Film Review
John Van Druten's stage adaptation of Kathryn Forbes's novel
Mama's Bank Account proved to be
one of the most successful Broadway productions of the 1940s, running
to over 700 performances. George Stevens' film version was no less
popular and has long been widely regarded as one of the best
examples of a now all but forgotten genre, the family melodrama.
Stevens may seem an odd choice to direct the film, given his background
in comedy, but he had already shown he had a penchant for melodrama
with the popular
Penny Serenade (1941), starring
Irene Dunne and Cary Grant. One of RKO's most lavish productions,
I Remember Mama boasts a
distinguished cast, headed by Dunne at her most awesome, and is one of
George Stevens' most technically accomplished films. The film is
perhaps a little dated by its slow pace and banal subject matter (it does
admittedly overplay the sentiment card in a few scenes), but its
sympathetic portrayal of an ordinary family struggling against the
small adversities of life is one that still has considerable appeal.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next George Stevens film:
A Place in the Sun (1951)
Film Synopsis
Katrin Hanson is an aspiring writer has just completed her first novel, a
nostalgic account of her family life in San Francisco, in around 1910.
After immigrating from Norway, Katrin's family found it difficult to get
by, and it was only through her mother Martha's careful management of the
family's modest earnings that they were able to make ends meet. Martha,
her husband Lars and their three daughters, Katrin, Christine and Dagmar,
all have to make sacrifices so that their son Nels can continue his education
at high school.
Marta's sister Trina creates a sensation when she reveals she is going to
get married to an undertaker, and she coerces Marta into breaking this surprising
news to their sisters, Jenny and Sigrid. One painful episode that Katrin
remembers was when her younger sister Dagmar had to go into hospital to be
treated for mastoiditis. Despite the intervention of her kind Uncle
Chris, Martha is forbidden from visiting her daughter until the treatment
has been completed. Martha gets her own way by adopting a disguise.
Dagmar makes a full recovery but on her return home she finds her beloved
cat has fallen ill...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.