Home Before Dark (film)
Home Before Dark | |
---|---|
Directed by | Mervyn LeRoy |
Screenplay by | Eileen Bassing Robert Bassing |
Based on | Home Before Dark 1957 novel by Eileen Bassing |
Produced by | Mervyn LeRoy |
Starring | Jean Simmons Dan O'Herlihy Rhonda Fleming Efrem Zimbalist Jr. |
Cinematography | Joseph F. Biroc |
Edited by | Philip W. Anderson |
Music by | Ray Heindorf |
Distributed by | Warner Bros |
Release date |
|
Running time | 136 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.4 million[1] |
Box office | $1.9 million (US/Canada rentals)[2] |
Home Before Dark is a 1958 American drama film directed and produced by Mervyn LeRoy and starring Jean Simmons, Dan O'Herlihy, Rhonda Fleming, and Efrem Zimbalist Jr.[3] The screenplay was written by Eileen and Robert Bassing, based on the novel by Eileen Bassing. The title song was written by Sammy Cahn with music by Jimmy McHugh.
The film, and Simmons' performance in particular, attracted positive critical comment. Pauline Kael of the New Yorker wrote, "Jean Simmons gives a reserved, beautifully modulated performance,"[4] and film critic Philip French believed it contained "perhaps her finest performance."[5]
Plot
[edit]Charlotte Bronn (Jean Simmons) leaves a Massachusetts state mental hospital to resume life with her professor husband, Arnold Bronn (Dan O'Herlihy) after a year inside. Dr. Collins worries that Charlotte will be among the many patients who relapse when they return to the same situations that caused their problems. Charlotte's stepmother, Inez (Mabel Albertson), and stepsister, Joan (Rhonda Fleming), live with them in the house Charlotte owns. Charlotte knows she attacked Joan in a fit of jealousy but has no memory of it. She knows because she was told. There is also a stranger in the house, a boarder, Dr. Jake Diamond (Efrem Zimbalist Jr.), on temporary assignment at the college where Arnold teaches. Arnold offered the room to Jake in order to be hospitable—and to please the soon-to-retire department head. Arnold wants his job. Mattie, the irascible cook, completes the household.
Arnold sees no reason to change things.
At breakfast, Inez bosses her mercilessly, issuing commands about everything from the food she eats to a new wardrobe. Arnold has been sleeping on the couch in his library. When Charlotte begs him to come back to their room, he lies, telling her that Dr. Collins says she should stay alone for a while. Bewildered, she asks, “How could love hurt me?” Charlotte struggles to adjust, but “can't get well in a vacuum”. Arnold observes that she has changed since they married. She used to enjoy faculty functions…
The flashback to a student-faculty dance reveals that Charlotte is actually a brunette. Hamilton “Ham” Gregory (Steve Dunne), who loves her, declares that she “hasn't been herself for weeks.” She's acting like her sister, “big personality, batting eyes, calling everybody ‘Ducky,'” She replies that Professor Bronn, who likes the way she calls him Ducky, will propose to her before the party ends.
Arnold says he is attracted by her “youth, quick mind, gaiety, and her free way of meeting life”. “I am not those things” she demurs. Arnold confesses: “I don't know how to show emotion. I cannot remember crying, even as a child.” But he felt jealous, seeing her with Ham. He is trying to tell her he loves her. They kiss, and we return to the present.
Inez and Charlotte meet Inez' friend in Boston and encounter Ham. Charlotte and Ham talk over lunch. He makes a drunken pass at her and asks if she is sure she was wrong about her sister and husband, Charlotte's old friend Cathy Bergner (Joanna Barnes), whose unfaithful spouse has confessed, asks Charlotte for advice, thinking she has experience. Charlotte walks to the college to demand a straight answer from Arnold, who tells her she is relapsing. She promises the family doctor to be good, afraid of being committed.
Arnold agrees to take Charlotte to Boston for Christmas. Jake suggests that she see a psychiatrist, as she once planned. In Boston, Arnold lies to his friends, forestalling their meeting Charlotte. At lunch, Charlotte asks Ham, who has stopped drinking, for help regaining control of her finances. When she tells him Arnold is drugging her food, he asks her to see a psychiatrist, a good man. She leaves.
After a manic shopping spree, she has her hair styled exactly like Joan's and buys a gold lamé evening dress, 5 sizes too big, It is falling off her when she joins Arnold and his friends in the dining room, introducing herself as “Joan”.
In the hotel room, Arnold weeps. She asks why. She does not remember, and wants all the truth. He does not admit infidelity, but he finally does say, “I do not love you.” They agree to divorce.
