In This Our Life: Difference between revisions
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==Production== |
==Production== |
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The Ellen Glasgow novel, for which [[Warner Bros.]] paid $40,000 for the screen rights,<ref name=TCM>[http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=620&category=Notes ''In This Our Life'' at Turner Classic Movies]</ref> portrayed William Fitzroy's [[incest]]uous desire for his niece Stanley, as well as [[Racism|racist attitudes]] in the society. Recommended by the director John Huston, the screenwriter Howard Koch believed he had to tone down these elements to satisfy the current [[Motion Picture Production Code]].<ref name=Stine>Stine |
The Ellen Glasgow novel, for which [[Warner Bros.]] paid $40,000 for the screen rights,<ref name=TCM>[http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title.jsp?stid=620&category=Notes ''In This Our Life'' at Turner Classic Movies]</ref> portrayed William Fitzroy's [[incest]]uous desire for his niece Stanley, as well as [[Racism|racist attitudes]] in the society. Recommended by the director John Huston, the screenwriter Howard Koch believed he had to tone down these elements to satisfy the current [[Motion Picture Production Code]].<ref name=Stine>{{Cite book |last=Stine |first=Whitney |lastauthoramp=yes |last2=Davis |first2=Bette |title=Mother Goddam: The Story of the Career of Bette Davis |location=New York |publisher=Hawthorn Books |year=1974 |isbn=0801551846 |pages=154–162 }}</ref> In his review of the completed film, the critic [[Bosley Crowther]] said it was "moderately faithful" to the novel and praised its portrayal of racial discrimination.<ref name="Crowther" /> |
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[[Bette Davis]], eventually cast as Stanley Timberlake despite her desire to play the "good sister" Roy,<ref name=Higham>Higham |
[[Bette Davis]], eventually cast as Stanley Timberlake despite her desire to play the "good sister" Roy,<ref name=Higham>{{Cite book |last=Higham |first=Charles |title=The Life of Bette Davis |location=New York |publisher=Macmillan |year=1981 |isbn=0025515004 |pages=152–159 }}</ref> was unhappy with the script. "The book by Miss Glasgow was brilliant," she later recalled. "I never felt the script lived up to the book." <ref name=Stine /> Nor did Glasgow. "She minced no words about the film," Davis said. "She was disgusted with the outcome. I couldn't have agreed with her more. A real story had been turned into a phony film."<ref name=Stine /> |
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Davis was also unhappy about events during production. While in the midst of costume and wig fittings, Davis was told her husband [[Arthur Farnsworth (Bette Davis' husband)|Arthur Farnsworth]] had been admitted to a [[Minneapolis]] hospital with severe [[pneumonia]]. Her friend [[Howard Hughes]] arranged a private plane, but her flight took two days because of being grounded by fog and storms. Almost immediately, studio head [[Jack L. Warner]] cabled her with demands for her return. Due to his pressure and her concern for her husband, Davis' own health declined. Her doctor ordered her to return to [[Los Angeles]] by train to get some rest before returning to work.<ref name=Higham /> |
Davis was also unhappy about events during production. While in the midst of costume and wig fittings, Davis was told her husband [[Arthur Farnsworth (Bette Davis' husband)|Arthur Farnsworth]] had been admitted to a [[Minneapolis]] hospital with severe [[pneumonia]]. Her friend [[Howard Hughes]] arranged a private plane, but her flight took two days because of being grounded by fog and storms. Almost immediately, studio head [[Jack L. Warner]] cabled her with demands for her return. Due to his pressure and her concern for her husband, Davis' own health declined. Her doctor ordered her to return to [[Los Angeles]] by train to get some rest before returning to work.<ref name=Higham /> |
Revision as of 16:31, 11 December 2010
In This Our Life | |
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Directed by | John Huston |
Written by | Howard Koch Based on the novel by Ellen Glasgow |
Produced by | Hal B. Wallis |
Starring | Bette Davis Olivia de Havilland Charles Coburn George Brent |
Cinematography | Ernest Haller |
Edited by | William Holmes |
Music by | Max Steiner |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date | May 8, 1942 |
Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | Template:FilmUS |
Language | English |
In This Our Life is a 1942 American drama film, the second to be directed by John Huston. Raoul Walsh also worked as director but was uncredited. The screenplay by Howard Koch is based on the 1941 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same title by Ellen Glasgow. The cast included the established stars Bette Davis and Olivia de Havilland as sisters and the romantic and life rivals.
