The Story (continued)
Robert
learns that Sondra is a young schoolteacher, and she also has a tremendous
love for pigeons (with wind flutes attached to their tails) that
make sounds as they fly overhead.
She suggested that he be brought to Shangri-La, because
she had read his books and idealistic writings about "better
worlds,"
and learned about world-weary Conway's aimless wanderings and dissatisfaction
about life:
I saw a man whose life was empty...Oh I know, it
was full of this and full of that. But you were accomplishing nothing.
You were going nowhere, and you knew it. As a matter of fact, all
I saw was a little boy whistling in the dark.
She is unimpressed by his worldly importance, and she
forces him to admit his directionless pursuits:
You're absolutely right. And I had to come all the
way to a pigeon house in Shangri-La to find the only other person
in the world who knew it. May I congratulate you?
Orphaned after her explorer-parents died during a lost
expedition in the "wild country beyond the pass," Sondra
describes how she was found by Chang and brought up by Father Perrault
himself. Conway is still astounded by the promise of life at Shangri-La
and his feeling of deja-vu, as they talk in a cherry-blossoming
orchard:
Conway: Of course, I can't quite get used to this
age thing.
Sondra: I'm thirty.
Conway: Oh, you're gonna make life very simple. It's inconceivable.
Sondra: What?
Conway: All of it. Father Perrault and his magnificent history. This
place hidden away from the rest of the world with its glorious concepts.
And now you come along and confuse me entirely.
Sondra: Oh, I'm sorry. I thought I was to be the light. But why do
I confuse you? Am I so strange?
Conway: Oh, on the contrary, you're not strange. And that, in itself,
is confusing. I had the same idea about, about Shangri-La. A sense
that I've been here before, that I belonged here.
Sondra: I'm so glad.
Conway: I can't quite explain it, but everything is somehow familiar.
The very air I breathe, the Lamasery with its feet rooted in the
good earth of this fertile valley while its head explores the eternal.
All the beautiful things I see - these cherry blossoms, you. All
are somehow familiar. I've been kidnapped and brought here against
my will. A crime, a great crime, yet I accept it amiably, with the
same warm amiability one tolerates only from a very dear and close
friend. Why? Can you tell me why?
Sondra: Perhaps because you've always been a part of Shangri-La without
knowing it.
Conway: I wonder.
Sondra: I'm sure of it, just as I'm sure there's a wish for Shangri-La
in everyone's heart. I've never seen the outside world, but I understand
there are millions and millions of people who are supposed to be
mean and greedy. And I just know that secretly, they are all hoping
to find a garden spot where there is peace, security, where there's
beauty and comfort, where they wouldn't have to be mean and greedy.
Oh, I just wish the whole world might come to this valley.
Conway: Then it wouldn't be a garden spot for long.
Almost all of the travelers find peace, romance and
contentment in Shangri-La, and they are positively transformed by
the experience, although Robert cannot believe everything is real
in the idyllic setting:
Robert: I'm waiting for the bump.
Sondra: Bump?
Robert: When the plane lands at Shanghai and wakes us all up. (Sondra
pinches his arm) Ouch!
Sondra: You see, it's not a dream.
Robert: You know, I sometimes think that the other is the dream,
the outside world.
In the sometimes-sordid "outside world," he
explains to Sondra how everyone struggles for existence, to "make
a place for himself," to "accumulate a nest egg and so
on." She is happy that he has come to Shangri-La - hopefully
permanently:
Sondra: I knew you'd come. And I knew when you did,
you'd never leave. Am I forgiven for sending for you?
Robert: Forgiven. (He kisses her forehead)
Poetically, while she rests her head in his chest,
in the film's most romantic and platonic scene, he describes how
a plane's shadow can zoom over hills and mountains below, but that
it always faithfully returns to the plane when it lands. He equates
Sondra to the plane, and he functions as the plane's shadow:
When we were on that plane, I was fascinated by the
way its shadow followed it. That silly shadow, racing along over
mountains and valleys, covering ten times the distance of the plane,
and yet always there to greet us with outstretched arms when we
landed. And I've been thinking that somehow, you're that plane,
and I'm that silly shadow. That all my life, I've been rushing
up and down hills, leaping rivers, crashing over obstacles, never
dreaming that one day that beautiful thing in flight would land
on this earth and into my arms.
