Movie Review: Possessed (Curtis Bernhardt, 1947)
I heard about a famous scene in a movie called Possessed with Joan Crawford. I watched it but the scene wasn't there. Strangely, it turns out that there are two films by this title, both starring Crawford, telling different stories.
The one I watched is a melodrama/film noir. Crawford plays Louise Howell, a steady nurse in charge of a rich matron whose mind is failing. She croaks under mysterious circumstances and eventually the husband pops the question to the nurse. But her marriage is just a ruse to make an ex-lover jealous. When he doesn't respond as she thought, she starts losing her mind. As the stakes keep getting higher and her step-daughter is drawn into the maelstrom of lust and deceit, Howell spirals down into hallucination and clinical psychosis.
This well-crafted film is worth watching for several reasons. The emphasis on Freudian mental health and the panacea of psychiatry is a nifty little time capsule recalling Hitchcock's Spellbound (1945). There's a brilliantly campy scene in which Howell, now a semi-catatonic mental patient in a bare cell, narrates her sordid past to two male shrinks who've injected her with sodium pentathol. Then they withdraw to confer, clicking their tongues as they deplore her "classic schizoid symptoms." Thus female desire is pathologized. But make no mistake: Possessed is a dark film that goes beyond revenge and murder to question the integrity of work and even the family in post-war
Thursday, August 31, 2006
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
I'm beginning to see why you like Joan Crawford so much . . . do another! Do another!
Post a Comment