Film Review
All That Heaven Allows is
quintessential Douglas Sirk. Not only is it a superbly crafted
piece of cinema but it contains Sirk's most scathing critique of
contemporary Western values, a subversive anti-bourgeois broadside
dressed up as a Mills & Boon-style melodrama. The story it
tells is the stuff of trashy cliché-laden weepies, and yet Sirk
masterly transforms this into a devastatingly poignant love story in
which a lonely middleclass woman is torn between her need for personal
fulfilment and what she thinks society expects from her. This is
Sirk's most powerful indictment of materialism and social prejudice, as
well as being one of his most beautifully constructed works. It
continues to have a powerful resonance and has been the inspiration for
several other films, most notably Rainer Werner Fassbinder's
Fear Eats the Soul (1974).
After their successful pairing in Sirk's earlier
Magnificent Obsession (1954),
Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson are brought together for a second romantic
entanglement. Hudson is far more convincing, somewhat less
wooden, than in his earlier Sirkian tear-jerker, although, as before,
he is out-classed and out-performed by Wyman, who is simply stunning in
this film. In one of her finest performances, Jane Wyman conveys
with harrowing realism the trauma and helplessness of a woman who
cannot escape from the prison in which her family, her friends and her
own insecurities have placed her after the death of her husband.
Just as the ancient Egyptians immured the wife of the dead pharaoh in
his tomb, so Cary Scott is walled up in her suburban palace, condemned
to the living death that is daytime TV. Wyman plays the part perfectly and with such
sensitivity that when the story reaches its dramatic peaks you cannot
help succumbing to the film's overwhelming emotional force and reach
for the Kleenex.
What is perhaps most surprising about
All
That Heaven Allows is how it is staged and shot.
Bizarrely, rather than underplay the kitsch unreality inherent in the
story, Sirk seems determined to embrace and accentuate it. He
undercuts the realism of the drama, using unnaturally garish colour
schemes that emphasise the artificiality of the heroine's cosy
bourgeois world. The sets and the way in which they are shot
would seem to be more appropriate for a children's fairytale than an
adult melodrama. Yet this isn't whimsy on the part of Sirk and his
production team but a subtle form of expressionism intended to convey
the personality traits and interior states of the protagonists,
a device that works remarkably well.
A recurring visual motif is the lonely widow Cary confined within the
four walls of her metaphorical and actual prison - the most inspired
example being her reflected image in the screen of a television
set. Whilst Hudson's Ron appears to epitomise the free spirit,
Wyman's Cary is continually portrayed as the prisoner, unable to give
up her creature comforts and the approbation of her friends, even for
love. But are Cary and Ron really so different? In
one telling scene, Cary asks her lover if he would rather she were a
man. Perhaps Ron isn't quite the contented individualist he
pretends to be. If what Cary hinted at is true, it look that he
too will have to make compromises to avoid being a social outcast -
just as the actor playing him would have to in his own life. The
sad reality is that none of us can ever be truly free; we are all
fettered by the arbitrary conventions and flawed standards that society
imposes upon us. Freedom is the greatest illusion of all,
as Douglas Sirk reminds us again and again in his beguiling works
of cinema.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Douglas Sirk film:
Written on the Wind (1956)
Film Synopsis
Cary Scott is a middle-aged New England widow. Well provided for
by her late husband, she leads a comfortable life but is anxious over
what the future may hold for her. Her grown-up children and her
prim, snobbish friends encourage her to remarry, not for passion, but
for companionship. Cary feels increasingly isolated and wonders
if she will ever know happiness again. Then, one day, she notices
a handsome young man pruning the trees in her front garden. The
man, Ron Kirby, is much younger than she is; he is certainly not part
of her social milieu; and yet she feels strangely drawn to him.
When he invites her back to his home so that he can show her his
silver-tipped spruce, she accepts willingly. Despite the
differences in their ages and social positions, Cary and Ron cannot
help falling in love. But when Ron asks her to marry him, Cary
hesitates. Accepting the proposal would mean giving up her large
house. Her children would reject her. And, worst of all,
she would become a social pariah. It is too high a price to pay,
so Cary tells Ron she cannot marry him and they part. It is not
long before Cary realises that she has made the wrong choice...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.