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Return to Peyton Place

 
Movies:

Return to Peyton Place

  • Director: José Ferrer
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Melodrama, Ensemble Film
  • Themes: Suburban Dysfunction, Small-Town Life, Haunted By the Past
  • Main Cast: Carol Lynley, Jeff Chandler, Eleanor Parker, Mary Astor, Tuesday Weld, Robert Sterling
  • Release Year: 1961
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 122 minutes

Plot

If anything, this star-studded sequel is even sillier than the original, adding to its problems by completely recasting all the roles, combining several of them into existing characters. Carol Lynley is the heroine this time, and she leaves Peyton Place for New York to write a book about the hypocrisy of her hometown. The book causes lots of trouble back home, getting Mike (Robert Sterling) fired as principal, angering Lynley's mother (Eleanor Parker), and stirring such horrible memories in Selena (Tuesday Weld) that she brains her new boyfriend with a fireplace poker, thinking he is her dead rapist stepfather. The film really belongs to Mary Astor, in a hilarious turn as a smotheringly possessive mother. She tries to come between her son and his new bride (Luciana Paluzzi) in some unintentionally hilarious scenes, causing Paluzzi to fling herself down a ski slope in an attempt at a self-induced miscarriage. Overwrought and overblown, the film is still a treat for fans of campy "suburban sin" melodramas. Look for Bob Crane as an unctuous talk show sidekick. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide

Review

The time was when 20th Century Fox, more than any other studio, had a knack for generating sequels and follow-up movies that were not only better movies, but also, occasionally, more interesting movies than their predecessors -- Fritz Lang's The Return of Frank James comes to mind, as a sequel to Henry King's Jesse James, as does Alfred Werker's The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes as a follow-up to Sidney Lanfield's The Hound of the Baskervilles. Alas, Return to Peyton Place doesn't fit into that group or category; indeed, watching it is more like watching Beneath the Planet of the Apes (ironically, a product of the same studio) -- you're there because of the earlier movie, and wondering what went wrong. Both movies represented significant come-downs from their predecessors, and seemed to take wrong turns in the basic thinking behind their respective scripts, tampering with essential characters, and compressing or deleting elements that made the earlier films work. The cast here is not bad -- Mary Astor had been a fine actress for decades, and Jeff Chandler, Robert Sterling, and Eleanor Parker were good players, even if Carol Lynley and Tuesday Weld were a bit lightweight in their respective roles.

The script, however, is a train wreck compared with the original film's screenplay, which, for all of its soap opera elements, at least had a little depth and complexity. The pieces just don't fit together properly as drama, the holes are obvious, and not even beautiful cinematography by Charles G. Clarke, a lush -- overripe -- score by Franz Waxman (complete with Rosemary Clooney singing the title song), or the presence of José Ferrer as director, doing the best that he could on individual scenes, can help the movie. It's obvious that he responded best to the portions of the script dealing with censorship and suppression, but there's a lot here that feels like it was phoned in, in the writing and the acting. And a lot of it feels like pieces of other, better scripts spliced together, along with some ludicrous moments as well; if Mary Astor's first scene plays well, the scenes between Jeff Chandler and Carol Lynley seem like bad college theater. Indeed, Ferrer's presence in the director's chair only adds to the sense of confusion one gets watching the movie. On the plus side, one does get a last glimpse of one-time movie and vaudeville funny man Emerson Treacy (as Bud Humphries) and Astor in a very late-career starring role, and the film certainly looks very good. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Cast

Luciana Paluzzi - Raffaella Carter; Gunnar Hellstrom - Nils; Brett Halsey - Ted Carter; Kenneth MacDonald - Dexter; Bob Crane - Peter White; Bill Bradley - Mark Steele; Tim Durant - John Smith; Casey Adams - Nick Parker; Pitt Herbert - Mr. Wadley; Warren Parker - Lupus Wolf; Arthur Peterson - Selectman; Jennifer Howard - Mrs. Jackman; Joan Banks - Mrs. Humphries; Emerson Treacy - Bud Humphries; Wilton Graff - Dr. Fowlkes; Hari (Harry) Rhodes - Arthur; Leonard Stone - Steve Swanson; Reedy Talton - Frank O'Roark; Jack Carr - Postman; Tony Miller - Photographer; Max Mellinger - Nevins; Collette Lyons - Mrs. Bingham; Carol Veazie - Interviewers; Helen Bennett - Interviewer; Charles Seel - Counterman

