Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Gaslight




Gaslight - repost from my previous site
Director: George Cukor
Starring: Ingrid Bergman, Charles Boyer, Joseph Cotten, Angela Lansbury
1944

A classic parlor drama from the 1940s, Gaslight was a Best Picture nominee when it came out, and that, just four years after the original Gaslight had been made.  See, this whole thing of Hollywood doing nothing but remakes is absolutely nothing new!  Even some of the great classic films are remakes!

Paula Alquist’s (Bergman) aunt, a famous singer, was murdered in their house in London when Paula was just a girl.  She goes to Italy to be raised by family friends, but returns to her old house when her new husband, Gregory Anton (Boyer) insists on it.  Soon, Gregory starts insisting on lots of things, including the fact that Paula is forgetting things, even though she swears she isn’t, and that they avoid visitors at all costs.  Her confidence begins to waiver, and she begins to be convinced of her insanity.


Y’know, I enjoy classic film.  I really do.  But I find Gaslight a little lacking.  I can see how the story would have been gripping in decades past, but it lacks a modern appeal, a modern sensibility.  Ingrid Bergman won an Oscar for her role as Paula, the beleaguered wife, and while I think her performance is good, I also think it’s over the top.  There’s very little subtlety in her performance or, for that matter, the film.  Bergman cries a lot and wails a lot and throws herself around a lot to show how Paula is falling victim to her husband’s psychological abuse.  I suppose that it’s true that back then, the Oscar went to the most obvious performance rather than the most deserving, just like it is today as well.  Ah well.

Part of what annoys me about the film is how obvious Gregory’s abuse is (Boyer Behaving Badly… sorry, had to be done).  There’s nothing subtle about it.  “Hey, I’m going to make my wife go crazy.  Sit down and watch!”  I love a good psychological thriller, but this is a bit too pie-in-the-face for me, never mind that the ending feels incredibly weak.  We ultimately learn Gregory’s motivations, and they are not nearly as entertaining or salacious as the film thinks they are.


 And then there’s the Joseph Cotten (dammit, autocorrect!) character, who completely feels like a tacked-on addition to ensure a happy ending.  I mean, I am a Joseph Cotten (stupid autocorrect!) fan, but this is not his greatest role.  He does precious little except serve as a mouthpiece for clunky exposition. 

Angela Lansbury in her first film role is rather fun as Nancy, the oversexed housemaid.  Problem is, the film needed more of her.  She wasn’t nearly as involved in the plot of the film as I remember, instead constantly dancing on the periphery of the action.  She’s so saucy and sassy and more than a little dark and dangerous, USE HER!  I wish she had been tied more tightly into the overall plot.

I will say this for the ending – when Gregory gets his comeuppance (not really a spoiler, this is a Hollywood movie from the 1940s, so we know the bad guy won’t be getting away with anything), I did find myself glorying in Paula’s victory.  There’s a great scene where she taunts him, throwing back his psychological abuse in his face.  I certainly had a moment of emotional connection there, but it was because Paula was finally saying to Gregory what I wanted her to say to him from the start.  I honest to god don’t understand why Paula was so weak throughout the rest of the film and so strong here.  I don’t understand why she put up with Gregory’s treatment the way she did.  I wanted her to punch him in the face every time he pulled one of his horrible tricks on her, and run out.  Stop being such a spineless doormat, Paula, and break free!

Is this a bad movie?  No, definitely not, but I do think it’s of another era.  It’s a gothic romantic thriller that hasn’t aged well. 

Arbitrary Rating: 6/10

5 comments:

  1. We've been agreeing with each other a lot lately, so I suppose it was time for us to disagree on one. I rather liked this one and found it surprisingly engaging. My biggest complaint was the nosy neighbor.

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    1. Ha ha! Indeed, too much agreement can make things stale.

      Fair enough. It jived for you, not as well for me.

      Given that this week's 1001 Movies Club film is Hitchcock, Gaslight is a movie that reminds me of Hitchcock without actually BEING by him.

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  2. I liked this, but didn't love it. I agree on Lansbury.

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    1. Lansbury's easily the best thing about this one for me, but I forgot how little she was in it. MORE SNARKY MAID, DAMMIT!!

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  3. Hmmm... I actually liked Gaslight. My criticism of the film is actually exactly the same as your. I just did not mind too much. To me the torment worked well exactly because I wanted to scream to her that she should snap out of it. But just because we see it doe not mean Paula see it.
    Get Cotten an Lansbury more involved in this film and you have a winner.

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