Lovett proposes to organize and teach classes in geology
to the children in the valley. Barnard excitedly draws up blueprints
for a plumbing and water-works system (with pipes and a reservoir)
for the valley. And Gloria's consumption and her outlook on life
miraculously improve. The greatest malcontent in the group is Robert's
restless and impatient brother George, who has pursued a 20 year
old Russian girlfriend Maria (Margo).
In another meeting with the High Priest, Robert Conway
is designated as the Priest's successor, because the Priest is on
the verge of dying (and more than 200 years old):
I am placing in your hands the future and destiny
of Shangri-La, for I am going to die. I knew my work was done when
I first set eyes upon you. I've waited for you, my son, for a long
time. I've sat in this room and seen the faces of newcomers. I've
looked into their eyes and heard their voices, always in hope that
I might find you. My friend, it is not an arduous task that I bequeath,
for our order knows only silken bonds. To be gentle and patient,
to care for the riches of the mind, to preside in wisdom while
the storm rages without...You, my son, will live through the storm.
You will preserve the fragrance of our history and add to it a
touch of your own mind. Beyond that, my vision weakens but I see
at a great distance a new world stirring in the ruins, stirring
clumsily but in hopefulness, seeking its lost and legendary treasures,
and they will all be here, my son, hidden behind the mountains
in the Valley of the Blue Moon, preserved as by a miracle.
The wind blows at the window's curtains, and the lights
dim, as the Priest's head drops and he expires ("He died as
peacefully as the passing of a cloud's shadow").
Bells peal to announce the death of the High Priest.
Meanwhile, George has arranged - with Maria - for porters
(outside the valley) to take him and Maria "back to civilization." Robert
is uncertain and indecisive when asked to accompany his brother,
and explains what holds him back:
Something grand and beautiful, George. Something
I've been searching for all my life. The answer to the confusion
and bewilderment of a lifetime. I've found it, George, and I can't
leave it. You mustn't either.
George believes that Robert's story about the Lama
is completely mad ("What else can I think after a tale like
that?...I think you've been hypnotized by a lot of loose-brained
fanatics"). Maria is as dissatisfied as he is, and thinks that
the Lama (and Chang) are fraudulent, insane imposters. Robert warns
his brother that if Maria leaves, she will age considerably (acquiring
all the years since her arrival in 1888 when she was brought to the
valley at the age of 20):
She's a fragile thing that can only live where fragile
things are loved. Take her out of this valley and she'll fade away
like an echo.
But Maria insists she will remain young in the outside
world, and she shakes his spiritual belief in the magical place:
I'll die if I have to stay here another minute...Look
at me, Mr. Conway, do I look like an old woman? Is this the skin
of an old woman? Look into my eyes. Are these the eyes of an old
woman?
After a long hesitation, doubt and uncertainty breed
in Robert's mind. He is slowly convinced to forsake the dream of
Shangri-La, turn his back on salvation, and disbelieve the place's
unearthly wonders. He is persuaded to leave Shangri-La and accompany
his brother and Maria. During their exit, they pass the torch-lit
funeral proceedings for the ancient High Lama - a winding line of
mourners filing up the valley walls to the temple. George babbles
excitedly about their return to England: "We'll have them breathless
when we tell them our story," but Robert isn't listening - he's
lost in his own thoughts. When Chang and Sondra spot Robert's departure,
he assures her: "But he will return." At the gateway to
the world, Robert looks back, in a closeup image, for one last tearful
and anguished view of the paradise refuge - it is one of the film's
most memorable and powerful moments. Sondra frantically races after
him and calls out: "Bob!" but cannot reach him. She collapses
at the cold entrance to the warm valley.
