Sunday 8 May 2011

Matt's Big Oscar Challenge Day One Hundred and Twenty: The Bette Quartet Part One

I can't believe it we're almost out of the 1940s now, only seven films to go and even more unbelievable four of them star Bette Davis. With that in mind I am going to try and watch all four of these Davis films back to back in a section I'm going to call the Bette Quartet and another strange thing is we're starting with another adaptation of a Somerset Maughn work - The Letter. In The Letter, Davis stars as Leslie Crosbie the wife of a rubbert plantation manager who in the first scene shoots a man to death. As Davis' husband Robert and their lawyer friend Howard come to her house they discover the body belongs to Geoff Hammond a well-regarded member of the community. Leslie tells them that Hammond forced himself on her and when he wouldn't leave her alone she shot and killed him. Joyce's campaign to get Leslie out of jail is going well his investigation of Hammond reveals a secret marriage to one of the local Malay women and Leslie is behaving herself in prison. Then a letter comes to light that shows that Leslie asked Hammond to meet him on the night of his murder and in order to obtain it Leslie and Howard use Robert's money to buy it from his widow. From there the revelation of what really happened on that night comes to light and results in Leslie's true feelings coming to light and the death of one of the characters in the closing moments of the films.

What I liked most about The Letter was the simplicity of the plot. It all revolved around the one incident and the letter that could change it all. Of course anyone who knows Bette Davis and the roles she normally inhabits knows that her original story wouldn't be the true one however I felt that Davis wasn't as fully manipulative as she often is and Leslie prefers to weave than to go out and use her female wiles to manipulate. William Wyler again directs Bette and again falls out with her, here over a scene towards the end of the film involving Leslie and Robert each had different ideas about how the scene should play out with the director getting his own way and Bette walking out before coming back again claiming her ending would've still been better. Wyler is able to set the mood of the Malay Jungle superbly with Max Steiner's Oscar-nominated score adding to events and the lighting being one of the things that dominates the proceedings from the opening gunshot to the final death. Other than Davis the only cast member to be nominated for an Oscar was James Stephenson as Joyce the lawyer a definitive presence but he wasn't anything special and my favourite performance came from Gale Sondergaard as Hammond's local wife, she never says anything but her looks speak volumes and I think that is the mark of a great actress. As with all the Davis/Wyler colloborations this is fairly melodramatic but it is also very low key and simplistic and I very much enjoyed it and I suspect as the Bette Quartet goes on this will seem like a very tame movie in comparsion to some of the other Davis creations.

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