Daily Archives: December 17, 2014

Brief Encounter (1945)

Brief Encounter
Directed by David Lean
Written by Anthony Havelock-Allen, David Lean, and Ronald Neame from the play “Still Life” by Noel Coward (all uncredited)
1945/UK
Cineguild
Repeat viewing/Netflix rental
#191 of 1001 Film You Must See Before You Die

 

[box] Laura Jesson: I’ve fallen in love. I didn’t think such violent things happened to ordinary people.[/box]

I didn’t realize how brief the encounter really was until I watched this small masterpiece for the umpteenth time.

The story mainly takes place in flashback as Laura Jesson (Celia Johnson) sits in her living room and thinks about the man she just said goodbye to while her husband does the crossword.  A recording of Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 is playing in the background.

It’s a simple story.  Laura goes to the nearest town every Thursday to do errands and watch a movie.  Laura meets Dr. Alec Harvey (Trevor Howard)  when he removes a piece of grit in her eye in a railway station tearoom.    The next Thursday she gives him a seat at her table in a crowded restaurant and they go to the movies together.  He asks her to meet him the following week.

After vowing not meet him, Laura is there.  The movie is bad so they take an outing on the river instead.  It is then that Alec confesses his love and Laura cannot deny hers.  The following week Alec has borrowed a friend’s car and they go driving.  At the end of the day, Alec says he is going to skip the train and wait for Laura in his friend’s empty apartment.  Laura cannot stay away.  But the guilt and shame is too much for her and she needs to find the strength to call things quits.  With Stanley Holloway as the station master who is flirting with Joyce Carey’s tearoom operator.

Why can’t love be simple?  Lean and the actors make you care about these people so much that the very British and restrained sexual tension is palpable.  We can understand every move they make and root for their love while at the same time understanding why it is all wrong.  The cinematography and frame composition is as beautiful as the story.  Most highly recommended.

Brief Encounter was nominated for Academy Awards in the categories of Best Actress, Best Director, and Best Writing, Screenplay.

Re-release trailer

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945)

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Directed by Elia Kazan
Written by Tess Slesinger and Frank Davis from the novel by Betty Smith
1945/USA
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Johnny Nolan aka The Brooklyn Thrush: Look, God invented time and when He invents something, there’s always plenty of it.[/box]

Elia Kazan’s first film is a moving period domestic drama. It took way too long to catch up with this one and I was not disappointed.

The Nolands are a poor family living in a Brooklyn tenament near the turn of the last century.  Father Johnny (James Dunn) is a singing waiter who works only between benders.  Mother Katie (Dorothy McGuire) tries to balance out her husband’s dreams and Irish blarney with strict propriety.  Daughter Francie is a dreamer too and a lover of knowledge.  She is the kind of kid that has to try all the different flavors of soda in alphabetical order.  Brother Neeley is all boy and hates school.  Katie’s sister Aunt Sissy (Joan Blondell) has just been married for the umpteenth time as the story starts.  No one is exactly sure whether the last marriage was ever dissolved.  Sissie is full of life and high spirits.  Katie, thinking of the children, bans her from the premises early on.

Francie and Johnny are thick as thieves.  He tells her many stories of what will happen when their ship comes in.  One day, Francie is walking in the neighborhood and passes a fancy school in the more prosperous quarter.  Her own school is a nightmare of rote learning and she longs to go to the new one.  Johnny sticks up for her and concocts another address and family for her so she can attend school outside her district.  This turns out to be a wise move because Francie blossoms there and is encouraged by her teacher to write.

But all is not well. Johnny continues to get blind drunk.  Katie discovers she is pregnant. She determines the only way the family can survive is by moving to a smaller place and putting Francie to work.  Things get worse before they get better but these people are survivors and all their trials are eased by lots of genuine love.  With Lloyd Nolan as a shy policeman and James Gleason as Johnny’s favorite bartender.

This film is surprisingly unsentimental considering the number of times it made me cry. Francie’s relationship with her father was really touching and so was Dorothy McGuire as a hard-working mother who tries to make things right while alienating all around her. Peggy Ann Garner might be the least affected child actor in movie history.  But she is outshone by James Dunn as the father.  He is so convincingly broken down and yet you fully understand why people fall in love with him completely.  Recommended.

James Dunn won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.  The film was also nominated for Best Writing, Original Screenplay.  Peggy Ann Garner won the Juvenile Award for outstanding child actress of 1945.

Clip