Writers: W. Somerset Maugham, Albert Lewin
Composer: Dimitri Tiomkin
Starring: George Sanders, Herbert Marshall, Doris Dudley, Eric Blore, Albert Bassermann, Florence Bates, Steven Geray, Elena Verdugo
More info: IMDb
Tagline: "Women are strange little beasts - you can treat them like dogs, beat them till your arms ache and still they love you." says Charles Strickland
Plot: Loosely inspired from Gauguin's life, the story of Charles Strickland, a middle-aged stockbrocker who abandons his middle-classed life, his family, his duties to start painting, what he has always wanted to do. He is from now on a awful human being, wholly devoted to his ideal: beauty.
My rating: 6.5/10
Will I watch it again? No.
George Sanders is the subject of the film and gets the highest billing but he's got little screen time considering. Are you surprised he plays a cad? Typecasting? What makes this performance different is that he's not charming and exudes a coldness without possibility of warmth. He's emotionless which is interesting to see from him. In other films where's he's a downright bastard, there's a certain playful charisma that shines through. Not with the character of Charles Strickland. The film is largely told in flashback through Geoffrey Wolfe (Marshall) as a novelist who tries to understand the man whose greatness was discovered after his death. There is A LOT of narration. It gets tedious after a while and it feels like the 88 minute running time can't finish fast enough. That is until a turn of events that takes the story down a darker path which finds a small bright spot before it blackens deeper. It's not pretty but it does make for a more compelling film. I doubt that we're supposed to like Charles but it's also hard to find anything sympathetic in Sanders' performance. Maybe that was the point. He led a tragic life striving to find one truth which he struggled with until almost the end of his life. It's an odd picture in some regards but simultaneously a curious and periodically compelling one.
No comments:
Post a Comment