Film Review
With knockout performances from two of Hollywood's finest, Joan
Crawford and John Garfield,
Humoresque
is easily one of Warner Brothers' classier forays into weepy melodrama
territory. The film's two star performers are at their
hard-bitten best and complement one another superbly, Crawford's
predatory vamp well-matched against Garfield's driven music
maker. In this clash of titanic egos, it isn't initially apparent
who will crack first, but once music from Bizet's
Carmen fills our ears we see at
once who is intended to play the ill-fated Don José role, and it
isn't Garfield.
As great as Crawford and Garfield are, the real star of
Humoresque is the music, which not
only propels the narrative and adds texture and emotional depth to the
drama but also serves as the third character in the eternal
triangle. Few films have used music so imaginatively or so
effectively as this one for dramatic purposes. Frank Waxman's
score, complemented by his arrangement of various well-known classical
pieces, is what most gives the film its heart-wrenching intensity and
sheer lyrical power.
Humoresque
is a near-prefect fusion of musical composition and dramatic art, opera
re-born as cinema.
The one major technical challenge faced by the production team was how
to convince an audience that John Garfield is a world class violist
when in fact he had never held a violin in his life. The virtuoso
violinist Isaac Stern recorded the music played by Garfield's character
and acted as an advisor to director Jean Negulesco. The
close-up shots in which Garfield is apparently playing the violin were
realised with Garfield standing with his hands held behind his back and
two musicians beside him each lending a hand to play the
instrument. In the long shots, Garfield is substituted by a
violinist double. Careful editing and camerawork create the
illusion that Garfield is another Yehudi Menuhin.
As you would expect in a prestige Hollywood production,
Humoresque offers not only two
great lead actors but also a superlative supporting cast. Oscar
Levant is a delight as Garfield's wisecracking buddy, lightening the
mood to prevent
Humoresque
from being totally humourless. As Garfield's compassionate
mother, Ruth Nelson provides much of the film's emotional stimulus, her
character's no nonsense decency making Crawford's selfish man-eater
appear all the more vile and pitiful.
Jean Negulesco's direction is understated but effective, relying on the
performances, the music and Ernest Haller's moody cinematography to
tell the story and gently build the drama to its operatic climax.
The tense, tragic denouement shows Negulesco at his most inspired and
compassionate. Smart inter-cutting between two locations
skilfully resolves the fate of the two lovers, the tragedy of the
moment heightened by the aural backdrop of music from Wagner's
Tristan and Isolde. Here we
see Joan Crawford at her most devastating. Once her character's
tough exterior has been shattered and trodden into the ground, we see
her as she really is, a woman desperately in need of love but incapable
of giving it. Yes, even a Teflon-coated bitch can make you cry.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis
A moment of personal tragedy prompts concert violinist Paul Boray to
re-evaluate his life. He recalls happier times when, as a small
boy, his mother gave him a violin for his birthday. After years
of dedicated study, Paul becomes an accomplished violinist, but he
finds it impossible to find work so he can pay his way. One
day, his pianist friend Sid Jeffers takes him along to a party hosted
by the wealthy socialite Helen Wright. The latter is trapped in a
loveless marriage with an older man and finds the headstrong young
violin player a tempting proposition. She decides to act as
Paul's patron, financing his debut concert and providing him with a
manager. Through Helen's money and contacts, Paul soon becomes an
established musician, and he shows his gratitude in just the way Helen
hoped he might. But just when Helen thinks she has won her man,
she realises that she will never be able to compete with his one true
love, his music...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.