Completed after the United States (US) entered World War II after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the film was disapproved for foreign release in 1943 by the wartime Office of Censorship because it dealt truthfully with racial discrimination as part of its plot.
Plot
In the modern South, Asa and Lavinia (Fitzroy) Timberlake gave their two daughters male names: Roy and Stanley. The movie opens with the young women as adults. Roy, a successful interior decorator, is married to Dr. Peter Kingsmill. Stanley Timberlake is engaged to attorney Craig Fleming. The night before her wedding, Stanley runs off with her sister's husband Peter. After Roy divorces him, Peter and Stanley marry and move to Baltimore.
Roy begins dating Fleming. He hires Parry Clay to work in his law office while the young man attends law school. Clay is the son of the Timberlake family maid, Minerva Clay. William Fitzroy, Lavinia's brother and Asa's former partner in a tobacco business, dotes on his niece Stanley and wants to help her. He suggests he will retain Fleming as his attorney if he agrees to stop representing the poor. When Fleming refuses, Roy Timberlake is impressed and decides to accept him in marriage.
In Baltimore, Stanley and Peter's marriage suffers from his heavy drinking and her wasteful spending. Peter commits suicide. Shaken, Stanley returns to her home town intending to win back Fleming. While discussing her late husband's life insurance with Fleming at his office, Stanley invites him to join her later for dinner. When he fails to come to the restaurant, she becomes drunk. While driving home, she hits and kills a child.
Witnesses recognize Stanley's car and the police go to question her. Stanley insists she had loaned her car to Parry Clay the night of the accident. Minerva Clay tells Roy that her son was home with her all evening. When Stanley refuses to admit her responsibility, Fleming tells her he has already questioned the bartender at the restaurant and knows she left drunk. Fleming plans to take Stanley to the district attorney, but she escapes to her uncle's house and pleads for his help. Having just discovered he has only six months to live, Fitzroy is too distraught to do anything. The police arrive at Fitzroy's house and Stanley leaves; in trying to escape, she crashes her car and is killed.
Production
The Ellen Glasgow novel, for which Warner Bros. paid $40,000 for the screen rights,[1] portrayed William Fitzroy's incestuous desire for his niece Stanley, as well as racist attitudes in the society. Recommended by the director John Huston, the screenwriter Howard Koch believed he had to tone down these elements to satisfy the current Motion Picture Production Code.[2] In his review of the completed film, the critic Bosley Crowther said it was "moderately faithful" to the novel and praised its portrayal of racial discrimination.[3]
Bette Davis, eventually cast as Stanley Timberlake despite her desire to play the "good sister" Roy,[4] was unhappy with the script. "The book by Miss Glasgow was brilliant," she later recalled. "I never felt the script lived up to the book." [2] Nor did Glasgow. "She minced no words about the film," Davis said. "She was disgusted with the outcome. I couldn't have agreed with her more. A real story had been turned into a phony film."[2]
Davis was also unhappy about events during production. While in the midst of costume and wig fittings, Davis was told her husband Arthur Farnsworth had been admitted to a Minneapolis hospital with severe pneumonia. Her friend Howard Hughes arranged a private plane, but her flight took two days because of being grounded by fog and storms. Almost immediately, studio head Jack L. Warner cabled her with demands for her return. Due to his pressure and her concern for her husband, Davis' own health declined. Her doctor ordered her to return to Los Angeles by train to get some rest before returning to work.[4]
Distressed to play Stanley rather than Roy - "I was not young enough for the part," Davis insisted [2] - the actress argued with producers about every aspect of her character. She directed her hair style and makeup. She insisted that Orry-Kelly redesign costumes for her, resulting in what others saw as an unflattering wardrobe.[4] Davis aided the project by finding the right person to play Parry Clay. Huston had reviewed some African American actors but was not satisfied with any. One day when Davis was in the studio commissary, she noticed Ernest Anderson working there as a waiter. She believed he had the right look and presence for the role and encouraged Huston to screen test Anderson. The director did, and cast the young man.[2] Anderson won the 1942 National Board of Review Award for his performance.
