Film Review
Any doubts as to Cary Grant's claims to be a serious actor are firmly
laid to rest in this sombre yet intensely moving melodrama, the first
film to be directed by the acclaimed playwright and screenwriter
Clifford Odets.
None But
the Lonely Heart earned Grant the second of his two Best
Actor Oscar nominations (he never actually won the award but received an
Honorary Oscar in 1970), for a performance that is widely considered
his best. Sporting a plausible imitation of a Cockney accent
(last heard in
Gunga Din, 1939), Grant
positively devours Odets' slightly overwrought screen adaptation of
Richard Llewellyn's novel and, in a role that is a world apart from the
kind he is known for, he plays havoc with our heartstrings, so
convincing is he as a young man struggling to come to terms with the
crushing limitations of his working class origins.
Grant's is not the only captivating performance offered by the
film. Odets somehow persuaded Ethel Barrymore to take a break
from her successful stage run and return to the cinema after a ten year
hiatus, winning the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her
devastating portrayal of Grant's devoted mother. Now pretty well
typecast as the villain after his standout performance in
Watch on the Rhine (1943),
George Coulouris was the obvious casting choice for the part of the
sadistic gangster boss who lures Grant away from the straight narrow,
and once again he does not disappoint. With Jane Wyatt, June
Duprez and Barry Fitzgerald thrown into the mix, all giving of their
best,
None But the Lonely Heart
could hardly fail to please the critics. Unfortunately, poorly
publicised and ill-suited for the time in which it was released, the
film struggled to find an audience and lost money for its studio,
RKO. An oddity for its time, and a rare departure for Cary Grant
into the unglamorous world of the proletariat, it is a film that has
much to commend it - strong performances, authentic characterisation
and a stifling sense of confinement that is perfectly in tune
with its subject matter. After this impressive debut,
it is curious that Odets directed only one further film,
The Story on Page One (1959).
© James Travers 2013
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Film Synopsis
On the eve of WWII, Ernie Mott returns to his home in the East End of
London, but he has no intention of staying. He seeks a better
life, and hopes that one day, by travelling around, he may find
it. One night, he shares a romantic evening with an attractive
young woman named Ada, who is none too pleased when he tells her he intends
to leave town the next morning. Before he can resume his travels,
Ernie is shocked to discover that his mother has terminal cancer.
Transformed into the dutiful son, he helps out in his mother's
bric-a-brac shop, but soon wishes he could find an easier way to make
money. When Jim Mordinoy, the local mobster, offers him just
that, he jumps at the chance, but it isn't long before his conscience
gets the better of him...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.