Irresistible trash. Or rather, ‘twash,’ in honor of Kay Francis’s famously weak ‘r.’ Francis, a great louché force in Pre-Code days, was in decline @ Warners, but producer Hal Wallis gave her quite the lux production here. Including a glamorously delayed third-reel entrance, after classical musician (and serial seducer) Basil Rathbone digs his romantic claws into underwhelming teen virgin Jane Bryan. Kay, a past Rathbone victim, may have sunk from operatic Mezzo-Soprano to nightclub chanteuse, but she spots the canoodling couple in a private box and quickly sizes up the situation. How lucky that a marksman follows her on the bill with a backstage table full of loaded pistols! The rest of the film plays out at her trial, as she explains all in a big grand, tawdry flashback filled with tears, illicit romance, marriage, war, amputation (!) & motherly sacrifice. Oh, Kay!!!; so wronged, so stained, so noble. So delicious. Rathbone is tremendous here, falling in love for real . . . each & every time. As husband/father/cuckold, Ian Hunter is not so tremendous (though looks amusingly like DOWNTON ABBEY’S Hugh Bonneville). Director Joe May can’t do much with those first two reels, but sit tight, he turns it on once Kay shows up. A Big Man back in his German/UFA days (HOMECOMING/’28; ASPHALT/’29), he’s a little like Hollywood’s William K. Howard in finding fabulous shots for situations and then not able to tie them properly together. Still, piece-by-piece, quite a technique! And watch for that fine vulgarian Laura Hope Crews who’d just played the same bawdy gal-pal specialty against Garbo in CAMILLE/’36.
DOUBLE-BILL: For Francis at her best, go to 1932 with ONE WAY PASSAGE or TROUBLE IN PARADISE among seven releases just that year; plus co-stars like Ronald Colman, Fredric March, William Powell & Herbert Marshall.
1 comment:
This does get going slowly (hard to believe that Rathbone had any interest in the rather wooden Jane Bryan, whose wing man as it were, Mary Maguire, is much more appealing) but once Kay comes on the scene the "twash" quotient goes way, way up. Her change in appearance from the cheerful brunette opera singer to the morose, stringy-haired bleached blonde in the courtroom, complete with heavy eye makeup and a head-to-toe black dress, is quite dramatic. Definitely seems like she was going for a Garbo here, though I don't think Kay was capable of much beyond "the gamut of emotions from A to B," alas. A fascinating aspect of this film is the use of a Rashomon-like effect in the courtroom where several scenes are repeated as flashbacks using a different camera angle that reveals new details. One is when Francis fires the fatal shot - in the flashback version we hear the identical soundtrack from the original scene, but see the action from Francis's point of view which brings more sympathy to her character. Trying to think of other films that use this, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is one, though 25 year later.
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