Film Review
The Forbidden Street, an
adaptation of Margery Sharp's novel
Britannia
Mews, is as much distinguished by its eccentric casting as its
exquisite production values. Made by Twentieth Century Fox at
Shepperton Studios, England, with funds frozen in Britain just after
the war, the film has a character that is neither British nor American,
something that confers on it an eerie nationless quality that allows it
to get away with a plot that treads a fine line between mundanity and
absurdity. Just about everyone involved in the production,
including its director and lead actors, regarded it as a
disappointment, but its unusual conflation of old fashioned period
melodrama and coy, unpredictably humorous rom-com is far from
unappealing. The things which, at the time of its production,
must have seemed like errors of judgement are now what give the film
its distinctive charm.
What a stroke of genius / folly / misguided economy (delete as you see
fit) to cast Dana Andrews in a double role, playing two English
characters who bear an uncanny resemblance to one another.
Andrews was, at the time, one of the American actors most closely
associated with film noir, famous for playing amiable tough cookies in
such films as
Laura (1944) and
Fallen
Angel (1945). So it was obvious he should being cast
as a drunken English artist and puppet-loving lawyer in a weird
Victorian melodrama. Andrews was so up for the challenge
presented by
The Forbidden Street
that he went to the trouble of perfecting an imitation of an English
accent - wasted effort as it turned out, since his dialogue ended up
being dubbed by an English actor for the British release of the
film.
And who better to play alongside an American pretending to be an
Englishman than Maureen O'Hara, the actress who had managed to pass her
Irish brogue off as Welsh in John Ford's
How Green Was My Valley
(1941)? Never mind the fact that, as a girl, O'Hara's character
in the film speaks with an upper crust English accent, and every member
of her family also talks like a fully paid up member of the English
aristocracy. Explaining away such obvious anomalies as this is
part of the fun of the film. Spending your entire childhood, and
then your whole adolescence, staring out of a window onto a slum alley
obviously turns you Irish, as well as making all the men you fall in love
with look alike, no matter how they talk.
In any event, the casting of Dana Andrews and Maureen O'Hara is pretty
well irrelevant, as the real star of the film is Sybil Thorndike, a
legendary thesp of the British stage who steals the show with her
portrayal of what is possibly the most congenitally vile hag to grace a
motion picture. Dame Sybil's wart-encrusted Mrs Mounsey
(affectionately referred to as 'The Sow') is in
a league of her own when it comes to scene-stealing villainy, and you
relish every moment that she is on screen. No overblown
caricature is this, but a grimly convincing depiction of depravity at
its worst - an outbreak of bubonic plague in human form. Another
incomparable British diva, Fay Compton, has the less gratifying duty of
playing O'Hara's mother (sans Irish accent), oddly paired off with
Wilfrid Hyde-White (another casting choice that requires a lunar leap of the
imagination). An unknown British actor (Anthony Tancred, making
his debut in a very short career) brings mirth aplenty as O'Hara's
'chinless wonder' brother - with a vocal inflection that betrays his
membership of the peerage, and the brains to match, he would not be out
of place in a P.G. Wodehouse novel.
And this is not to overlook the most important character in the film,
the Victorian slum alley in which the entire narrative is
located. This was the creation of Andrej Andrejew, whose previous
art direction credits included such inestimable films as Robert Wiene's
Crime and Punishment (1923)
and G.W. Pabst's
Pandora's Box (1929). The
set has such a scale, depth and vitality that, even though it is
entirely studio bound, it is as alive as any other character in the
film, its character gradually changing (for the better) with the
passing of time. When we first enter Britannia Mews, it is indeed
a place of morbid fascination, its aura of squalor and corruption felt
in every shot. Making the most of Andrejew's magnificent set, and
giving it an odd mix of menace and fairytale mystique, is Georges
Périnal's atmospheric photography. Périnal had a
distinguished career as a cinematographer, first in France when he
worked on such films as Rene Clair's
Sous les toits de Paris (1930)
and Jean Cocteau's
Le Sang d'un poète
(1932), and later in the UK on Zoltan Korda's
The Four Feathers (1939) and
Powell and Pressburger's
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
(1943).
Flawed as it is in many respects,
The
Forbidden Street makes up for most of its sins and is an
engaging piece that delights with its intermittent moments of (mostly)
serendipitous brilliance. No sooner has Dame Sybil been
kicked unceremoniously out of the frame than a collection of adorable
French marionettes spring up and grab our attention (puppeteering being
another skill that Dana Andrews appears to have acquired for the making
of this film). Much comedy is milked from Andrews and O'Hara's
unusual sleeping arrangements (he seems to prefer the company of
puppets), leading to a superb pay-off at the end of the film.
Director Jean Negulesco seems to have no idea whether he is directing a
comedy, a melodrama or a pantomime, so he just lets each scene decide
for itself which emotional chord to go for. The result is a so-so
film invigorated by a dose of charming anarchy, without which it could
so well have ended up as drearily prosaic.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
As a child, Adelaide Culver would gaze in fascination from her bedroom
window at the slum alley Britannia Mews which ran behind her family's
house in London. When, as a young woman, she chooses to marry a
penniless artist, Henry Lambert, against her family's wishes, she is
forced to take up residence in the Mews. The allure of marriage
soon wears off when Henry, unable to find inspiration, takes to
drink. A row ends with Adelaide accidentally pushing her husband
down a staircase, resulting in his death. A wicked neighbour, Mrs
Mousey, threatens to tell the police Adelaide deliberately killed her
husband unless she remains in the Mews and pays her a regular
allowance. Some time later, Adelaide meets an unsuccessful young
lawyer, Gilbert Lauderdale, who is the exact image of her former
husband. In return for chasing Mrs Mousey away, Adelaide invites
Gilbert to live with her at her home in the Mews. Despite their
mutual attraction, the couple sleep in separate rooms because Gilbert
is married to another woman, albeit one who left him many years
ago. Gilbert is delighted to discover a set of marionettes
created by Henry Lambert and gives up his job as a lawyer to run what
soon becomes a popular puppet theatre. Just when everything is
going well for Adelaide Gilbert's wife suddenly shows up on her
doorstep...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.