Film Review
The best of the three screen adaptations of W. Somerset Maugham's
celebrated 1915 novel
Of Human Bondage
features Bette Davis in her star-making role. Davis
was under contract with Warner Brothers at the time but lobbied hard to
get the role of the monstrous Mildred Rogers when she learned that RKO had acquired the
rights to the novel. She was practically the only actress
interested in the role. Other stars, such as Irene Dunne and
Katherine Hepburn, turned the part down. Davis insisted on
playing Mildred with a strong (and very grating) cockney accent, which
she picked up from a housemaid she hired once she had been given the
part.
Leslie Howard is appropriately cast as the sensitive Maughamsian hero, giving a
suitably understated performance that heightens our involvement with
his character as he is drawn into a destructive love affair with
the most unsuitable of partners.
Davis takes no prisoners and plays her part for all it is worth,
although there is a sense that the lady doth protest too much.
Her Mildred is so unremittingly revolting that it is hard to see just why
her admirer is so enamoured of her.
Whilst the film can hardly do justice to Somerset Maugham's remarkable
novel, it is an admirable adaptation which captures something of the
brutality, pathos and irony of the original story. John
Cromwell's imaginative direction makes the most of the film's limited
budget, whilst the moody photography and confined sets lend a
claustrophobic sense of entrapment, evoking the poisonous
desolation that is wrought by an unrequited passion.
Not long after this, Howard and Davis would be reunited for
Archie Mayo's
The Petrified Forest (1936).
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
For the past four years, clubfooted Englishman Philip Carey has been
studying art in Paris. When he realises that his work will never
amount to anything more than second rate, he returns to England to
study medicine. One day, he encounters Mildred, a sluttish
waitress who works in a London tearoom. Although she gives him no
encouragement, and in fact taunts him repeatedly, Philip cannot help
falling in love with Mildred. He is devastated when she decides
to marry a vulgar salesman, Emil Miller, but consoles himself with a
sympathetic woman writer, Norah. Some months later, Mildred
return to Philip, with her newborn baby, having been rejected by
Miller. Still madly in love with Mildred, Philip squanders his
rapidly diminishing financial resources to pay for a room for Mildred
and her child. But then she deserts him a second time, running
off to Paris with one of his medical student friends. With no
money left and turned out of his lodgings, Philip is at the end of his
tether. Fortunately, he still has friends who are prepared to
help him - Sally Athelny and her father, one of Philip's former
patients. With their help, Philip finds work so that he can earn
enough money to resume his studies. Just when Philip's life is
back on track, Mildred returns to torment him a third time...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.