Film Review
"One of the worst films made in the history of the world." That
was Bette Davis's considered assessment of her one and only
collaboration with director John Huston. If this reaction sounds
a tad over the top, that's nothing compared with Davis's performance in
this film. In what is arguably the most enjoyable of her monster
roles, Davis ignites the screen with something of the zeal of a mad
pyromaniac, playing the part of a lying, cheating, narcisitic,
man-eating, child-killing fiend for all it's worth. To
misquote Davis, it is performances like
this that make life worth living.
In an inspired adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by Ellen
Glasgow, Bette Davis is partnered with Olivia de Havilland, whose
career was very much in the ascendant after her Oscar nomination for
her supporting role in
Gone With the Wind
(1939). Both Davis and de Havilland are perfectly cast in this
film, the two well-matched actresses personifying the worst and best in
female comportment. Whilst Davis is the epitome of the
self-centred bad woman, her co-star is the goodie two-shoes that
society expects a woman to be (and terminally dull with
it). Admittedly the irony is ladled on a bit thickly, although
nowhere nearly as thickly as Davis's lipstick and mascara. This
is the only film in which Bette Davis is out-staged by her own make-up.
Suitably cast in the (mercifully) subdued male roles are frequent Davis
collaborator George Brent and the rising star Dennis Morgan, both
exquisite (in a one-legged Meerkat kind of way) as hapless Davis-fodder.
The ample supporting
cast includes some of Hollywood's finest character actors, including
Frank Craven, Charles Coburn, Billie Burke and Hattie McDaniel.
Making his screen debut is Ernest Anderson; he landed the part of Parry
Clay through Bette Davis's intervention, after she saw him serving as a
waiter in the studio canteen.
A woman's picture, intended to provide escapism for bored housewives,
this is clearly not the kind of film that we associate with John
Huston. Huston had just completed his first film,
The Maltese Falcon (1941) and
was drawn to
In This Our Life
because he felt it dealt with some interesting issues, including racial
prejudice and incest. In its sympathetic portrayal of a black man
wrongly arrested for a crime, the film is many years ahead of its
time, and its subtle suggestion of incest is just as daring.
Even though Huston gave his lead actress a virtual free rein and world
defend her performance to his superiors at Warner Brothers, Davis
greatly disliked working with him. When her husband went down
with pneumonia, Davis was granted compassionate leave, but this set the
shooting schedule back by several weeks when she delayed her return and
contracted influenza. Towards the end of the shoot, after Huston
had been called away to work for the war department, Raoul Walsh stood
in to complete the film. Although Walsh directed the scene in
which Davis gives her most powerful performance (the one in which she,
now in full Lady Macbeth mode, tells her sick uncle that he might as
well snuff it), the actress absolutely loathed the director, and their
on-set clashes came close to derailing the production. It is not
for nothing that Bette Davis was known as a legendary terror.
When riled, she could put the fear of God into God.
Despite the reservations of both Bette Davis and the Warner Brothers high command,
In This Our Life proved to be a
great success. Doubtless, Bette Davis's wonderfully
uninhibited performance was probably enough of a lure to fill the
stalls several times over, but Huston's meticulous direction and a nice turn from Olivia de Havilland
couldn't have harmed the box office receipts. Predictably,
however, the film garnered some very mixed reviews, and it still
remains (inexplicably) one of the least celebrated films of both Huston
and Davis.
In This Our Life has far more
substance than most female-oriented melodramas of this era. Not
only does it tackle some controversial themes (racism and incest)
in an intelligent manner, it
also provokes its audience to reflect on how society should expect
women to behave. By giving the two leading female characters male
names (Stanley and Roy), isn't the film boldly stating that women
should deserve the same freedoms as men? There are not many
American films of this period which make a stab at tackling racial
and sexual inequality. Perhaps this should be considered one of
John Huston's most courageous and socially conscious films?
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next John Huston film:
Key Largo (1948)
Film Synopsis
Stanley and Roy are two sisters, the grown-up daughters of unsuccessful
entrepreneur Asa Timberlake. In temperament and behaviour the two
women could not be more dissimilar. Whilst Roy is responsible and
considerate, Stanley is egoistical and flighty. On the eve of her
wedding to humdrum lawyer Craig Fleming, Stanley decides to run off
with Roy's husband, Peter Kingsmill. This betrayal brings Roy and
Craig together, but it soon turns out that Stanley and Peter are
ill-matched. Stanley's behaviour ultimately drives Peter to
suicide, although Stanley has no intention of playing the grieving
widow for longer than she needs to. One evening, Stanley arranges
to meet up with Craig, hoping to rekindle their former
relationship. When Craig fails to show up, Stanley heads back
home in her car. Somewhat worse for drink, she accidentally runs
down a mother and her young child. When the child dies, Stanley
tries to pin the blame for the accident on a young black man, Parry
Clay. At first, everyone seems to believe her - until Roy visits
Parry's mother and learns the truth...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.