Film Review
Of the many screen adaptations of Daphne Du Maurier's abundant literary works
the only one that can be said to be definitive is Alfred Hitchcock's
Rebecca (1940), the one film that is
totally steeped in the oppressively tenebrous atmosphere of the author's
distinctive world. Hitchcock's subsequent
The Birds (1963) and Nicholas Roeg's
Don't Look Now (1973) are utterly
inspired re-workings of two of the writer's most memorable short stories
but neither of these quite matches the creepy poetry, sustained tension and
haunting background malevolence of a lesser Du Maurier's adaptation - Henry
Koster's
My Cousin Rachel. The film's main claim to fame is
that it was the first in which the British actor Richard Burton had a starring
role, and what a remarkable debut it is. More than anything, it is
Burton's desperately tortured portrayal of a man at the mercy of his passions
- paranoid suspicion locked in mortal combat with amorous obsession - that
makes it such a compelling and devastating piece of film drama.
Oddly, considering how faithful it is to her original novel, Du Maurier loathed
Nunnally Johnson's screenplay for Koster's film - and so did the creative
giant who was originally slated to direct it, George Cukor. Burton
only signed up for the project to work with Cukor, so production got off
to shaky start, not helped by the lead actor's extremely poor working relationship
with his co-star Olivia de Havilland. At the time, the German-born
Koster was best known as a director of light comedies and musicals - inconsequential
but popular fare such as
Three Smart Girls (1936) and
Spring Parade
(1940) - but he was an accomplished technician and had many impressive titles
to his name, most notably the lavish Biblical epic he was to direct the following
year -
The Robe (1953). Later, he would direct Bette Davis and
Richard Todd in the polished historical drama
The Virgin Queen (1955), and
James Stewart in the popular comedy
Mr Hobbs Takes a Vacation
(1962).
My Cousin Rachel belongs to a cycle of beautifully crafted Gothic
melodramas, most produced by Twentieth Century-Fox, that provided a badly
needed counterpoint to the two dominant Hollywood formats of the time - gritty
noir crime-thrillers and modern age woman-centric melodramas (the classic
'weepy'). Whereas the latter genres seem to be targeted at male and
female audiences separately, the Gothic melodrama appealed to both sexes
and had elements of both kinds of film - sentimental drama filmed in an atmosphere
of noirish oppression and mystery. Sumptuously photographed in moody
black and white, with mesmerising performances from its two well-matched
lead actors, Henry Koster's slick Du Maurer adaptation easily deserves its
place alongside other similar Gothic melodramas of the time - from William
Wyler's
Wuthering Heights
(1939) to Robert Stevenson's
Jane Eyre
(1944) and Joseph L. Mankiewicz's
Dragonwyck
(1946). Whilst Koster won far greater acclaim in his lifetime for his
subsequent cinematic triumph
The Robe,
My Cousin Rachel is
arguably a more interesting and worthy film, outshining many other Du Maurier
adaptations - including Hitchcock's botched
Jamaica Inn and Richard Eyre's somewhat
tepid 2017 remake (in which lead actor Sam Claflin fails to match up to Rachel
Weisz's startlingly enigmatic Rachel).
Admittedly, Nunnally Johnson's overly conventional screenplay doesn't come
close to capturing the rich complexity of the original novel - one of the
author's most compelling and imaginative - but this is amply made up for
by the sheer artistry of the art design and Joseph LaShelle's brooding cinematography,
both of which capture the unmistakeable aura of mistrust and paranoia that
pervade Du Maurer's gripping page-turner. The raw wave-beaten Cornish
setting is effectively evoked by some technically flawless use of back-projection
which, helped by Franz Waxman's bleakly ominous score, constantly highlights
the tempestuous nature of Burton's dangerously impulsive character whilst
suggesting that darker elemental forces are at play in guiding Philip and
Rachel to their doom. The shadowy interiors of the old Ashley residence
have a House of Usher-like sense of a lingering ancestral menace that constantly
mirrors Philip's changing moods, reaching a crescendo of abject darkness
when the hot-headed romantic finally gives in to a murderous impulse on Rachel's
refusal to marry him.
The genius of Du Maurier's novel lies in the fact that, since the story is
told in the first person, from the perspective of someone who is clearly
not a reliable narrator, we never know for sure exactly who Rachel is or
what she is capable of doing. She could just as easily be an innocent
victim of circumstance as a scheming money-hungry opportunist, perhaps even
a cunning murderess. Our inability to divine Rachel's true nature is
the result of Philip's own muddled feelings about her, which are the result
of intense feelings of lust, jealousy and guilt - the extent of which are
not apparent until the drama has run its course (thus making a second viewing
of the film essential).