Three days following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, which pulled the US into World War II, Huston had to leave the production for an assignment with the War Department. The studio used Raoul Walshto complete the film, although he received no screen credit. Walsh and Davis immediately clashed, and she refused to follow his direction or reshoot completed scenes.[citation needed] She developed laryngitis and stayed off the set for several days. After she returned, the producer Hal B. Wallis frequently acted as mediator between Davis and Walsh, who threatened to quit.
Because of the delays, the film was not done until mid-January 1942, well over schedule. The first preview was highly negative, with audience comments especially critical of Davis' hair, makeup, and wardrobe, the elements which she had controlled. Preparing for Now, Voyager, Davis disregarded the comments.[4] She thought the film was "mediocre," although she was glad that the role of Parry Clay was "performed as an educated person. This caused a great deal of joy among Negroes. They were tired of the Stepin Fetchit vision of their people." [2] When the US wartime Office of Censorship reviewed the film in 1943 prior to foreign release, it disapproved the work because, "It is made abundantly clear that a Negro's testimony in court is almost certain to be disregarded if in conflict with the testimony of a white person." [1]
Cast
- Bette Davis ..... Stanley Timberlake Kingsmill
- Olivia de Havilland ..... Roy Timberlake
- George Brent ..... Craig Fleming
- Dennis Morgan ..... Peter Kingsmill
- Frank Craven ..... Asa Timberlake
- Billie Burke ..... Lavinia Timberlake
- Charles Coburn ..... William Fitzroy
- Ernest Anderson ..... Parry Clay
- Hattie McDaniel ..... Minerva Clay
- Lee Patrick ..... Betty Wilmoth
Critical reception
Bosley Crowther of the New York Times called it "neither a pleasant nor edifying film." He felt "the one exceptional component of the film" is the "brief but frank allusion to racial discrimination" which "is presented in a realistic manner, uncommon to Hollywood, by the definition of the Negro as an educated and comprehending character. Otherwise the story is pretty much of a downhill run." He added, "Director John Huston, unfortunately, has not given this story sufficient distinction . . . The telling of it is commonplace, the movement uncomfortably stiff. Olivia de Havilland gives a warm and easy performance as the good sister who wins out in the end . . . But Miss Davis, by whom the whole thing pretty much stands or falls, is much too obviously mannered for this spectator's taste . . . It is likewise very hard to see her as the sort of sultry dame that good men can't resist. In short, her evil is so theatrical and so completely inexplicable that her eventual demise in an auto accident is the happiest moment in the film." [3]
Variety noted, "John Huston, in his second directorial assignment, provides deft delineations in the varied characters in the script. Davis is dramatically impressive in the lead but gets major assistance from Olivia de Havilland, George Brent, Dennis Morgan, Billie Burke and Hattie McDaniel. Script succeeds in presenting the inner thoughts of the scheming girl, and carries along with slick dialog and situations. Strength is added in several dramatic spots by Huston's direction." [5]
DVD release
On April 1, 2008, Warner Home Video released the film as part of the box set The Bette Davis Collection, Volume 3, which also includes The Old Maid, All This, and Heaven Too, Watch on the Rhine, and Deception.
References
- ^ a b In This Our Life at Turner Classic Movies
- ^ a b c d e f Stine, Whitney; Davis, Bette (1974). Mother Goddam: The Story of the Career of Bette Davis. New York: Hawthorn Books. pp. 154–162. ISBN 0801551846.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b New York Times review
- ^ a b c d Higham, Charles (1981). The Life of Bette Davis. New York: Macmillan. pp. 152–159. ISBN 0025515004.
- ^ Variety review