A stable upper-middle-class husband (wife, two kids, good job/good pay, two-level colonial with garage, cabin in the country) casually gets involved (then entwined) with a younger woman, succumbs to passion and loses everything . . . including the mistress. An oft-told tale, notable here because of how closely it follows the pattern of Theodore Dreiser’s SISTER CARRIE.* Or does for the first half. After that, running amok with melodramatic tropes, plot-driven coincidence and a series of convenient crimes of opportunity. Ann Sheridan’s penultimate film under Warners contract, she’s the object of desire, a nightclub chanteuse working for gentlemanly club owner Robert Alda, who meets-cute with Dr. Kent Smith after a traffic accident brings her to his office and reminds him what’s missing in his life: passion. The promise of divorce hovering, but always out of reach. Then the death of a patient brings swapped identity, bank withdraws, a move cross-country, another promise of divorce, a life in hiding (first for her/then for him), misery, boredom, madness, plastic surgery . . . the works. Not without its amusing OTT moments of gloom & doom, but with also-ran director Vincent Sherman in charge (often assigned to escort fading stars on their way off the lot) the movie can’t make the stylistic turn it must between the mundane and stark melodrama. Still, nice to see Warners giving good roles to B-Listers: Kent Smith’s doctor on the mark when he doesn’t have to hit extremes (he also looks a bit like Laurence Olivier who took the equivalent role in William Wyler’s CARRIE - see below), Alda, as mentioned, and a typically excellent turn from reliable Bruce Bennett, the carefree bachelor partner at Smith’s doctor’s office. Sheridan, who rarely got roles worthy of her talent (Warners execs blinded by the va-va-voom rep they first gave her), handles this Lana Turner-esque role with ease. But a chance to make something more than claptrap is squandered.
DOUBLE-BILL/LINK: *As mentioned, William Wyler’s CARRIE/’52 covers all the bases on this wandering husband storyline with stunning precision. Even for those allergic to Jennifer Jones’ studied charms. While Olivier never did anyting better on film. https://maksquibs.blogspot.com/2008/05/carrie-1952.html









