Daily Archives: June 30, 2015

Three Came Home (1950)

Three Came Home
Directed by Jean Negulesco
Written by Nunnally Johnson from a book by Agnes Newton Keith
1950/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
First viewing/Amazon Prime

 

[box] [first lines] Agnes Newton Keith: Six-degrees north of the Equator, in the heart of the East Indies, lies Sandakan, the tiny capital of British North Borneo. In Sandakan in 1941, there were 15 thousand Asiatics, 79 Europeans, and 1 American. I was the American. [/box]

Claudette Colbert is always great as this type of woman surviving against enormous odds.

Harry Keith (Patrick Knowles) works as a government official in British Borneo, accompanied by his wife Agnes (Colbert) and their adorable four-year-old son. Agnes previously published a book about life in Borneo which took a sympathetic view of Asians. When the Japanese attack Pearl Harbor, the European residents of Borneo spend most of their time preparing for invasion.  It comes quickly enough.

After a few weeks of unpredictable treatment by the Japanese on the island.  The Europeans are ordered to prepare to be transported to another location.  Before they are, Agnes is ordered to present herself to the commanding officer for the local theater, Colonel Suga (Sessue Hayakawa).  It turns out he admired her book and wants a copy with her autograph.  We also find out he was educated in the U.S. and has small children at home in Japan.

Agnes’s pleasant chat with Suga does her no good whatsoever.  The women and men are first put in separate and adjacent camps.  They can make highly dangerous attempts to meet but mostly spend their time worrying, starving, and suffering from malaria.

Then things get worse after they are again moved.  They must survive years of separation, malnutrition and hard labor.  We see the women eating garbage, which they regard as a lucky treat. Agnes is attacked in the dark by a Japanese soldier with rape on his mind.  She uses another meeting with Suga to complain.  This backfires on her in a big way when Suga is no longer around.  The title gives away the ending.

I tend to like POW stories and this was no exception.  It is very well done and Colbert is outstanding.

The complete film is also currently available on YouTube.

Clip

The Furies (1950)

The Furies
Directed by Anthony Mann
Written by Charles Schnee from a novel by Nevin Busch
1950/USA
Hall Wallis Productions
First viewing/Netflix rental

[box] Vance Jeffords: I don’t think I like being in love. It puts a bit in my mouth.[/box]

Barbara Stanwyck in a role that might have been written for her and Walter Huston’s swan song make this a movie well worth seeing.

T.C. Jeffords (Huston) is the larger-than-life owner of The Furies ranch.  He lives life to the max scattering a flurry of IOUs known affectionately as “TCs” in his wake.  Daughter Vance (Stanwyck) is an independent-minded daddy’s girl who wins her father’s heart mainly by sticking up for herself.  Jefford’s son was more of a mama’s boy and Vance runs the ranch in her father’s absence.

T.C. is in constant need of bank loans.  One of the conditions for his latest mortgage is that a number of Mexican-American squatters be evicted from his land.  T.C. is willing but Vance insists that childhood friend Juan Herrera (Gilbert Roland) and his family be allowed to stay.  The Herreras regard the land as their own ancestral property.  T.C. gives his promise.  He also promises Vance $50,000 on the condition that she marry someone he approves of.

Into this situation rides Rip Darrow (Wendell Corey).  T.C. took prime acreage included in the ranch when he killed Darrow’s father.  Vance is taken with the strong, silent gambler and invites him to court her.  Finally he agrees to call on her at the Furies.  When he does, he willingly accepts T.C.’s offer of the $50,000 in exchange for not marrying Vance.

T.C. travels to San Francisco and brings Flo Burnett back with him.  Flo immediately begins to subtly take over.  She convinces T.C. to evict the Herreras, hire a ranch manager, and send Vance off on a grand tour of Europe.  The infuriated Vance strikes back and she and T.C. become mortal enemies.  Much drama ensues.  With Albert Dekker as a banker and Thomas Gomez and Wallace Ford as T.C. loyalists.

This handsomely shot film is reminiscent of Greek tragedy in its outsized emotions.  Both Huston and Stanwyck are superb as are the supporting players.  It’s more melodrama than Western but I enjoyed it for what it was.

This was Walter Huston’s final film. I’m sad to see him leave this journey.  Vincent Milner was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Cinematography, Black-and-White.

Trailer