Film Review
With its stagy compositions, long unbroken takes, limited camera
movement and heavy reliance on dialogue,
The Skin Game is almost the
complete antithesis of the kind of film that Alfred Hitchcock had been
making up until this point in his career. The film is obviously
an adaptation of a stage play - this one written by the popular British
writer John Galsworthy, of
Forsyte Saga
fame - and Hitchcock directs it almost as though it were a
modest stage production, with little of his usual flair and
inventiveness. The film is a curiosity piece for those
interested in Hitchcock's early work, nothing more.
Hitchcock had adapted many stage plays prior to this, but he had always
gone to great lengths to mask their theatrical origins, by using real
locations wherever possible and by using the camera to tell the story
rather than rely on pages of dialogue for exposition - examples
of this are to be found in
Downhill (1927) and
The Farmer's Wife (1928).
Viewed Today,
The Skin Game
is perhaps the most dated of the early Hitchcock films - partly because
its subject (a stodgy melodrama about class warfare) is dated, partly
because the performances are
old-school
theatrical, but mainly because it is stylistically bland. It is
reported that Hitchcock had, by this time, grown bored with adapting
stage plays and this film certainly shows it, in spades.
There had been a previous adaptation of
The Skin Game, released in 1921 and
directed by B.E. Doxat-Pratt. Two of the main players of this
film, Edmund Gwenn and Helen Haye, reprised their roles in the
Hitchcock version; they had also starred in the original London stage
play. Edmund Gwenn would appear in two further Hitchcock films,
Foreign Correspondent (1940) and
The Trouble with Harry (1955).
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Alfred Hitchcock film:
Number Seventeen (1932)
Film Synopsis
For centuries, the Hillcrists have ruled their own piece of rural
England, but times are changing and money now counts for more than
breeding. They are appalled when one of their neighbours, a
grubby self-made businessman named Hornblower, begins evicting
long-standing tenants from cottages to provide homes for his pottery
workers. Things come to a head when Hornblower announces his
decision to by an estate adjacent to the Hillcrists' so that he can
expand his business. When Hornblower succeeds in getting the land
by low cunning, the Hillcrists are furious, but Providence smiles on
them. They discover that Hornblower's daughter-in-law has a
dark secret, and intend to use this information to their advantage...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.