Sunday, June 21, 2026

My Review of The Trial (1962)

 


Written And Directed by Orson Welles

Josef K.: "I only came here because I wanted to see if the inside of this famous legal system was as loathsome as I guessed it was. And now I'm too depressed to want to see anything more. I just want to get out of here and be alone."

Well, this was on my list of films from Anthony Perkins that I knew I needed to watch and I did late last night. Kafkaesque or what? 

It wasn't too long since his star making turn as Norman Bates that Anthony Perkins took on the role of office worker Josef K. With this role, he was playing a man who was being tried for a crime that he had no idea he had committed.

If you're hoping for clarity on the very nature of the crime that Josef K had committed, the one thing this movie committed to was not giving the audience any clue to it. There's no confirmation of what Josef K actually did to be put on trial whatsoever.

Throughout the movie and as Josef K's trial progresses and devolves, there's a myriad of characters that Josef K interacted with. On the romance front there's the likes of neighbour Marika Bürstner (Jeanne Moreau), and Leni (Romy Schneider) - the assistant to The Advocate aka Albert Hastler (Orson Welles). I hate to admit it but Perkins doesn't have any romantic chemistry with either woman.

The amount of people that interact with Josef K are numerous but memorable enough. The Advocate in particular served as a good foil while family members such as Uncle Max (Max Haufler) and Cousin Irmie (Naydra Shore) added some context to the type of man Josef K happened to be.

My favourite interactions were between Josef K and his landlady, Mrs. Grubach (Madeleine Robinson), Bloch (Akim Tamiroff) and the artist Titorelli (William Chappell). I think they're some of the strongest scenes but there's no interactions (bar the ones that unsuccessfully try to frame Josef K as a ladies man) that don't work.

Then there's the conclusion itself. Of course Josef K's trial wouldn't go in his favour and death was the only way it would end. It's a particularly brutal ending for him, though not entirely unexpected.

- Orson Welles did the opening and closing narrations as The Advocate.
- Yes, it's based on Franz Kafka's 1925 book of the same name with the chapter order somewhat different from the source material. Josef died differently in the book too.
- I definitely got more closet gay vibes off Josef K than the ladies man that Anthony Perkins tried but didn't succeed in depicting here.
- Chronology: Josef K was killed on the evening before his thirty first birthday.

The Trial (1962) did have an amazing central performance from Anthony Perkins in an adaptation that was relentless from start to finish. It's tense, brutal, took various turns and then landed that ending all too well.

Rating: 9 out of 10 

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