Daily Archives: June 7, 2015

Madame Bovary (1949)

Madame Bovary
Directed by Vincente Minnelli
Written by Robert Ardrey from the novel by Gustave Flaubert
1949/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Emma Bovary: Is it a crime to want things to be beautiful?[/box]

How could MGM destroy a masterpiece of world literature?  Let me count the ways.

The story of the novel is bookended by scenes of the trial of Gustave Flaubert (James Mason).  He defends the morality of his work in a possible concession to the Hayes Code. So right off the bat we change a study of provincial manners and human frailty into an object lesson on the dire consequences of adultery.

Farmer’s daughter Emma Bovary (Jennifer Jones) was raised in a convent where a Swiss housemother provided the girls with romantic novels and fed them all the love stories of legend.  Emma imagined herself as the heroine of all these tales.  She returns to the farm where the first educated man she meets is Charles Bovary (Van Heflin), a simple country doctor who has come to set her father’s broken leg.  She marries him but the reality of marriage is a cruel disappointment.  She decides to devote herself to making a beautiful home for him and secretly begins taking loans for furnishings, etc.  She starts a flirtation with Leon Depuis, a presentable young villager who assists her, but before this can become anything more his mother sends him off to Paris to study law.

Emma decides that what she needs is a son who will not face the obstacles she is suffering as a woman.  But again, her hopes are dashed when the child turns out to be a girl. Next, a local pharmacist convinces her that Charles could win the Legion of Honor if he is the first to perform a surgery to cure club foot.  (The filmmakers give the botched surgery – one of the most memorable parts of the novel – a pass.)

A count invites the Bovary’s to a ball where Emma is swept off her feet by the handsome aristocrat Rudolphe (Louis Jourdan).  They begin a love affair but Rudolphe gets cold feet when it comes to running away with Emma.  The ever-trusting Charles rescues Emma from a suicide attempt and later unwittingly enables her to start a liaison with Leon, now a law clerk in Rouen.  Emma’s dreams are finally dashed permanently when her debts catch up with her, but not before the money lender gives her a lecture on the wickedness of her ways.

This is a handsome production and Minnelli’s staging of the ball scene, in particular, is marvelous and worth seeing.

The film’s problems begin with the characterization of Emma, who comes off as more like Scarlett O’Hara than the pathetic none-too-bright heroine of Flaubert’s novel.  The other characters and their dialogue ring one false note after another.  Maybe I would have loved it if I had not read the book but not as more than as a costume melodrama.

Madame Bovary was nominated for an Oscar for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Black-and-White.

Trailer

 

Impact (1949)

Impact
Directed by Arthur Lubin
Written by Dorothy Davenport and Jay Dratler
1949/USA
Cardinal Pictures
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Walter Williams: In this world, you turn the other cheek, and you get hit with a lug wrench.[/box]

This odd film noir had an intriguing premise.  The execution not so much …

Hard-charging industrialist and automotive wizard Walter Williams (Brian Donlevy) has a soft spot for his wife Irene (Helen Walker).  He showers her with flowers, presents, and sweet talk.  He is so much in love with her that when she begs off from a romantic trip to Lake Tahoe due to illness and asks him to give her unemployed cousin Jim a ride instead he gladly agrees.  We soon find out that the “cousin” is actually her lover and as soon as he gets Walter in an isolated place he conks him over the head with a lug wrench and dumps him into a ditch.

When Jim speeds off in Walter’s car, he gets hit by an oil tanker and goes up in a ball of flames.  The corpse is unrecognizable.  Walter is not dead but manages to crawl into the back of a moving van.  Lt. Tom Quincy (Charles Coburn) of the police starts to investigate the murder.  All the circumstantial evidence seems to show that the victim was Walter and the murderer was Irene.

In the meantime, the heartbroken Walter painfully makes his way to Idaho where he adopts an assumed name and gleefully keeps abreast of his wife’s murder trial.  There he helps out war widow and gas station owner Marsha Peters (Ella Raines) with his prowess as an auto mechanic and soon they are in love.  Marsha’s mother finds out the truth.  The rest of the movie is devoted to homespun wisdom about doing the right thing supplied by Marsha and her mother and Walter’s trial for Jim’s murder.  With Anna May Wong as a star witness.

I knew this was not going to end well as soon as Charles Coburn started speaking in a bad Irish brogue.  The story is really a mess.  The tacked on Capraesque corn in the second act is bad enough but a lot of the developments just defy logic. Too bad, this had definite possibilities.  Most of the actors did fine with the material.

It is old home week on flickersintime!  First we get Buster Keaton in In the Good Old Summertime and now the cruelly underutilized Anna May Wong makes a reappearance in this.   So good to see a familiar face.

Trailer