Film Review
Just when her film career had all but been written off after a string
of disappointments in the late 1940s, Bette Davis bounced back with
All About Eve (1950), with the
force of a tornado. Professional success came with personal
happiness as she embarked on her fourth marriage, with the actor Gary
Merrill. It was in this state of happy delirium that Davis agreed
to appear in a film which, had her critical faculties been a little
shaper, she would have rejected in an instant. The lure of an
expenses-paid trip to England and the chance to star in a prestige
British film alongside her new husband must have been
irresistible. Davis was even allowed to choose who would direct
the film, and she opted for Irving Rapper, someone she knew would not
intimidate her. Rapper had directed Davis in three of her best
films -
Now, Voyager (1942),
The Corn Is Green (1945) and
Deception
(1946) - and there was no reason to think they wouldn't strike lucky
again.
Unfortunately, there was one major obstacle to overcome: the
script. Adapted from a play by Leslie Sands,
Another Man's Poison suffered from
being located in one setting, the main protagonist's living room.
Attempts to broaden out the narrative and make it less theatrical
resulted in the plot becoming even more uneven and far-fetched, to the
point that the storyline and characters in it scarcely had any
credibility at all. Even though endless rewrites to the script
were undertaken whilst filming was underway, the film never came
together in the way that Davis had hoped. It was ludicrously
contrived B-movie fare that not even a twice Oscar-winning star could
salvage, although she gave it a damn good try. Cinema needs its Bette noir.
To see
Another Man's Poison
at its best you have to pretend it is a black comedy and not a straight
noir thriller. Davis probably had this in mind when she realised
how dire the script was - how else can we account for her wild,
eye-rolling bouts of self-parody? Davis was never happier than
when playing the bad girl and here she seems to be having the time of
her life, snatching a handsome young thing from her pretty secretary
one minute, engineering a cold-blooded murder the next. Lines
that would have been unbearable had they been spoken by any other
actress have a delicious malevolence when uttered by Davis playing the
homicidal vamp. For once in her career, Bette Davis was able to
throw herself into a character with absolutely no redeeming features
(apart from an obsessive devotion to her horse) and she appears to love
every moment of it. It is a foretaste of the evil harridans the
actress would go on to play so brilliantly in the twilight of her
career, beginning with the unforgettable
What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
(1962). One man's third rate thriller is another man's Bette fest.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Janet Frobisher is a successful crime writer who lives in a remote
manor house on the Yorkshire moors. When her estranged husband
shows up unexpectedly having robbed a bank Janet poisons him with
medicine intended for her horse. She is wondering what to do next
when her husband's accomplice, George Bates, barges in, looking for a
hideout. Once Bates has helped her to dispose of her husband's
corpse, Janet reluctantly allows him to stay, although she is
unimpressed when he passes himself off as her husband. Tensions
are further strained when Janet's secretary Chris turns up with her
fiancé Larry to spend the weekend at Janet's house. When
Janet reveals that she and Larry have been having an affair, Chris
makes a hasty exit, providing Janet with a heaven-sent opportunity to
rid herself of the loathsome Mr Bates...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.