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1937 film by Richard Thorpe From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Night Must Fall is a 1937 American film adaptation of the 1935 play by Emlyn Williams, adapted by John Van Druten and directed by Richard Thorpe. It stars Robert Montgomery, Rosalind Russell and Dame May Whitty in her Hollywood film debut at age 72, who earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress. She reprised her role in the stage drama in London and New York City. A critical success, Night Must Fall was named the best film of the year by the National Board of Review. Robert Montgomery also received an Oscar nomination for Best Actor in a Leading Role. A 1964 remake starred Albert Finney, although the remake did not do as well as the original.
Night Must Fall | |
---|---|
Directed by | Richard Thorpe |
Screenplay by | John Van Druten |
Based on | Night Must Fall 1935 play by Emlyn Williams |
Produced by | Hunt Stromberg |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Ray June |
Edited by | Robert Kern |
Music by | Edward Ward |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Loew's Inc.[1] |
Release date |
|
Running time | 116 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $589,000 (est.) |
Box office | $1,015,000 (worldwide est.) |
Police drag the river and search the surrounding countryside in a small English village for the body of Mrs. Shellbrook, who was a guest at the local hotel and has been missing for days. The authorities question the town folk, including those living in the home of Mrs. Bramson, an elderly woman who holds court in the village. She pretends to need a wheelchair, and threatens to fire her maid, Dora, for allegedly stealing a chicken and breaking china. Dora distracts Mrs. Bramson by mentioning her Irish boyfriend, Danny, who works at the hotel. Danny comes by to visit Dora, who asks Mrs. Bramson to speak with him. Perceiving that Mrs. Bramson is a hypochondriac who only affects her need for a wheelchair, Danny is charming toward her and says that she reminds him of his mother. He tells Mrs. Bramson that he loves Dora and would marry her if he had a better job. Mrs. Bramson offers him one, and he becomes her servant.
Mrs. Bramson's niece and companion, Olivia Grayne, is suspicious of Danny, but Mrs. Bramson dismisses her concerns. When Mrs. Bramson's attorney, Justin Laurie, arrives to give his client money, he warns her not to keep so much cash in her possession, but she ignores him, too. Arriving with his belongings, Danny sees Mrs. Bramson putting cash into her safe, but pretends not to notice. Meanwhile, Justin asks Olivia to marry him, but she refuses because their relationship lacks any true romance. Justin leaves, feeling dejected. Olivia later catches Danny lying to Mrs. Bramson about a shawl that allegedly belonged to his mother, as Olivia notices the price tag still attached to it. Even so, she removes the tag so Mrs. Bramson does not become aware of it. Olivia, annoyed by Danny at first, comes to feel attracted to him as he occasionally both challenges and compliments her.
Dora discovers Mrs. Shellbrook's decapitated body in the forest; her head is still missing. Olivia accuses Danny of the murder, but he denies it. Again, Mrs. Bramson dismisses her niece's concerns as she has grown fond of Danny. Olivia visits Justin and tells him she is afraid, so he invites her to stay with him and his mother. Olivia first accepts his offer, but later declines, saying that she is silly for being so fearful.
During the week, locals take tours of the crime scene. Since her house is in the vicinity, Mrs. Bramson becomes a local celebrity, and basks in the attention to Olivia's disgust. A detective questions Danny and searches his room, making him fearful. Feeling sympathetic towards Danny, Olivia helps him deceive the detective. Meanwhile, the rest of the household does not feel comfortable being in the house while a killer is at large, but Mrs. Bramson feels because of Danny.
The following night, Olivia leaves, being afraid of Danny. She warns Mrs. Bramson not to spend another night there. Mrs. Bramson dismisses Olivia as silly, declaring Danny will protect her. Two other servant girls leave for the evening as well. Realizing she is alone, Mrs. Bramson hears noises and becomes frightened. She screams for Danny, who comes in and calms her down by giving her something to drink, and tries to lull her to sleep. To her horror, Danny then suffocates her and empties the safe.
Olivia returns, just as Danny is about to pour kerosene all over the house and set it ablaze. She tells Danny she returned to prove she was right about him, realizing he has murdered her aunt. Danny tells her about his childhood, and resenting being looked down upon for being a servant, and states that this is his chance and he is taking it. He says that he must kill her too, so no one can incriminate him in Mrs. Bramson's murder. Olivia replies she understands he will kill her, but wants him to know she is no longer attracted to him and now sees him for who he really is, a cold-blooded killer. As Danny closes in on Olivia, Justin arrives with the police. He called them when he could not reach her by phone. They arrest Danny for murder while Justin and Olivia embrace.
Dame May Whitty, Kathleen Harrison, Merle Tuttenham and Matthew Boulton reprised the roles they originated in the London production. Whitty and Boulton also appeared in the Broadway production.[2]
In an article on TCM.com, Margarita Landazuri reports that Montgomery saw the play in New York and “badgered” Louis B. Mayer into giving him the role. Apparently, the studio was willing to risk a flop in order to get control over Montgomery and his desire for meatier roles. He recalled: “... they okayed my playing in it because they thought the fan reaction to me, in such a role, would humiliate me." The actor also agreed to pay part of the cost of the film.[3]
The film was a critical but not a financial success. The New York Daily News wrote that Robert Montgomery's performance "lifts the MGM actor out of the lower brackets, where he has slipped because of shoddy material, into an eminent position among the top-notchers of Hollywood players." Variety proclaimed that "the appearance of Montgomery in a part which is the antithesis of his pattern may be art, but it's not box office." Louis B. Mayer personally supervised the making of a trailer that preceded the film, warning filmgoers of its "experimental nature."[4]
Writing for Night and Day in 1937, Graham Greene gave the film a poor review, describing it as a "pretentious little murder play...a long dim film". Greene comments that the main problem with the film is that it is directed "like an early talky...no more than a photographed stage play".[5]
The film grossed a total (domestic and foreign) of $1,015,000: $550,000 from the US and Canada and $465,000 elsewhere. It made a profit of $40,000.[citation needed]
Night Must Fall was named the best film of 1937 by the National Board of Review.[6]
Montgomery was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor and Whitty for Best Supporting Actress.[7]
The Warner Archive Collection released Night Must Fall on DVD (Region 0 NTSC) on December 14, 2010.[8][9]
A radio adaptation of Night Must Fall was presented on Philip Morris Playhouse October 24, 1941.[10] Starring Burgess Meredith, Maureen O'Sullivan and Flora Robson, the program has not survived in radio collections.[11]
Night Must Fall was adapted for the July 24, 1944, broadcast of The Screen Guild Theater, starring James Cagney, Rosemary DeCamp and May Whitty.[12][13]
Robert Montgomery produced, hosted and starred in a CBS Radio adaptation of Night Must Fall on Suspense March 27, 1948. May Whitty, Heather Angel, Richard Ney and Matthew Boulton costarred.[14][15]
A remake, also entitled Night Must Fall, was released in 1964, starring Albert Finney.
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