Film Review
One of the brightest of the MGM musicals came out of the bleakest
period in WWII, and no wonder it proved an enormous box office
hit.
Meet Me in St. Louis
is a magical film that has lost none of its charm, delighting with its
uplifting musical numbers, Vincente Minnelli's slick direction and the
heart-warming contributions from its stars, Judy Garland and 7-year-old
Margaret O'Brien. It's as light and fluffy as candyfloss, and
just as sweet.
It was whilst making this film that Vincente Minnelli and Judy Garland
first met and fell in love; they would marry the following year.
Make-up artist Dorothy Ponedel was responsible for Garland's new look,
transforming her from the adorable little girl of
The Wizard of Oz into a
stunning young woman. Garland's insecurities and emotional
instability began to take their toll during the making of this film,
although her performance is faultless and there is no hint of the
personal crises that would lead to her nervous breakdown a few years
later.
With its lavish sets and lush colour photography,
Meet Me in St. Louis evokes a
fairytale world that is about as far from the reality of 1900s America
as it is possible to get, yet this is exactly what a war-weary audience
wanted in 1944, a delightful pick-me-up that reminded them better days
lay ahead. Of the many songs the film offers, some have become
popular classics, including:
The
Trolley Song,
The Boy Next
Door and
Have Yourself a
Merry Little Christmas. It's a terrific feel-good film
that is sure to make you laugh and cry, although for maximum effect it has to be
seen late on Christmas Eve.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Vincente Minnelli film:
Madame Bovary (1949)
Film Synopsis
In 1903, St Louis is home to the Smith family, a typical middle-class
American household which comprises successful business man Alonzo
Smith, his wife Anna, their grown-up son Lon and four daughters, Rose,
Esther, Agnes and Tootie. Esther has developed a crush on the boy
next door, John Truett, and wonders how she can contrive their first
meeting. Rose is disappointed when her boyfriend in New York
fails to offer her the proposal of marriage she had been
expecting. Meanwhile, the youngest girls Agnes and Tootie
are busy getting themselves into trouble, as little girls might, by
trying to derail a trolley bus. Alas, this halcyon existence is
to come to an end when Mr Smith reveals that, owing to his promotion,
he and his family must move to New York. For Esther and her
sisters, it is as if their father has announced the end of the world...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.