Koster's film makes a reasonable stab at capturing the essential ambiguity
of the source novel, but in this it is somewhat inhibited by the conventions
of film melodrama and limits of cinematic expression of this era, which tend
to favour a coldly objective approach to storytelling. More than anything,
it is the sheer power of Richard Burton's performance that propels our continually
shifting opinions of the titular heroine, forcing us to see her as Philip
sees her as his mood oscillates between intense loathing and crazed obsessive
desire. There are more than a few moments when Burton attains the dizzying
heights of his greatest screen performances - in such films as Tony Richardson's
Look Back In Anger (1958)
and Peter Glenville's
Becket (1964)
- and throughout this dazzling histrionic tour de force he is ably matched
by his co-star - a stunningly beautiful, utterly beguiling Olivia de Havilland.
Burton could hardly have hoped for a better start to his Hollywood career.
Acclaimed by the critics, he received the Golden Globe for New Star of the
Year and his first Oscar nomination (as Best Supporting Actor), with the
film also nominated for Academy Awards in the categories of Best Art Direction,
Best Cinematography and Best Costume Design on a black and white film.
In contrast to Burton's wildly tempestuous Philip, de Havilland's Rachel
has such a level of measured restraint that you just can't help suspecting
her of dark ulterior motives. She says and does nothing to justify
our suspicions and yet we cannot stop ourselves from reading malevolent intent in her all
too obvious attempt to claw back some money after her husband's sudden demise.
(It is interesting to note that de Havilland's sister Joan Fontaine had played
the reverse role to Rachel in Hitchcock's psychological thriller
Suspicion (1941), being the woman
who suspects she is going to be murdered by her seemingly devoted husband
- a surprisingly inscrutable Cary Grant). It is only in the final reel
of the film that we begin to realise we may have completely misread Rachel,
so easily have we been led astray by her tormentor's paranoid delusions.
With two Oscar wins already under belt, Olivia de Havilland had reached the
summit of her art by this point in her career. After establishing herself
in the 1930s in a series of cute ingénue roles, she gravitated to
much more complex and controversial characters in the 1940s, culminating
in her Oscar-winning performance in William Wyler's proto-feminist masterpiece
The Heiress (1949). In the wake of this rip-roaring success
de Havilland was perfectly positioned to take on more ambiguous roles and
the heroine of Du Maurier's
Cousin Rachel was tailor-made for her.
With Burton doing his damnedest to steal every scene, giving free rein to
his surging Welsh passions at the least provocation, his co-star still continues
to hold our attention (if not our sympathies) with a performance of remarkable
subtlety. At no point in the film does de Havilland allow us to reach
Rachel's inner soul but there is just a fleeting glimpse of the Machiavellian
fiend she would go on to play a decade later, in Robert Aldrich's southern
Gothic melodrama
Hush...Hush,
Sweet Charlotte (1964).
© James Travers 2023
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Southern England in the 1830s. In his early twenties, Philip Ashley
lives on the large Cornish estate of his cousin Ambrose whilst the latter,
his guardian since childhood, resides in Florence for health reasons.
Not long after Ambrose gets married in Italy, Philip begins to receive disturbing
letters from him with the news that his condition has been worsened by both
his physicians and his wife Rachel. Philip's concern takes him to Florence,
but he arrives too late. He learns from Guido Rainaldi, a close friend
of Rachel, that Ambrose has recently died and has bequeathed his entire estate
to Philip. Even though Rachel has inherited nothing from her husband,
Philip is convinced that she murdered him for his money - ignoring the opinion
of Mr Kendall, Philip's kindly godfather, that Ambrose most likely died from
a brain tumour.
A few months later, Rachel shows up unexpectedly in Cornwall, appealing to
Mr Kendall for financial support. On meeting her for the first time,
Philip sees her not as a scheming murderess but as an innocent woman cruelly
dealt with by fate. To make amends for his uncle's ill-treatment of
her, he grants the impoverished widow an annual allowance of five thousand
pounds, which he increases on learning that this is insufficient for her
needs. Mr Kendall's warnings that Rachel is sending large sums of money
out of the country and has a reputation in Italy for loose living falls on
deaf ears. On hearing that Ambrose had intended leaving his whole estate
to his wife, the now hopelessly infatuated Philip feels bound to hand over
all that he has inherited to Rachel, on condition that the estate reverts
to him if she subsequently marries.
The young man apparently has nothing to lose, believing she has given her
assent to marrying him. In fact, Rachel has no intention of wedding
her infatuated cousin and this apparent rejection instantly revives Philip's
mistrust of her. As he recovers from a sudden attack of delirium, through
which Rachel dutifully nurses him back to health, Philip is now certain of
his cousin's intention of killing him, allowing her to marry her secret lover
Rainaldi without losing her fortune. Certain that he can find evidence
of Rachel's malign intentions, Philip makes a thorough search of her room,
not realising - or caring - that he has already sent his cousin to her death...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.