Film Review
Combining kitchen sink realism with the dream-like expressionism that
was becoming noticeable in much European art house cinema at the time,
The Pumpkin Eater is a profoundly
unsettling examination of a crumbling marriage within the starched
confines of bourgeois respectability. Harold Pinter's superlative
(and often chilling) dialogue (adapted from a novel by Penelope
Mortimer), together with Oswald Morris's distinctive cinematography,
brings a fresh, somewhat surreal dimension to a familiar tale of
infidelity and marital breakdown, the stylistic touches emphasising the
psychological anxiety of the heroine as her life dissolves into an
existential void.
Jack Clayton directed many notable films, including the social realist
classic
Room at the Top (1959) and the
genuinely frightening thriller
The Innocents (1961), before
his descent into Hollywood mediocrity with
The Great Gatsby (1974). He
made
The Pumpkin Eater during
his inspired
auteur middle
period, presumably after having been influenced by his European
contemporaries. The film's style and subject matter clearly owe
something to Michelangelo Antonioni (see for example
La
Notte, 1961), although the impact of the French New Wave
can also be felt, not only from Alain Resnais's
L'Année dernière à
Marienbad (1961), but also Louis Malle's
Le Feu follet and Jean-Luc
Godard's
Le Mépris, both released
in 1963.
Anne Bancroft won the Best Actress award at Cannes in 1964 for her
stellar work on this film, but hers is just one of a bevy of
exceptional performances from a remarkable cast. Peter Finch and
James Mason are every bit as compelling as Bancroft, each giving the most cynical
and twisted portrayal of middle-class masculinity imaginable (which is
exactly how Bancroft's character would see them, through
the prism of psychological meltdown created by her husband's infidelity).
Cedric Hardwicke is excellent in his last film role (he died not long
after the film was released in 1964) and there is a remarkable, almost
visceral turn from Yootha Joyce, who deserves to be far better
remembered for roles such as this instead of the mediocre sitcoms she
devoted so much of her time to in during the 1970s. These characteristically
Pinter-esque performances help to make
The Pumpkin Eater one of the most
innovative and disturbing British films of the 1960s.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Jack Clayton film:
The Great Gatsby (1974)
Film Synopsis
As middle-age steals over her, Jo Armitage finds herself trapped in a
stale marriage and, in a state of profound melancholia, she looks back
on her life. She remembers her early life with her present
husband, Jake, an aspiring young screenwriter. They were so very
much in love and Jake wasn't remotely put off by the fact that Jo had
five children from her two previous marriages. But as the
years pass, the couple drift apart, Jake's success in his work merely
accentuating the rift between them. Realising that her husband
has started to have extra-marital affairs, Jo sinks into depression and
begins to lose interest in life...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.