I had hoped to see MILDRED PIERCE next month at the Film Noir series currently being hosted by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, but when I tried to order tickets last week I discovered the screening had already sold out. If I'd realized tickets would sell out so much more quickly than the recent Noir City Festival at the Egyptian, I'd have committed to ordering tickets sooner! It's good news, however, that there are so many film fans interested in seeing a classic movie. Ann Blyth will be making a personal appearance so it should be a very special evening indeed.
We instead did the next best thing, and my daughters and I watched it tonight on our large TV screen. The DVD print is one of the best I have ever seen in all my years of DVD watching; the movie's amazing look combined with the quality of the DVD provided a top viewing experience. I had never seen MILDRED PIERCE before, and although it's a very dark movie, it really blew me away. It was a very impressive film.
MILDRED PIERCE is a sort of melodrama meets film noir. The movie immediately plunges the viewer into the heart of the story, with a shocking opening scene as Monte Beragon (Zachary Scott) is gunned down in a lonely beach house. Mildred Pierce (Joan Crawford) flees the murder scene and briefly considers jumping off a bridge. Is she a murderess? It certainly appears that way, especially when she tries to frame Wally Fay (Jack Carson) for the killing. But there's much more to Mildred's story...
We flash back in time to Mildred's unhappy marriage to Bert (Bruce Bennett) and her obsession with providing her daughters Veda (Ann Blyth) and Kay (Jo Ann Marlowe) with the best of everything. Following a divorce Mildred ekes out a living as a waitress, a profession which embarrasses her snooty daughter Veda. Eventually Mildred builds a restaurant empire, but no matter how hard Mildred tries, she can't make Veda happy. Veda grows into an evil young woman, yet Mildred keeps enabling Veda's behavior and trying to win her love.
Joan Crawford won a deserved Oscar for her performance in the title role. At one time I didn't care for Crawford, but I've gradually come to enjoy her work, and she was superb in this, playing a flawed but very interesting character. She's on screen the vast majority of the time, and she's fascinating from start to finish.
Ann Blyth and Eve Arden were each nominated for Best Supporting Actress; Arden plays Mildred's employer and later her trusted employee. Blyth was apparently only 16 when she made this film; she turned 17 a couple months before the film's fall 1945 release date. Her character ages from early teens to a young woman and she is completely believable at every stage. Blyth not only juggled playing the transitions in Veda's age, she believably conveyed a heartless, amoral young woman. I believe it would have been very appropriate if Blyth had won the Oscar. (Anne Revere was the winner that year for NATIONAL VELVET.)
The fine cast also includes Lee Patrick, Butterfly McQueen, Moroni Olsen, and Veda Ann Borg.
The film has a fabulous look, from the set design to the costumes and especially including the cinematography. It's hard to imagine that Ernest Haller's stunning black and white cinematography didn't win the Oscar. The winner that year was Harry Stradling Sr. for THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY. Other contenders included SPELLBOUND, THE LOST WEEKEND, and THE KEYS OF THE KINGDOM.
The movie was directed by Michael Curtiz. It runs 111 minutes.
MILDRED PIERCE is based on a novel by James M. Cain, who also wrote DOUBLE INDEMNITY and THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE.
The film made me think of the later Warner Bros. film NORA PRENTISS (1947), which might just be the darkest melodrama-noir ever made. Each film is named for the lead female character. Bruce Bennett appears in both films, they share California locations (Northern California for NORA PRENTISS, Southern California for MILDRED PIERCE), and there are similar themes about a character whose refusal to be happy with a nice life leads to utter disaster. The final shot in NORA PRENTISS, as two characters walk away after justice has been served, echoes the last shot of MILDRED PIERCE.
DVD extras include a Crawford trailer gallery and the 2002 documentary JOAN CRAWFORD, THE ULTIMATE MOVIE STAR. The DVD was reviewed by Glenn Erickson at his DVD Savant site. He describes the DVD as "a killer restoration of Ernest Haller's crisp & moody B&W cinematography." DVD Verdict calls the DVD transfer "stunning" and "startlingly good."
There's more on the film from Steve-O at Noir of the Week.
MILDRED PIERCE is also available on VHS.
This movie can also be seen on Turner Classic Movies, which has the trailer available here.
Tonight's Movie: Mildred Pierce (1945)
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