Dodsworth (film)
Dodsworth is a 1936 American drama film directed by William Wyler, and starring Walter Huston, Ruth Chatterton, Paul Lukas, and Mary Astor. Sidney Howard based the screenplay on his 1934 stage adaptation of the 1929 novel of the same name by Sinclair Lewis. Huston reprised his stage role.
The center of the film is a study of a marriage in crisis. Recently retired auto magnate Samuel Dodsworth and his narcissistic wife Fran, while on a grand European tour, discover that they want very different things out of life, straining their marriage.
The film was critically praised and nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Actor for Huston, and Best Director for Wyler, and won for Best Art Direction. Dodsworth was nominated for AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies in 1997 and 2007.
Plot
In the small Midwestern city of Zenith, Samuel "Sam" Dodsworth is a successful, self-made man: the president of Dodsworth Motors, which he founded 20 years before. Then he sells the company to retire. Although Tubby Pearson, Sam's banker and friend, warns him that men like them are only happy when they are working, Sam has no plans beyond an extended trip to Europe with his wife Fran, who feels trapped by their dull small city social life.While travelling on the RMS Queen Mary to England, Sam meets Edith Cortright, an American divorcee now living in Italy, who is sympathetic to his eagerness to expand his horizons and learn new things. Meanwhile, Fran indulges in a light flirtation with a handsome Englishman ; but when he suggests it become more serious, she hastily retreats and asks Sam not to spend time in England as planned, but go on directly to Paris.
Once there, Fran begins to view herself as a sophisticated world traveler and tries to develop a high-class social life, also pretending to be much younger than she is. Sam says that people who would socialize with hicks like either of them are not really high-class, but she sees him as increasingly boring and unimaginative; he only wants to see the usual tourist sights and visit car factories. She becomes infatuated with cultured playboy Arnold Iselin, who invites her to Montreux and later Biarritz. She suggests Sam return home and allow her to spend the summer in Europe; feeling rather out of place in the urbane Old World, he consents.
Sam is happily welcomed by his old friends, as well as his daughter and new son-in-law, who have moved into his and Fran's mansion. Before long, though, Sam realizes that life back home has left him behind—and he is tormented by the idea that Fran might have, as well. He has a Dodsworth manager in Europe confirm that she is in fact seeing Iselin, and returns to Europe immediately on the RMS Aquitania to put a stop to it. Fran tries to deny the affair, but Iselin confirms everything. She breaks down and begs for forgiveness. He still loves her and agrees to patch up their marriage.
However, it is soon evident that they have grown far apart. In Vienna, news of the birth of their first grandchild arrives; although initially excited, Fran is displeased with the idea of being a grandmother. She eventually informs Sam that she wants a divorce, especially after the poor, but charming, young Baron Kurt von Obersdorf tells her he would marry her if she were free. Sam agrees.
Sightseeing aimlessly throughout the Continent while the divorce is being arranged, Sam encounters Edith by chance in an American Express office in Naples. She invites him to stay at her peaceful, charming Italian villa. The two rapidly fall in love. Sam feels so rejuvenated that he wants to start a new business: an airline connecting Moscow and Seattle via Siberia. He asks Edith to marry him and fly with him to Samarkand and other exotic locales on his new venture. She gladly accepts.
Meanwhile, Fran's idyllic plans are shattered when Kurt's mother rejects his request to marry Fran. In addition to divorce being against their religion, she tells Fran that Kurt must have children to carry on the family line, and Fran would be an "old wife of a young husband". Kurt asks Fran to postpone their wedding until he can get his mother's approval; but Fran sees that it is hopeless, and calls off the divorce.
Feeling a duty to Fran, Sam reluctantly decides to sail home with her on the SS Rex, leaving Edith. However, after only a short time in Fran's now critical and demanding company, Sam realizes their marriage is irrevocably over. "Love has to stop somewhere short of suicide", he tells her. At the last moment, he gets off the ship to rejoin Edith. Sam sails back to Edith's villa where she is standing on the balcony overlooking the water looking very sad. When she thinks she sees Sam on the sailboat her eyes light up with anticipation and when the sail moves to the side revealing it is indeed him with a huge smile on his face, Edith's face changes to an equally brilliant smile.
Principal players
- Walter Huston as Sam Dodsworth
- Ruth Chatterton as Fran Dodsworth
- Paul Lukas as Arnold Iselin
- Mary Astor as Edith Cortright
- David Niven as Captain Lockert
- Gregory Gaye as Kurt Von Obersdorf
- Mme. Maria Ouspenskaya as Baroness Von Obersdorf
- Odette Myrtil as Renée De Penable
- Spring Byington as Matey Pearson
- Harlan Briggs as Tubby Pearson
- Kathryn Marlowe as Emily
- John Howard Payne as Harry
Production
The film was in production during Mary Astor's bitter divorce proceedings and child custody battle; during part of the production, to avoid the press, Astor lived in her dressing room bungalow, working on the film during the day and appearing in court in evening sessions.
The film's sets were designed by the art director Richard Day.
Reception
, writing for The New York Times in September 1936, described the film as "admirable", and added that director Wyler "has had the skill to execute it in cinematic terms, and a gifted cast has been able to bring the whole alive to our complete satisfaction... The film version has done more than justice to Mr. Howard's play, converting a necessarily episodic tale... into a smooth-flowing narrative of sustained interest, well-defined performance and good talk."Time magazine said it was "directed with a proper understanding of its values by William Wyler, splendidly cast, and brilliantly played".
Among the film industry's leading critics in 1936, the entertainment trade publication Variety bestowed perhaps the highest praise on the production:
Writing for The Spectator in 1936, Graham Greene gave the film a good review, describing it as "a very well-made and well-acted film". Greene criticized the director's overuse of music which he described as "almost incessant", however he praised the "naturalness" of the picture as a quality all too rare in film.
The film was named one of the year's ten best by The New York Times, and was one of the top twenty box office films of the year.
The film historian and Turner Classic Movies host Robert Osborne named Dodsworth his favorite film.
In 1990, Dodsworth was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry. In 2005, Time magazine named it one of the 100 best movies of the past 80 years.
Dodsworth currently holds an 89% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on eighteen reviews.
Awards and nominations
At the Academy Awards, the film was nominated for seven awards, winning one.;Wins
- Best Art Direction: Richard Day
- Outstanding Production: Samuel Goldwyn Productions
- Best Director: William Wyler
- Best Actor: Walter Huston
- Actress in a Supporting Role: Maria Ouspenskaya
- Best Sound Recording: Thomas T. Moulton
- Best Writing : Sidney Howard