Film Review
The success of
The Man in Grey
prompted Gainsborough Pictures to make a costume melodrama in a similar
vein, this time an adaptation of Michael Sadleir's popular novel
Fanny by Gaslight. The film
was directed by Anthony Asquith who was, at the time, one of Britain's
leading filmmakers, having distinguished himself with films such as the
definitive screen adaptation of Bernard Shaw's
Pygmalion
(1938) and the wartime drama
We Dive
at Dawn (1943).
Asquith had a genius for extracting the maximum value from a limited
budget and
Fanny by Gaslight
has the look of a pretty lavish Hollywood production, with
authentic-looking sets and costumes that richly evoke late Victorian
England. Solid performances from the three leads (Calvert,
Stewart and Mason) just about compensate for the dry screenplay,
although the story drags towards its middle and fails to deliver the
impact of its source novel.
The film is noted for its sexual candour, unusual in a British film of
this period, and would have been well-received by a contemporary female
audience. Having had to hold the fort at home during the war,
women were becoming empowered and, perhaps for the first time, saw that
true sexual equality was within their grasp.
Fanny by Gaslight, with its strong
central female character, may have fuelled this female liberationist
sentiment and helped to light the touchfire that led to the
ensuing sexual revolution.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Anthony Asquith film:
The Browning Version (1951)
Film Synopsis
In the 1880s, Fanny Hopwood returns to her home in London after
spending ten years at a boarding school. Her reunion with her
parents and sister is shortlived, however. Through an altercation
with Lord Manderstoke, Fanny's father is knocked down and killed by a
horse-drawn carriage. It becomes public knowledge that the
Hopwoods' income derived from a brothel which they ran on their
premises, and the disgrace that ensues drives Fanny's mother into an
early grave. Fanny is sent to work as a servant at the house of
Clive Seymore, a prominent cabinet minister who reveals that he is
Fanny's natural father. When Manderstoke threatens to
provoke a scandal by revealing his connection with a brothel owner,
Seymore commits suicide, having arranged for his friend and advisor
Harry Somerford to take care of Fanny. Harry discovers that he is
in love with Fanny and asks her to marry him. Once more,
Manderstoke appears to threaten Fanny's happiness by provoking her
lover into accepting a duel...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.