Sunday, April 28, 2013

ALFRED HITCHCOCK: The Farmer's Wife (1928)

This Hitchcock was a little bit twee for my tastes. It took three days to finish watching it. The movie opens with the death of the farmer's wife then four minutes later the farmer's daughter is getting married and after the wedding the farmer decides he wants to take a wife. He has three ladies in mind, but the perfect wife is right in front of him: his housekeeper.

Frankly, it's hard to see how the farmer doesn't grasp this from the get go; the housekeeper, Minta, is so much more attractive than the four women he proposes marriage to. Played by Lilian Hall-Davis, who was the female lead in The Ring, Hitchcock's previous release, the character has very little to do until the last ten minutes of the movie. But throughout Davis gives a calm, gentle and assured performance. Sadly, Davis suffered from severe depression in real life and like many successful silent screen actors the transition to sound hurt her career; she committed suicide in 1933.

Jameson Thomas plays the role of the Farmer; he's okay. Handsome, his idea of being a farmer seems to be poking his chest out and pointing his finger alot. There are flashes of dandy ism, a sly smile, and the following year these traits were put to great effect in the classic Piccadilly, where Thomas played a nightclub impresario. The movie was notable for featuring beautiful Chinese American star Anna May Wong, one of the very few Asian stars in that era and even today. She's best known today for playing opposite Marlene Dietrich in Josef von Sternberg's Shanghai Express.

The Farmer's Wife began on the London stage as a play from Eden Philpotts. He was also an author and poet and a friend of Agatha Christie. His play was a huge hit; none other than Laurence Olivier went on tour with it in 1926.

Hitchcock later told Francois Truffaut in their famous interview he had little recollection of The Farmer's Wife.




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