Credit

Hans Peters - Art Director, Jack Martin Smith - Art Director, Curtis Harrington - Associate Producer, Donfeld - Costume Designer, David Hall - First Assistant Director, José Ferrer - Director, David Bretherton - Editor, Franz Waxman - Composer (Music Score), Leonid Raab - Musical Direction/Supervision, Rosemary Clooney - Songwriter, Paul Francis Webster - Songwriter, Ben Nye, Sr. - Makeup, Charles G. Clarke - Cinematographer, Jerry Wald - Producer, Fred MacLean - Set Designer, Walter Scott - Set Designer, Warren B. Delaplain - Sound/Sound Designer, Bernard Freericks - Sound/Sound Designer, Ronald Alexander - Screenwriter, Grace Metalious - Book Author

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Wikipedia: Return to Peyton Place (film)
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Return to Peyton Place

Original film poster
Directed by José Ferrer
Produced by Jerry Wald
Written by Ronald Alexander
Based on the novel by Grace Metalious
Starring Carol Lynley
Jeff Chandler
Eleanor Parker
Constance MacKenzie
Mary Astor
Robert Sterling
Music by Franz Waxman
Cinematography Charles G. Clarke
Editing by David Bretherton
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) May 5, 1961
Running time 123 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Gross revenue $9,996,178
Preceded by Peyton Place

Return to Peyton Place is a 1961 drama film produced by Jerry Wald and directed by José Ferrer. The screenplay by Ronald Alexander is based on the 1959 novel of the same name by Grace Metalious. The film is a sequel to Peyton Place.

Contents

Plot

The film centers on the life and loves of bestselling author Allison MacKenzie, who follows in the footsteps of her mother Constance by having an affair with a married man, her publisher Lewis Jackman. When she returns to her hometown following the publication of her first novel, Samuel's Castle, she is forced to face the wrath of its residents, who are incensed by their barely-disguised counterparts and the revelation of town secrets in the book. Roberta Carter makes it her mission to ban the book from the high school library, while at the same time trying to dissolve her son Ted's marriage to his Italian bride Raffaella. Another union in trouble is that of Allison's mother, who is shocked by her daughter's exposé, and stepfather Michael Rossi, the school principal and one of the novel's only defenders.

Production

The 1957 screen adaptation of Metalious' first novel had been a critical and commercial success, ranking second at the box office and garnering nine Academy Award nominations. But production costs for Cleopatra were affecting the studio's solvency,[1] so 20th Century Fox executives were unwilling to meet the salary demands of the original's A listers and opted to cast the sequel with lesser names. The film grossed $9,996,178 in the US, far less than the $25,600,000 earned by its predecessor.[2]

The film was shot in CinemaScope on location in Fitchburg, Massachusetts.

The film's theme, "The Wonderful Season of Love," was written by Paul Francis Webster and Franz Waxman and performed by Ferrer's then-wife Rosemary Clooney. The soundtrack has been released on CD by Varèse Sarabande,[3] and the film is available on DVD.

Cast

Critical reception

Variety described the film as "a high-class soap opera" and added, "José Ferrer's direction of this material is deliberate, but restrained and perceptive...The lovely Lynley does a thoroughly capable job, although a shade more animation would have been desirable. But it is the veteran Astor who walks off with the picture."[4]

TV Guide says, "the story and its themes tend to evolve to a predictable ending. Astor is marvelous in her role as the overbearing mother...and Weld, virtually unknown at the time, starred in a role that displayed her natural sex appeal."[5]

The UK website DVD Times opines the film "doesn't have the art or passion to make itself compelling, instead relying on a series of base, poorly constructed scenarios which drown quickly in melodramatic sap...The screenplay adopts the format of a daily soap opera...full of hysterical melodrama and inane meanderings...Astor, to her credit, is marvellous...Jeff Chandler...destroys every scene he's in while Carol Lynley makes a cold and unsympathetic lead, with a brittle voice and an oddly immovable face...Tuesday Weld...is spirited and would have made a better Allison."[6]

Robert Firsching of Allmovie said the film was "sillier than the original, adding to its problems by completely recasting all the roles, combining several of them into existing characters." Calling it "overwrought and overblown," he said "the film is still a treat for fans of campy 'suburban sin' melodramas."[7]

References

External links


 
 

 

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