Film Review
The Man in Grey was the first
in a run of enormously popular period melodramas made by Gainsborough
Pictures in the 1940s. Based on a novel by Eleanor Smith, it
combines elements from the 'woman's picture' and historical fiction
into a new kind of film with a distinctive identity, one that was
generally reviled by the critics but absolutely adored by British
cinema audiences. The four lead players in this film -
Margaret Lockwood, Phyllis Calvert, James Mason and Stewart Granger -
became major film stars in their own right as a result of its success
at the box office, on both sides of the Atlantic. For a time
afterwards, Lockwood and Mason would struggle against being typecast as
villains, and no wonder. In
The
Man in Grey, both actors appear to be the very quintessence of
evil.
Formulaic and predictable as the film is, the sheer quality of the
performances makes it thoroughly engrossing. Leslie Arliss's direction
is hardly inspired but thanks to Arthur Crabtree's atmospheric
photography
The Man in Grey
has a haunting Gothic feel about it, vaguely reminiscent of Hitchcock's
Rebecca
(1940). Calvert and Granger are excellent in their amiable dual
roles (they appear as the descendents of two of the main characters in
an effective framing story), but it is Mason and Lockwood who give most
entertainment value, both clearly revelling in their villainous
portrayals of characters who have no redeeming qualities
whatsoever. Mason, the sadistic hedonist, finds his match in Lockwood,
the ruthless social climber with a penchant for murder. Lockwood is described as 'deadly
nightshade' at one point and this is exactly what she is, a callous,
unfeeling reptile of a woman, her venomous nature accentuated to an
almost unbearable pitch by the trusting devotion of Calvert's saintly
Clarissa. Such is the torrid chemistry of the Lockwood-Mason
coupling that repeat performances were inevitable - the most memorable
of course being in Gainsbourough's deliriously uninhibited
The
Wicked Lady (1945).
© James Travers 2014
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Film Synopsis
In Regency England, Hesther Shaw is welcomed by Miss Patchett to her
school for young ladies in Bath. Hesther's straitened
circumstances makes her resentful of the kindnesses shown to her by
Miss Patchett and her pupils but she soon buries her grievances and
makes friends with the universally popular Clarissa Marr. Shortly
after Hesther elopes with a penniless soldier, Clarissa leaves the
school and begins her life in London society. Lord Rohan, a
wealthy but dissolute landowner known as 'the man in grey', forces her into marrying
him with hopes that she will soon provide him with an heir. By
chance, Clarissa meets up with Hesther, who now earns her crust with a
travelling theatre company. Clarissa and another member of the
company, Rokeby, form an instant attraction. Having assumed the
role of Clarissa's companion, Hesther embarks on an illicit affair with
Lord Rohan. Realising that Clarissa and Rokeby are in love,
Hesther conspires to bring them together, for motives that are far from
friendly...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.