Film Review
A Letter to Three Wives is a
marvellously witty and incisive study of marital strife, scripted and
directed with great flair by Joseph L. Mankiewicz, one of Hollywood's
most talented writer-directors. The impeccable script is replete
with the kind of sophisticated comic dialogue that is as rewarding to
the discerning spectator as a glass of the finest claret, and it is
also pretty spot on in its reading of the psychology of married
couples. The film also works as a social satire, mocking the
mania of the middle classes to conform to some kind of shallow ideal of
taste and respectability. It also finds time to hammer out a
vitriolic critique of popular entertainment (in this case, heavily
sponsored radio shows) and a lament for society's under-appreciation of
education - things that are just as valid today.
The calibre of the writing and direction is matched by the
near-faultless performances from its magnificent ensemble cast, which
includes a particularly memorable turn from the stunning Linda Darnell,
who draws our attention like a precious jewel in a bed of
gossamer. Darnell's sparky scenes with Paul Douglas are the
most poignant and effective, and not just because they are the best
written.
Mankiewicz won the won Best Director and Best Screenplay Oscars in 1950
for this film, an achievement he repeated the following year with his
next film,
All About Eve
(1950). 20th Century Fox boss, Darryl F. Zanuck, originally
wanted Ernst Lubitsch to direct the film. Zanuck would later
accuse Mankiewicz of almost bankrupting the studio when his
ill-conceived 1963 blockbuster
Cleopatra
bombed at the box office.
© James Travers 2008
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Next Joseph L. Mankiewicz film:
House of Strangers (1949)
Film Synopsis
One bright Saturday morning, three friends, Deborah, Rita and Lora, are
about to take a party of school children on a riverside picnic when a
messenger hands them a letter. The letter is from their mutual
friend, Addie Ross, who simply states that she has just stolen one of
their husbands. Each woman has reason to think her husband may
want to leave her. Deborah is anxious that she cannot live up to
her husband's expectations at social occasions. Rita knows that
her husband resents her pursuing a career as a writer for lowbrow radio
shows. And Lora has long suspected that her husband felt she only
married him for his money. Their daytrip over, the three wives
make a hasty return to their homes, where one of them will have an
unpleasant surprise...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.