The Mudlark

Posted 12 February 2008 in Screening log

Rating 1950 US / UK Dir Jean Negulesco Cast Irene Dunne, Alec Guiness, Finlay Curie, Andrew Ray IMDb

Watching this film is sort of like expecting to taste a bite of raspberry sundae, and finding only once on your tongue that it’s chocolate instead. Still good, but for a moment psychologically disorienting. I watch this expecting an Irene Dunne film, and find instead only Queen Victoria. After spending six months more or less immersed in Irene’s films, I can’t locate her anywhere in this role, apart from the rare word betraying her real southern-tinged warble, an isolated characteristic facial tic. That’s surely to her credit: her performance goes much, much deeper than the makeup and false pudge they put on her. I mean, given the kind of acting one expects from a movie of this era, the complexity and subtlety of her work is frankly staggering. As I said at the outset of this long venture, she’s such a natural performer she would have succeeded in any period of film history. But for all that, it’s vaguely disturbing to watch, from my position, both admiring her in the particular way I do, and being so personally confounded by self, identity and appearance: that is my Irene, but that is not her face, those are not her eyes, that is not her voice. It is, honestly, unsettling.

Anyway, as to the film, it’s weak as hell when she’s not onscreen, and that’s probably about half the runtime. Anyone should know by 1950 that, as the studio system had been established, in all but the greatest films no one cares about anyone but the stars. Here, the bits with the kid are too cutesy, the romantic interludes between servant and noble couples completely bloodless, the political maneuvering simplistic. As far as I know it does justice to this period in VR’s life, but there’s not much going on. (If one really cared for the subject matter, they should check out the very excellent Mrs Brown). It’s an inoffensively mediocre film with one really incredible (read: freakishly transformative) performance at its core.

 

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

(required)

(required)


about
Lauren, 25, out-of-work librarian. At the moment, TLC is but a review blog and catalogue of my film-related perversions. I always plan to do more with it — and to one day step outside 30s Hollywood again. Who knows?


navigation
Films: All reviewed | Favorites
Actors: Profiles | Favorites
Directors: Profiles | Favorites
Screencap galleries
All films by year
2008 Viewing log


Screening Log
» Elegy 2008, Isabel Coixet
» Jeopardy 1953, John Sturges
» 2 or 3 Things I Know About Her 1967, Jean-Luc Godard
» Appaloosa 2008, Ed Harris
» Belle toujours 2007, Manoel de Oliveira
» Duel in the Sun 1946, King Vidor
» Dragonwyck 1946, Joseph L Mankiewicz
» The Spiral Staircase 1945, Robert Siodmak
» The Man Who Knew Too Much 1934, Alfred Hitchcock
» Tell No One 2008, Guillaume Canet

Feedback
Elegy (1)
  • DG: “fantasy about a brilliant aging man nursing a sexual obsession for a much younger, earthier, and...
Duel in the Sun (2)
  • Lauren: That is particularly hilarious considering the same guy did the score for the film I queued up as I was...
  • Mango: That Selznick… http://filmexperience.blogspot .com/2008/10/anecdote-of-week- how-do-you-score.html
Jeopardy (9)
  • Mango: Next Tuesday? Oh, you are going to miss the final night of Carole’s Star of the Month! (Ah, but next...
  • Lauren: Good idea! Damn, my service won’t actually start until Tuesday. I feel like I’m missing all the...

The Bookshelf
Currently reading
On the shelf
» Film library
» Complete library

links
» Allure
» Awards Daily
» Bright Lights Film Journal
» Cinemaniacal
» Cinemascope
» Cinema Talk
» Classic Cinema Online
» Collective Contemplations on Cinema
» Critical Culture
» Criticker
» Fataculture
» Film Comment
» Film Int
» Greenbriar Picture Shows
» House of Mirth & Movies
» If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger...
» Jump Cut
» Mango Grove
» Not Coming to a Theater Near You
» The Pagan Agenda
» Pop Matters
» Rants & Musings
» Reverse Shot
» Self-Styled Siren
» Senses of Cinema
» Shining a Light on the Forgotten Classics
» Sight & Sound
» Sin in Soft Focus
» TCM schedule
» They Shoot Pictures, Don't They?
» Through a Blog Darkly

Netflix
In a Lonely Place Fallen Angel Jean Renoir: French Cancan Abraham's Valley I'm Going Home Genealogies of a Crime I'm Not There The Fallen Idol 

Friend me