Thursday, August 17, 2017

Best Pictures #43: 1930-31 (4th) Academy Awards Outstanding Production Nominee East Lynne (1931)

by A.J.

Best Pictures #43: 1930-31 (4th) Academy Awards Outstanding Production Nominee
East Lynne (1931)
East Lynne is fortunately not a lost film, but it is unavailable to the general public. There is only one print of the film in existence and it is kept at the UCLA Film Archive. It is a non-circulating item, but can be viewed by appointment. I fully intend to make such an appointment to view East Lynne (along with the other Best Picture nominee that only exists in their archive, The White Parade (1934)) once a trip to Los Angeles fits my schedule and budget. Until then, what I know about East Lynne I have gathered from IMDB.com, Wikipedia, the blogs of people that have seen the film at UCLA, and, most importantly, the reviews from the New York Times and Variety from the film’s initial release. 

Produced and released by the Fox Film Corporation, East Lynne is a Victorian era set melodrama based on a novel by Ellen Wood. It stars Ann Harding as Lady Isabella Carlyle, Conrad Nagel as her husband Robert, Clive Book as Sir Francis Levison, who is in love with Isabella, and is directed by Frank Lloyd. The movie follows Lady Isabella, a member of society’s upper echelon, who suffers misfortune after misfortune including the sabotaging of her marriage, a divorce, and ostracization. The film’s finale has her rushing to see her son again before she goes completely blind. The story had been adapted as a play and the movie is based on the stage version as much as the novel though it makes changes to both. 
The review in Variety (the author credited is “Variety Staff”) published on December 31st, 1930 has the has the headline: “An excellent piece of work in taking a legendary meller [melodrama] play and transposing it into a screen drama of strength and charm.” In his review for the New York Times, published on February 21st, 1931 just as the film was released nationwide, Mordaunt Hall writes, “Many a dainty handkerchief was dabbed on a pretty face during some of the episodes in the career of the unfortunate Lady Isabella; this alone was a testimonial to Miss Harding's impressive performance.” Hall goes on to praise Harding: “when Miss Harding appears, always attractively gowned, she captures one's full attention.” The Variety review agrees, stating that Harding gave an “outstanding performance.” Both praise the sets and interior design by Joseph Urban and have positive things to say about director Frank Lloyd. Both reviews are positive overall though each has one complaint. Variety states that the scene in which Isabella meets her father in Paris is a “false note.” The sole complaint of the Times’ review is: “The actual ending of the film is a trifle too melodramatic, but what happens just before is accomplished in an appealing fashion.”

The modern reviews from the blogs of other people dedicated to watching every Best Picture nominee range from very negative to mixed. The consensus from those reviews is that East Lynne is an outdated melodrama. It will be some time before I can concur or disagree with the modern reviews or the reviews from the movie’s theatrical release. As far as I can tell only from what I have read, it seems that East Lynne, being an adaptation of a well-known novel and play with decorative sets and costumes and heavy melodrama would be considered “Oscar bait” today. Even then the Academy couldn’t resist, but only gave it one nomination, for Outstanding Production. 
Nominee: Fox
Producer: William Fox
Director: Frank Lloyd
Screenplay: Tom Barry and Bradley King, based on the novel by Ellen Wood
Cast: Ann Harding, Conrad Nagel, Clive Brook
Release Date: March 31st, 1931
Total Nominations: 1, including Outstanding Production
Other Nominations: N/A

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