Film Review
Of the films that Frank Borzage made during the sound era, few match the
intense lyricism and biting emotional power of
Man's Castle. It is a classic
Borzage tale of love triumphing over adversity and human frailty, and
the director handles the subject with a delicacy and warmth that is
surpassed only by his great silent masterpieces. The setting may
be the Great Depression, one of the bleakest times in American history,
but Borzage crafts a modern fairy tale which, whilst not overlooking
the extreme hardship of the time, is exquisitely romantic, without a
whiff of bogus sentimentality. Although it was made on a
ludicrously small budget (so small that Borzage was unable to shoot some scenes on
location and had to make do with some shoddy back-projection), the film
offers both an authentic recreation of Depression era America and a
visually captivating portrait of two people falling in love, one which
comes close to matching the searing poetry of F.W. Murnau's
Sunrise
(1927).
The casting of Spencer Tracy and Loretta Young as the romantic leads is
inspired and both actors give exceptional performances, each
convincingly portraying a character who struggles to conceal his or her
true feelings beneath a mask of stoical imperturbability.
Although Tracy and Young were both married (to other people) at the time, they could not
help falling in love during the make of this film, and their mutual
feelings show in virtually every shot where they appear together.
Tracy has rarely looked this vulnerable on screen and his character's
attempts to reconcile his need for freedom with his need for love have
such poignancy that you wonder if he is exposing something of his own
personal angst.
Man's Castle
is testament both to Borzage's undying belief in the redeeming power of
love and to his well-earned reputation as a filmmaking poet of rare ability.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Frank Borzage film:
Magnificent Doll (1946)
Film Synopsis
During the Great Depression, a homeless young woman named Trina meets a
dapper man in a New York park one evening. The man, Bill, takes
pity on Trina and invites her to dine with him at an expensive
restaurant. After a sumptuous meal, Bill declares that he is in
the same predicament as Trina and reveals that he only just gets by on
the little he earns. Bill takes Trina to a Hooverville shanty
town, one of many that blight the city, offering a last refuge to the
poor and homeless. Bill only intends to stick around until
Trina is settled but he soon realises that she is deeply in love with
him. When he learns that Trina is pregnant with his child, Bill
makes up his mind to run away...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.