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A Place
In the Sun (1951)
In Best Director-winning George Stevens' classic tearjerker
based upon Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy - a star-crossed
melodramatic romance (and social drama) set in 1950:
- in the opening, low-born, ambitious George Eastman
(Montgomery Clift) from Chicago hitched a ride to his distant,
wealthy Uncle Charles Eastman's (Herbert Heyes) place, where he
sought and acquired employment at his Uncle's bathing suit factory
as a low-level worker; George had left his widowed mother Hannah
Eastman (Anne Revere), a religious mission worker in Chicago
- as the mostly-ungifted, aimless, and uneducated
nephew George slowly ascended the ladder of success, powerful romantic
chemistry developed between him and snobbish, beautiful, well-bred
rich socialite-debutante Angela Vickers (Elizabeth Taylor) - his
own distant cousin
- in the meantime, George began to date (against company
policies regarding fraternization with co-workers) and eventually
impregnated poor, lower-class Alice Tripp (Shelley
Winters); in her cramped one-room apartment while serving the very
tardy George his birthday dinner, she confessed: "George,
it's awful. I can't tell you now....Oh, I'm so afraid...George, I'm
in trouble - real trouble, I think...Remember the first night we
came here. Oh, I'm so worried"
- the first of two starry-eyed, sensuous romantic scenes
between George and Angela: (1) during their dance scene: George appeared
sullen, deep and far away (due to the fact that he had impregnated
a co-worker), so he confessed his love to Angela, a love of an ideal
woman which had now been discovered in her: "I love you. I've
loved you since the first moment I saw you. I guess maybe I've loved
you before I saw you"; Angela then began to confess her love
too, but then became totally self-conscious, looking around anxiously
and hesitantly: "You're the fellow who wondered why I invited
you here tonight. Well, I'll tell you why. I love...Are they watching
us?" - and she pulled
him out to the balcony terrace for privacy
Dancing Sequence
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George's Sullen Look
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"Aren't you happy with me?"
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"I've loved you since the first moment I saw you"
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"Are they watching us?"
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- (2) during their terrace balcony scene:
she replied reticently to his confession: "I love you too.
It scares me. But it is a wonderful feeling"; extreme closeups
filled the screen as they revealed innermost emotions and inflamed
passions; George was filled with guilt and repression: "Oh,
Angela, if I could only tell you how much I love you, if I could
only tell you all." She comforted him with an intimate reply while pulling him closer
to her: "Tell Mama, tell Mama all"; they embraced and kissed passionately
(a soft-focus kiss in gigantic close-up)
- a doctor refused to terminate Alice's shameful
and unwanted pregnancy (the term abortion was not used); as a result,
Alice used coercive blackmail and insisted on an immediate marriage
with George (to make their child legitimate): ("I'll
tell them everything George, I mean it") - she confronted George
on the phone and threatened to reveal their relationship and pregnancy,
and even mentioned committing suicide
- on Labor Day weekend at the
Vickers' lakeside home during a vacation period, Alice arrived in
town to speak to George, and insisted that they go to the county
clerk's office to get married immediately - but it was closed for
the holiday
- the scene of the infamous lake/rowboat "murder" -
during a rowboat ride with Alice out into the middle of Loon Lake
on a dark night, George contemplated, planned and willed (if not
actually committed) the murder of his fiancee; however, at the last
crucial moment, he realized that he could not bring himself to carry
out his murderous evil plan ("I'll make it up to you. I'll stick
by you") by overturning the boat and letting her drown; but
then, in an ironic twist of fate, when she stood up to embrace him
and console him ("Oh, poor George. I know it isn't easy for
you. I shouldn't have said that"), she unbalanced the boat and
caused it to rock and capsize; she accidentally fell in the lake
and drowned, and he was unable (or unwilling) to save her
- the scene ended in a very long shot of the overturned rowboat, and transitioned
to a dark, blurry dissolve into the next scene; George attempted
to delay dealing with the fact of Alice's death, but was soon confronted
and arrested by authorities: ("Is your name George Eastman?...You're
under arrest")
The Lake - Rowboat "Murder" Sequence
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Boat Capsized
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Overturned Rowboat
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"Is
your name George Eastman?...You're under arrest!"
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- during a dramatic courtroom trial, George faced
murder charges, and confessed that he intended to murder Alice,
but there were no witnesses that he actually did; there was only
strong circumstantial evidence against him; the relentless District
Attorney R. Frank Marlowe (Raymond Burr, TV's future Perry Mason)
devastated George on the stand; he even re-enacted the rowboat
death in the courtroom, while George failed to credibly answer
questions and help to reconstruct the drowning -- the most dramatic
moment in the courtroom came when Marlowe struck the oar across
the boat, implying that George had struck Alice and caused her
to fall into the water
- in the final prison/execution farewell scene in his
death cell, condemned and doomed poor boy George was with Angela,
wearing black (with a white collar): Angela: "...I'll
go on loving you for as long as I live." George replied: "Love
me for the time I have left. Then, forget me." They kissed
one last time. Angela: "Goodbye, George." She half-turned
away and then looked back. "Seems like we always spend the
best part of our time just saying goodbye." George took to
his death the superimposed image of dark-haired Angela kissing him
- inevitably, George fell from his 'place in the sun'
when executed (by the electric chair)
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George in Opening Credits - Hitchhiking
George's Forbidden Relationship with Co-Worker Alice
Alice's Startling Confession of Pregnancy
Balcony Love Scene: "Tell Mama, tell Mama all"
Alice Coercively Confronting George: "I'll
tell them everything"
Courtroom Trial: George on Witness Stand Brutally
Questioned by DA Frank Marlowe (Raymond Burr)
Final Prison Farewell Scene
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