to the realism of such European directors as Jean
Renoir. French film critic André Bazin emphasizes
that deep-focus cinematography “brings the spec-
tator into a relation with the image closer to that
which he enjoys with reality” and “implies, conse-
quently, both a more active mental attitude on the
part of the spectator and a more positive contribu-
tion on his part to the action in progress.”^6 In
preserving the continuity of space and time, deep-
focus cinematography seems more like human
perception.
Toland also understood that a scene involving
deep-space composition did not necessarily have to
be shot with deep-focus cinematography, as he
demonstrated in William Wyler’s The Little Foxes
(1941). Perhaps the best example is found in a scene
in which Regina Giddens (Bette Davis) confronts
her severely ill husband, Horace Giddens (Herbert
Marshall), a man she detests for his overall opposi-
tion to her scheming brothers and their plan to
expand her family’s wealth by exploiting cheap
labor. The sequence takes place in their parlor after
256 CHAPTER 6CINEMATOGRAPHY
1 2
3 4
Use of deep-space composition in The Little Foxes
At the climax of William Wyler’s The Little Foxes(1941;
cinematographer: Gregg Toland), Horace (Herbert Marshall)
responds to his wife’s tirade [1], begins having a heart attack,
and rises [2] while Regina (Bette Davis) remains rigidly in
place [3], offering Horace no help as he staggers to his death
in the background, helpless and out of focus [4].
(^6) André Bazin, “The Evolution of the Language of Cinema,” in
What Is Cinema?trans. Hugh Gray, 2 vols. (Berkeley: Univer-
sity of California Press, 1967–71), I, pp. 35–36.