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A Place in the Sun, a review by AntaresA Place in the Sun Year: 1951 Film Studio: Paramount Pictures Genre: Romance, Drama Length: 121 Min. Director George Stevens (1904) Writing Theodore Dreiser (1871)...Novel "An American Tragedy" Patrick Kearney (1893)...Play "An American Tragedy" Michael Wilson (1914)...Screenplay Harry Brown (1917)...Screenplay Producer Ivan Moffat (1918) George Stevens (1904) Cinematographer William C. Mellor (1903) Music Franz Waxman (1906)...Composer Stars Montgomery Clift (1920) as George Eastman Elizabeth Taylor (1932) as Angela Vickers Shelley Winters (1920) as Alice Tripp Anne Revere (1903) as Hannah Eastman Keefe Brasselle (1923) as Earl Eastman Fred Clark (1914) as Bellows, defense attorney Raymond Burr (1917) as Dist. Atty. R. Frank Marlowe Herbert Heyes (1889) as Charles Eastman Review The Fifties would bring about many changes to the film industry. Technologies that had helped us defeat the Axis powers were now being used to make everyday life in America more convenient and more informed. Television would become the guiding force in entertainment over the next decade and the major threat to the power of the Hollywood studios. With the weakening of the Hays code, producers and studio executives decided that racier subject matter would best hold back the tide of growing popularity with television, and keep their coffers filled. Just ten years earlier it would have been unthinkable to make a film based on the novel An American Tragedy by Theodore Dreiser. But times had changed, and a story about an illegitimate pregnancy and the murder that ensues, would be considered tame in the light of the atrocities that had occurred during the war. George Stevens softened the story by dwelling more on the love relationship of the characters as portrayed by Montgomery Clift and Elizabeth Taylor. This would be the first pairing of these two screen icons, and the chemistry between the two was electric. They would appear in two more films together, Raintree County, and Suddenly, Last Summer, with the former being the last time we would see Clift in all his youthful glory. The car accident that would alter his facial features, would also lead to a dependency on painkillers, and his performances in all later projects would seem distant and detached. But for the time being, he was beginning his ascent to the top of the most popular actors list, as he would follow this film two years later with From Here to Eternity. Taylor would become his lifetime friend and confidant and over the next decade would help him in his times of trouble. A Place in the SunReview Criterion4 Stars - Historically important film, considered a classic. (From A Place in the Sun (1951) on November 5th, 2010) Hidden Figures, a review by addicted2dvd
Stars:Plot:Extras:
My Thoughts: I have to say I loved this film. A truly interesting and powerful story with a great cast. I could not turn away from this film. It grabbed my attention so easily that I was surprised when it was over. And this film is just over 2hrs long! If you are like me and enjoy true stories this is one not to miss. I highly recommend it! I can hardly wait to watch it again when I show it to Gen and Moira. Rating: (From What Movies I Been Watching on May 21st, 2017) [Rerun Marathon] Spaced, a review by Tom10/10 Most fun episode so far. (From [Rerun Marathon] Spaced on November 24th, 2007) |