Film Review
It was while working together on
Frisco
Jenny (1932) that the director William Wellman and actress
Ruth Chatterton grew to appreciate one another's talents, having first
been mutually contemptuous of each other. Their second
collaboration is a similarly gloomy melodrama which, like the one
before it, powerfully conveys the hardships experienced by ordinary
Americans, particularly women, during the Great Depression of the 1930s.
Lilly Turner is the perfect vehicle
for Chatterton, allowing her to show her worth as a serious dramatic
actress whilst giving her the freedom to make use of her comedic skills
(albeit very subtly) in some of the lighter scenes. Here,
she plays opposite her then husband and frequent co-star George Brent,
whom she would divorce the following year.
Whilst not quite so hideously contrived as
Frisco Jenny,
Lilly Turner does exhibit many of
the toe-curling vices of the 1930s American melodrama, in particular an
over-reliance on coincidence and stock characters who are pretty well
summed up in their one word job description (bounder, drunk, quack, strongman,
etc.). Many of the film's shortcomings can be traced to the
stage play of the same title (written the year before by Phillip Dunning and George Abbott)
on which it is based.
The smallness of the budget and the absurdities of the
plot are to a large extent masked by the generally excellent
performances and the oppressive mood that Wellman and his
cinematographer James Van Trees manage to create, a mood that presages the great
American films noirs that were to come in the following decade.
A thick air of fatalism hangs over this film, not unlike
that felt in the poetic realist dramas that would be made in France
later in the decade (
Le Quai des brumes (1938),
Le Jour se lève (1939)). Although
Chatterton gives her character
plenty of spunk, she is far from in control of her destiny - social and
economic forces will determine her future happiness. That said,
you can't help sensing in the film's wonderfully ambiguous ending that
Lilly Turner will get what she wants, eventually.
© James Travers 2012
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next William A. Wellman film:
Wild Boys of the Road (1933)
Film Synopsis
When Lilly Turner marries Rex Durkee, an aspiring actor, she could not
be happier. But her dreams soon turn to dust when Rex forces her
to become a dancer with a rundown carnival and she discovers that Rex
is already married. She promptly marries her alcoholic friend
Dave Dixon, but he proves to be no better than her first husband.
To earn her crust, she lends her services to a quack doctor, Peter
McGill, and immediately enflames the passions of McGill's simple-minded
strongman, Fritz. Driven mad by his desire for Lilly, Fritz soon
ends up in a lunatic asylum, just as Lilly turns her attention to a
passing cab driver, Bob Chandler, who becomes Fritz's
replacement. Bob and Lilly fall madly in love but Lilly is unsure
whether she can bring herself to abandon Dave, who has become totally
dependent on her. One day, Bob announces he has been offered an
engineering job in another country. Lilly must make up her mind
to leave Dave and start a new life with Bob...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.