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Movie Reviews of EnchantmentMovie Review: Wonderful movie Summary: 5 Stars
I saw this movie many years ago and I really enjoyed it. It's a love story set during WWII in England, and what can I say? It's a tear-jerker. It's so nice to see this movie out on DVD and is now a part of my DVD library. Get the kleenex ready.
Movie Review: Ahhhhhh Summary: 5 Stars
Pure and lovely. This movie may cause one to think of the possibilities if we don't act upon, that which we know IS the time to act. Music was ENCHANTING!! A rare gem!
Movie Review: Chamber music of eternal love. Summary: 5 Stars
I was deeply moved by this movie. Strickingly beautiful, enchanted story telling of love. It was a chamber music of joy and pain of eternal love.
Movie Review: Extremely Original Storytelling Technique Summary: 4 Stars
58 years before "Monster House" - a film about a neighborhood terrorized by a house - there was "Enchantment" (1948); a film narrated by a house. I'm not kidding; the house provides a brief bookend voice-over commentary; introducing the story and then wrapping things up at the conclusion.
Fortunately this house is much better behaved than its 2006 successor because 95% of the film takes place under its roof. The modest set means that second-to-none cinematographer Gregg Toland's expertise is somewhat wasted. There wasn't much for him to apply himself to here other than some interesting lighting and a series of interesting match cut transitions (more about these later).
"Enchantment" is a romance, more precisely two romances as the film tells the story of wartime romances in a London family during both the WWI and WWII. Set in 1944, the film opens with retired General Roland (Rollo) Dane (a convincingly aged David Nivin) pining away over his lost opportunity for true love. Upon the death of his sister Selina he moved back into his boyhood home because it contains memories of his lost love Lark (Teresa Wright). Lark was an orphan his family adopted when she was eight. Rollo and Lark fell in love when they grew up but shrewish sister Selina managed to derail the romance. Lark marries someone else and Rollo pursues a career in the Army. They never see each other again.
Enter niece Grizel (Evelyn Keyes-Scarlett O'Hara's little sister) who comes to wartime London from America. Grizel is an ambulance driver who moves in with her great uncle Rollo. Grizel begins a romance with a wounded Canadian officer named Pax (Farley Granger), who turns out to be Lark's nephew.
Now this may not sound very promising, but "Enchantment" transcends ordinary romantic melodrama by the way in which it tells its tale (and I'm not talking about the talking house). The story is told by cutting back and forth between two parallel romantic story lines taking place in the same house; Rollo and Lark during WWI and Grizel and Pax during WWII. This device works quite well and is worth watching just to see the match cut transitions that move the film back and forth between the two romances. There are ten of these transitions. The camera holds on the door inside Selina's bedroom as the story flashbacks to the same spot 25+ years earlier. Then a place-setting at the dinner table takes the story forward. The transitions continue; using a chandelier, a mantle clock, the fireplace, the sidewalk, and the staircase. But this is more than just a slick editing trick. Each match cut is designed to draw attention to parallels between Grizel and her predecessors in the house. Which is why she is given Selina's old room. The climatic transition does not use the match cut technique, presumably to indicate that the later romance will have a more upbeat outcome than the earlier one.
The final match cut involves a set of house "keys"; probably not a deliberate play on a certain actresses' surname but a symbolic reference (i.e. the key to happiness). The sidewalk transition is the best one as Niven actually morphs into Granger at the same exact point on the sidewalk. This was a dolly tracking shot and the row houses in the background had to line up perfectly (remember this was before digital effects).
For pretty much everyone who has seen"Enchantment", the most memorable images involve eight-year old Lark and ten-year old Rollo; played by real life brother and sister Peter Miles and Gigi Perreau. Gigi totally hijacks the film at this point leaving viewers wishing she had more scenes. Peter (in appearance and style) may remind you of Freddie Highmore ("Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" and "Finding Neverland").
In fairness to Selina (nicely played by Jayne Meadows), her resentment of the cute little waif is somewhat understandable. Lark immediately brings out the protective instincts of Selina's father and two brothers. Basically supplanting Selina and stealing her destiny.
Niven, Wright, and Keyes are quite good although Keyes never quite sells her shrewish side nor her attraction to Pax. I felt this was mostly due to Granger who was one creepy guy. Hitchcock cast him for his lead in "Rope" for this very quality and while it was an asset in that role it works to everyone's detriment here.
Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
Movie Review: Go After Him! Summary: 4 Stars
I watched ENCHANTMENT with mixed emotions. The basic story is captivating: an orphan girl is thrust into the bosom of a family unprepared for her direct, earthy approach to life. Little Lark Ingoldsby is played by the luminous child actress Gigi Perreau. When she arrives at the Dane mansion she can't do much more than shiver and cry and fall asleep, her grief too large to contain within her skin. Selina Dane, a hideously rude girl possibly eight or nine years older than Lark, takes her in unwillingly, and determines to make her life miserable. Which she does for the next fifteen years or so.
To be fair to Selina (as a grown woman played by Jayne Meadows, quite well) she resents Lark for stealing the love of her father, her two brothers Pelham and Rollo, and in fact, everyone loves Lark and Selina feels very much on the shelf, playing second fiddle all the time. Though raised as brothers and sisters, both boys fall madly in love with Lark. It all seems vaguely incestuous. You can see it in the expression on Teresa Wright's face when, on her birthday, her "brother" Pelham gets carried away by passion and kisses her right on the mouth. Lark then worries that she's let things get out of hand. However she doesn't have any scruples when it comes to loving Rollo (David Niven) who is fairly charming in the part.
I think that Goldwyn should have borrowed Jennifer Jones from Selznick to play the part of Lark. It is so much a Jennifer Jones part that Wright seems distinctly uncomfortable in having to imitate Jones' ways in every scene. Whatever Wright's other virtues, she wasn't naturally sexy, and I think that the part calls for an actress with more of an erotic charge than "Young Charlie."
In the present day story, Farley Granger's as stiff as usual, and Evelyn Keyes is surprisingly warm and low key, a far cry from the noir roles for which we remember her best nowadays, but I can't get over their names! She is "Grizel Dane" and his name's "Pax Masterson." It's insane! The film climaxes in a mad chase across London as the V-1 rockets fall during rhe Blitz, quite an exciting sequence that demonstrates how far a woman will go to get the man she loves. As elderly David Niven has advised Grizel, "Don't stop to bargain for happiness, for in one wasted moment, a door may close, a ship may sail, a train may leave, a man may die. Go after him!"
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