In a memorable sequence, an avalanche - caused by random
and playful gunfire of the Tibetan porters, buries the entire expedition
except for the three white travelers. In the fierce blizzard weather
as they plod along, a tired Maria is slung over Robert Conway's back,
and her face ages rapidly as she quickly reverts in appearance to
her actual age. George screams out: "Look at her face! Her face!
Look at her face!" Maria dies an old wrinkled and withered woman
(aging by half a century, the time she spent in the valley). Despairing
and hysterically crazed after an abrupt return to the world of time
and death, George commits suicide by throwing himself off a cliff
ledge. Robert is left alone to realize that the legendary Shangri-La
was not a dream, and he frantically searches for a way to return
through the snowy mountains - a tiny figure questing against the
immensity of the Himalayas.
In the final sequence of the film, the scene shifts
to London where foreign news reports are received. Headlines in London
papers read: CONWAY FOUND ALIVE IN CHINESE MISSION, CONWAY SUFFERS
LOSS OF MEMORY, UNABLE TO RECOUNT EXPERIENCES OF AN ENTIRE YEAR,
HOMEWARD BOUND WITH GAINSFORD ABOARD SS MANCHURIA. [The montage of
newspaper headlines was later perfected in Citizen
Kane (1941).] Robert has been found alive in a Chinese village
a year after his disappearance - as an amnesiac, and is being brought
home to England by explorer Lord Gainsford aboard the SS Manchuria.
Gainsford sends a message from the ship to London officials,
describing how the determined Conway regained his memory, kept recalling
a place called Shangri-La - and then escaped:
Last night, Conway recovered his memory. Kept talking
about Shangri-La. Telling a fantastic story about a place in Tibet.
Insisted upon returning there at once. Locked him in room, but
he escaped us. Jumped ship during night at Singapore. Am leaving
ship myself to overtake him, as fearful of his condition. Wrote
down details of Conway's story about Shangri-La, which I am forwarding.
According to more London headlines, Gainsford "abandons
pursuit of Conway"
and returns home to London after a "fruitless search in Orient
for Robert Conway." At the Embassy Club in foggy London, Gainsford
(Hugh Buckler) describes his almost year-long pursuit and search for
the vanished Conway, who sought to return to the Valley of the Blue
Moon:
During those last ten months, that man has done the
most astounding things. Well, he learned how to fly, stole an Army
plane and got caught, put into jail and escaped, all in an amazingly
short space of time, but this is only the beginning of his adventure.
He begged, cajoled, fought, always pushing forward to the Tibetan
frontier. Everywhere I went, I heard the most amazing stories of
the man's adventures. Positively astounding, till eventually, I
trailed him to the most extreme outposts in Tibet. Of course, he
had already gone, but his memory, oh, oh... His memory will live
with those natives for the rest of their lives. 'The man who was
not human,' they called him. They'll never forget the devil-eyed
stranger who six times tried to go over a mountain pass that no
other human being dared to travel, and six times was forced back
by the severest storms. They'll never forget the madman who stole
their food and clothing, who they locked up in their barracks but
who fought six of their guards to escape. Why, their soldiers are
still talking about their pursuit to overtake him and shuddering
at the memory. He led them the wildest chase through their own
country. And finally, he disappeared over that very mountain pass
that they themselves dared not travel. And that, gentlemen, was
the last that any known human being saw of Robert Conway.
Asked if he believes of Conway's talk about Shangri-La,
Lord Gainsford gives a toast and salutes the missing Robert Conway:
Yes. Yes, I believe it. I believe it because
I want to believe it. Gentlemen, I give you a toast. Here's my
hope that Robert Conway will find his Shangri-La. Here's my hope
that we all find our Shangri-La.
In the film's final image, [a deviation from Hilton's
novel], a bearded and fatigued Conway struggles through the snow
to regain and recapture his lost dream. He views the sanctuary of
the lost valley through an elusive mountain entrance, and the bells
peal again. |