Film Review
By the late 1930s, the French born actor Charles Boyer was an even bigger star in America than
he was in his native France. His success in
Algiers (1938), the hugely popular
American re-make of the French classic
Pépé-le-Moko
(1937), had made him one of Hollywood's most bankable leading men, so it
is hardly surprising that he should end up being cast opposite some of
the most prominent actresses of the time. In
Love Affair, the charismatic Boyer
shares the limelight with Irene Dunne in what is easily one of the most
successful screen partnerships of his career. To what is on paper
a fairly humdrum melodrama (it's the classic scenario of love found
then tragically lost) both actors bring considerable charm and finesse, and Boyer
has rarely given a more sensitive and poignant performance than he does
here.
Leo McCarey directs the film with his customary flair and sensitivity, the
changing mood of the piece subtly underscored by Rudolph Maté's
atmospheric lighting and Roy Webb's eloquent music. As in
McCarey's subsequent sentimental comedy-dramas
Going
My Way (1944) and
The Bells of St. Mary's (1945),
song plays an important part in the narrative, most notably in the
memorable sequence in which Irene Dunne croons
Plaisir d'amour to an admiring
Boyer. The aching sense of loss we feel when the scene is later
replayed, with Dunne tragically absent, is almost unbearable.
Love Affair was both a significant
critical and commercial success, receiving no fewer than six Oscar
nominations in 1940 (in categories that included Best Picture, Best
Writing and Best Actress). It was subsequently remade by McCarey
as
An Affair to Remember
(1957), with Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr in the lead roles. In
1994, Glenn Gordon Caron directed a further remake (keeping the
original title), starring Warren Beatty and Annette Bening.
Needless to say, neither of these can hold a candle to Leo McCarey's
original film.
© James Travers 2013
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Michel Marnet, France's most eligible playboy bachelor, is on his way
to America by liner so that he can marry the fabulously wealthy heiress
Lois Clarke. During the voyage, he strikes up an acquaintance
with another young woman, Terry McKay, who is also engaged to be
married. Within no time, Michel and Terry realise they are in
love with each other, an impression that is reinforced when they stop
off briefly at Madeira to visit Michel's elderly grandmother.
Once they have reached New York, Michel and Terry agree to meet up at
the Empire State Building in six months' time; if either one of them
fails to honour the rendezvous, the other must accept that their affair
was no more than a passing infatuation. As Michel embarks on a
career as a painter, Terry finds work as a cabaret singer. Six
months later, Terry hastens to the Empire State Building, certain that
Michel will be there to greet her. Just when the couple are set
for a happy future, disaster strikes...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.