Film Review
Now, Voyager may justifiably
earn the epithet of a high class woman's weepy, packed with enough high
grade schmaltz to sink a flotilla of soap-filled battleships, but its
artistic strengths put it in a class of its own, making it one of the
all-time classics of Hollywood at the height of its Golden Era. This is far more than a
conventional melodrama; it is fundamentally about the power of love to
change lives for the better, to defeat the tyranny of loneliness and
rejection, through a wondrous spiritual transformation.
In a role that does justice to her talent and allows her to show her
full dramatic range, Bette Davis is magnificent as the ugly duckling
spinster who becomes a glamour girl with a heart of gold.
Her measured and intense performance brings several moments of
genuinely heart-rending poignancy, and manages to draw our attention
away from the many needless contrivances with which the plot is
strewn. Gladys Cooper is almost as memorable as the unflinchingly
matriarchal Mrs Vale, although the one-sided nature of her character
makes it hard for an audience to have any sympathy for her, which does
weaken the dramatic tension in a few places. Both Davis and
Cooper were nominated for Oscars, but the film's only Oscar win was for
Max Steiner's stirring, highly romantic score.
Bette Davis and Gladys Cooper may rule this particular roost, but there
are some pleasing contributions from their attractive male co-stars,
Paul Henreid and Claude Rains - who appeared together in
Casablanca,
released the same year. The secondary importance of their
characters does tend to support the charge that this is a film with a
strong feminist subtext, although, to be fair, any film with the
charismatic and controlling Bette Davis in it is unlikely to see many
male characters hogging the limelight.
Now, Voyager is perhaps most
famous for its final scene, where Henreid lights two cigarettes
simultaneously and hands one to Davis as a gesture of their undying
love. There is uncertainty over whether this was scripted or
improvised but it is a brilliant touch that helps to make this one of
the most alluring and memorable of American film melodramas.
© James Travers 2008
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Film Synopsis
As a direct result of her mother's domineering treatment of her, Charlotte Vale,
the youngest child of a wealthy Boston family, has grown up to be a
repressed old maid. At the request of her sister-in-law,
Charlotte is visited by the eminent psychiatrist Dr Jaquith, who
recommends that she be admitted to his sanatorium. After a few
months in Jaquith's care, Charlotte is a changed woman, and it is with
newfound confidence that she sets off for South America on a pleasure
cruise. Here, she meets and falls in love with Jerry Durrance, a
man who is trapped in an unhappy marriage. Realising that their affair
can go nowhere, they go their separate ways. Charlotte returns to
Boston and is determined not to allow her mother to have the upper hand
over her again...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.