Perfect Strangers (1945 film)
Perfect Strangers | |
---|---|
A poster with the film's US title: Vacation from Marriage | |
Directed by | Alexander Korda |
Produced by | Alexander Korda |
Screenplay by |
Clemence Dane Anthony Pelissier |
Story by | Clemence Dane |
Starring |
Robert Donat Deborah Kerr |
Music by | Clifton Parker |
Cinematography | Georges Périnal |
Edited by | Edward B. Jarvis |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release dates | 15 October 1945 (London) |
Running time |
102 minutes (UK) 93 minutes (US) |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Perfect Strangers (United States title: Vacation from Marriage), is a 1945 British drama film made by London Films. It stars Robert Donat and Deborah Kerr as a married couple whose relationship is shaken by their service in the Second World War. The supporting cast includes Glynis Johns, Ann Todd and Roland Culver. It was produced and directed by Alexander Korda from a screenplay by Clemence Dane and Anthony Pelissier based on a story by Clemence Dane. Dane won the Academy Award for Best Story. The music score was by Clifton Parker and the cinematography by Georges Périnal.
Plot
Robert and Cathy Wilson (Robert Donat and Deborah Kerr) are a timid married couple in 1940 London. He is a bookkeeper, she a bored housewife. However, their tedium-filled lives are drastically changed by the war. He enlists in the Royal Navy, while she (against his wishes) joins the Wrens. During the three years the couple are apart, they are transformed, each becoming much more self-confident.
Cathy's assertive new friend, Dizzy Clayton (Glynis Johns), helps her break out of her shell. She begins going out with Dizzy's cousin, naval architect Richard (Roland Culver), who falls in love with her. However, she remains faithful (if unenthusiastically) to her husband.
Meanwhile, Robert toughens up on sea duty and in time becomes a petty officer. His hands are badly burned when his ship is sunk, but he stoically rows in the lifeboat for five days without complaint. He recuperates in a hospital, tended by Elena (Ann Todd), a beautiful nurse. On the last night of his stay, he asks her out to dinner. He is attracted to her, but she informs him that she lost her beloved husband only six months earlier, kisses him, and leaves.
Robert and Cathy both receive ten-day leaves, but each dreads being reunited with the dowdy spouse each remembers and being forced back into the dreary life they shared.
Cathy cannot bring herself to return to her flat, where Robert is waiting. Instead, she phones Robert to meet her on more neutral ground. She tells him she will not be returning to him. He is relieved and readily agrees to a divorce, to her surprise. They then go to the neighbourhood pub, where each discovers the wholesale changes in the other. They find that they are "perfect strangers". Nonetheless, they are attracted to each other. Robert's friend 'Scotty' lets slip Robert's unflattering description of the 'old' Cathy to the new; it hardens her heart. But later that night, the couple reconsider and reconcile.
Cast
- Robert Donat as Robert Wilson
- Deborah Kerr as Cathy Wilson
- Glynis Johns as Dizzy Clayton
- Ann Todd as Elena
- Roland Culver as Richard
- Elliott Mason as Mrs. Hemmings
Cast notes
- Deborah Kerr made her MGM debut in this film. MGM had purchased half of her contract after her performance in Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, in which she played three roles. MGM studio boss Louis B. Mayer is supposed to have said "That girl's a star" upon seeing her performance in Perfect Strangers, and she was soon an established MGM property.[1]
- On the other hand, Perfect Strangers was Robert Donat's last film for MGM.[1]
- Roger Moore made his uncredited film debut in Perfect Strangers.
Production
Perfect Strangers was the first of what was supposed to be a number of co-productions between Alexander Korda and M-G-M – including a version of War and Peace directed by Orson Welles and starring Korda's wife, Merle Oberon, as well as The Hardy Family in England – but no subsequent films came from the agreement, because Korda bristled at being bossed around by MGM's head of production, Louis B. Mayer.[1][2]
The film was originally scheduled to have been directed by Wesley Ruggles, but producer Korda took over the reins after disagreements with him about the film's story.[2]
The film did some location shooting in Scotland, but was primarily shot in London.[2]
Reception
Perfect Strangers was a commercial success in both the UK and the US, where it was re-titled Vacation from Marriage.[1] It was one of the biggest hits at the British box office in 1945.[3]
Awards and honors
Clemence Dane won an Academy Award for Best Original Motion Picture Story for Perfect Strangers".[4]
References
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 Fristoe, Roger. "Vacation from Marriage (1945)" TCM.com
- 1 2 3 "Notes" TCM.com
- ↑ Robert Murphy, Realism and Tinsel: Cinema and Society in Britain 1939-48, p 207
- ↑ "Vacation From Marriage" Academy Award Database, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
Bibliography
- Vermilye, Jerry. The Great British Films, Citadel Press, 1978. pp 82–84. ISBN 0-8065-0661-X
External links
- Perfect Strangers at the Internet Movie Database
- Perfect Strangers at the TCM Movie Database
- Perfect Strangers at AllMovie