At the big New Year's party, Charlotte “looks like herself” again, Joan is a hit in the gold dress, and Arnold obsesses about appearances. Charlotte walks out, telling him to “go to hell.”
She fires Mattie and confronts the family, telling Arnold that he married an imitation of Joan. She calls Jake and asks him to drive her to Boston. She calls Ham and asks him to arrange an appointment with the psychiatrist, “today”. She tells Arnold that they must vacate the house after the semester break. Jake drives her away into a wintry dawn.
Cast
[edit]- Jean Simmons as Charlotte Bronn
- Dan O'Herlihy as Arnold Bronn
- Rhonda Fleming as Joan Carlisle
- Efrem Zimbalist Jr. as Jacob "Jake" Diamond
- Mabel Albertson as Inez Winthrop
- Steve Dunne as Hamilton Gregory
- Joanna Barnes as Cathy Bergner
- Joan Weldon as Frances Barrett
- Kathryn Card as Mattie
- Marjorie Bennett as Hazel Evans
- Eleanor Audley as Mrs. Hathaway
- Johnstone White as Malcolm Southey
Reception
[edit]When Bosley Crowther reviewed the film in the November 11, 1958, issue of The New York Times, he praised Simmons' portrayal of Charlotte Bronn, but little else: “For more than two hours, this hapless creature, whom the lovely Miss Simmons plays with a great deal more passion and sincerity than the hollow script justifies, tears her poor self to tatters in a situation that is slightly absurd, not only in its psychological pretense but also in the stilted way it is staged. Fetched home from a mental hospital by her curiously chilly spouse, … she finds herself once more confronted with the same circumstances that impelled her into the asylum in the first place. If anything, they are worse. …Miss Simmons thrashes around in this unnatural situation, stifling her love and jealousy, backing away from the temptatious boarder and getting progressively worse. Finally, after she has jumped her trolley and made an embarrassing scene in a Boston hotel, she asks the questions that have been obvious to any adult all along: "Why haven't I been taken to a psychiatrist?"—and, to her husband, "Do you love me?" He answers "No."That's about it. … the direction of Mr. LeRoy contributes to the thinness of the drama. While he has over-elaborated his sets, he has underelaborated his characters with the graphic glints that might make them meaningful….Happily, we are spared one superfluity…"Home Before Dark" is filmed appropriately in plain old-fashioned black and white.”[6]
Variety staff wrote: “Home before Dark should give the Kleenex a vigorous workout. … it is a romantic melodrama of considerable power and imprint. The screenplay… sometimes seems rather skimpy in its character motivation. It is also difficult at times to understand the mental tone of the mentally ill heroine (Jean Simmons). But while the tale is unfolding it is made so gripping that factual discrepancies are relatively unimportant. (Simmons') stepmother (Mabel Albertson) and her stepsister (Rhonda Fleming)… are masterful females who could drive anyone to the edge of madness. Her only real ally in the house is a stranger (Efrem Zimbalist Jr), who is also an alien in the setting of the inbred New England college community…The whole picture is seen from Simmons’ viewpoint, which means she is ‘on’ virtually the whole time. Her voice is a vibrant instrument, used with thoughtful articulation and placement, the only vital part of her at times. Joseph Biroc’s photography is suited to the grim New England atmosphere. It is winter, a depressingly gray winter, and the locations in Massachusetts give the picture the authentic feel.”[7]
Award nominations
[edit]The film was nominated for three Golden Globe awards: Jean Simmons for Best Actress (drama), Best Picture (drama), and Zimbalist for Best Supporting Actor.
Home media
[edit]Home Before Dark was released to DVD by Warner Home Video on July 8, 2011 via its Warner Archive MOD DVD service.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Box Office Information for Home Before Dark. IMDb. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
- ^ "Top Grossers of 1958". Variety. 7 January 1959. p. 48.
- ^ "Home Before Dark". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
- ^ Kael, 5001 Nights at the Movies
- ^ Screen legends Philip French, The Guardian, 2008
- ^ Crowther, Bosley (1958-11-07). "Screen: Neglected Wife; 'Home Before Dark' on View at Music Hall". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-12-18.
- ^ Variety Staff; Staff, Variety (1958-01-01). "Home Before Dark". Variety. Retrieved 2021-12-18.
External links
[edit]- 1958 films
- 1958 drama films
- Films about adultery in the United States
- American black-and-white films
- American drama films
- Films about depression
- Films based on American novels
- Films directed by Mervyn LeRoy
- Films scored by Ray Heindorf
- Films set in Boston
- Films set in Massachusetts
- Films shot in Boston
- Films shot in Massachusetts
- Warner Bros. films
- 1950s English-language films
- 1950s American films