Film Review
Regarded by some as George Stevens' finest film,
A Place in the Sun remains one of
the all-time classics of Hollywood and an inspired
piece of filmmaking. The dream pairing of
Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor, the two most photogenic actors
of the period, contributed to the film's enormous commercial and
critical success, and helped to establish Stevens as one of the
foremost filmmakers of his generation. Poignant, lyrical and
masterfully composed, this is a film which explores complex social and
moral themes within the framework of a compelling love story that can
leave no audience unmoved.
Stevens initially had a hard job persuading Paramount to make this
film, an adaptation of Theodore Dreiser's 1925 novel
An American Tragedy. The
studio had already adapted the novel in 1931 (under the same title as
the novel), with direction by Josef von Sternberg, but this had not
been a great success. Dreiser's novel was itself based on an
infamous
cause célèbre,
the 1906 murder of 20-year-old Grace Brown by Chester Gillette, a poor
relation of a wealthy industrialist. Although sceptical that the
story would appeal to a contemporary audience, Paramount finally agreed
to allow Stevens to make the film, providing he did not use the
title of Dreiser's novel. The poetic alternative
A Place in the Sun was suggested
by associate producer Ivan Moffat, having been inspired by Hitler's
assertion that it was Germany's turn to have its place in the sun.
The casting of Montgomery Clift as the male lead was considered a safe
bet. A promising young method actor, he had distinguished himself
in a handful of films, including the Howard Hawks western
Red
River (1948) and William Wyler's
The Heiress (1949). More
controversial was Stevens' decision to offer the two principal female
roles to Elizabeth Taylor and Shelley Winters. At the time,
Taylor was a mere 17 years old and was only just beginning to move away
from the child roles, in films such as
Lassie Come Home (1943) and
National Velvet (1944), that had
brought her fame at an early age.
A Place in the Sun was a
career-defining film for Taylor, allowing her to make the transition to
serious adult roles with consummate ease.
Shelley Winters was by no means the obvious choice for the part of
Alice Tripp. Prior to this film, she had fashioned for herself a
reputation as a blonde sex symbol, but she was determined to play the
part of the dowdy Alice in Stevens' film and went to great lengths to
persuade the director that she was right for the part. Even
whilst making the film, Stevens had to fight against Winters' natural
inclination to play the glamour puss and would often mislead her to get
the performance he wanted. Just as Liz Taylor's image was
radically altered by this film, so was Shelley Winters', although the
change was perhaps less flattering than the latter actress may have
wished. It is worth noting that Raymond Burr appears in
this film as a tenacious attorney, almost a dry run for his
best-known role as Perry Mason in the popular TV series which would begin airing on
American television in 1957.
At the 1952 Academy Awards ceremony,
A
Place in the Sun was nominated for nine Oscars and took six
awards, in the categories of Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best
Music, Best Editing, Best B&W Cinematography and Best
Editing. Both Montgomery Clift and Shelley Winters were nominated
for Oscars, but did not win the award. 1951 was an exceptional year for
American cinema and Stevens' film was up against strong competition,
from such films as
An American in Paris (which
took the Best Picture award),
The African Queen (which won
Humphrey Bogart the Best Actor award) and
A Streetcar Named Desire (for
which Vivien Leigh won the Best Actress award).
A Place in the Sun is not just
a powerfully moving melodrama offering a wry comment on the
hollowness of the American dream. It is also a
superbly crafted piece of cinema, mesmerising with its very distinctive
visual style. George Stevens began his career as a
cinematographer (famously working on many of Laurel and Hardy's films
before the war), so that when he became a director he had acquired a
keenly developed visual sense, which he used to bring texture and depth
to his films. Note this film's innovative use of long overlapping
dissolves, which takes us seemlessly between the two world that are
inhabited by the central protagonist (played by Montgomery Clift) - the
depressingly drab milieu represented by one of his two lovers and the
glamorous alternative that the other offers. Stevens' approach
has an almost Brechtian simplicity. He uses the camera objectively, as
a passive observer, leaving it to the spectator to draw his own
conclusions rather than have his mind made up by the filmmaker.
Could this be why the film is so engrossing and stands up so well to
multiple viewings?
In stark contrast to the harshly realistic interpretation that Von
Sternberg brought to his adaptation of Dreiser's novel,
A Place in the Sun has a haunting
romanticist feel to it. As in a Greek tragedy or a classical
romantic novel, the fate of the characters in this film appears to be
pre-ordained and there is nothing they can do to alter their
destiny. The choices that George Eastman appears to have are mere
illusion. In reality, his trajectory is pre-determined, perhaps
by some divine influence, perhaps by his own psychological flaws.
There can be no deviation from the path he must tread. The final
sequence involving Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor has a
particular resonance, a particular poignancy. The actors were
very much in love but they would themselves be parted by tragic circumstances.
Such is life.
© James Travers 2010
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Next George Stevens film:
Shane (1953)