Film Review
Stellar performances from two of Hollywood's finest luminaries rescues
this shamelessly contrived melodrama and elevates it to the status of a
minor classic, assisted by some deft direction from Edmund Goulding and
the slick production design that characterised Warner Brothers' quality
productions in the studio's heyday. Bette Davis may have been
given top billing but it is her co-star Mary Astor who steals the show,
delivering an outstanding performance which won her the Best Supporting
Actress Oscar in 1942. Davis's former off-screen lover George
Brent plays the male lead, but he is almost completely eclipsed by the
sheer star power that emanates from the two leading ladies.
Bette Davis is reputed to have had great difficulty working with other
actresses of her calibre. Petty rivalry with Miriam Hopkins
during the shooting of
The Old Maid (1939) had come
perilously close to wrecking that production.
The Great Lie was an exception, an
occasion when Davis not only worked well with her co-star, Mary Astor,
but was also instrumental in getting her cast. It was through
their positive working relationship that Davis and Astor managed to
knock what they felt was a disappointing soap into something worth
watching. It helped that Astor was an accomplished pianist, and
was therefore able to play her role with far more credibility than most
actresses. Davis was originally reluctant to play the sympathetic
lead role but was persuaded to do so on the insistence of her fans that
she should play a nice character for once.
Plot-wise,
The Great Lie is
truly cringe-worthy, riddled with the kind of daft plot contrivances
that you would expect to find only in a low-grade TV soap opera.
And yet so gripping are the performances from Davis and Astor, so
potent is the emotional realism that they bring to the film, that you
hardly notice this. We accept the story, incredible as it is,
because we accept the reality of the two main protagonists, two
tragically vulnerable women who are vying for the love of the same
man. The talented supporting cast includes the great
African-American actress Hattie McDaniel, who had previously won an
Oscar for her role in
Gone with the Wind (1939).
This was the last of four films which Edmund Goulding directed with
Bette Davis,
Dark Victory (1939) being their
best known collaboration.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Edmund Goulding film:
The Razor's Edge (1946)
Film Synopsis
Peter Van Allen has been married to Sandra Kovak, a renowned concert
pianist, for only a few days when he learns that the union is not
legal. Sandra has mistaken the date of her divorce and is still
legally wed to another man. When Sandra refuses to cancel a tour
so that she can marry Peter again, Peter revisits his old flame Maggie
Patterson and asks her to be his wife. Maggie, still madly in
love with Peter, accepts willingly and the couple embark on a happy
married life. At Maggie's insistence, Peter begins a career in
aviation, but during a flight over Brazil his aircraft goes
missing. Maggie then learns that Sandra is pregnant with
her husband's child. Certain that Peter is dead, Maggie persuades
Sandra to have the baby and hand it over to her, so that the child will
be assured a secure future. Then, some months later, Peter
makes an unexpected return. Sandra cannot stand by and allow
Peter to accept the lie that Maggie is the mother of her child...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.