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Until They Sail

 
Movies:

Until They Sail

  • Director: Robert Wise
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: War Romance, Romantic Drama
  • Themes: Women During Wartime, Sibling Relationships, Military Life
  • Main Cast: Jean Simmons, Joan Fontaine, Paul Newman, Piper Laurie, Charles Drake
  • Release Year: 1957
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 95 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

Adapted by Robert Anderson from a story by James A. Michener, the Robert Wise-directed soaper Until They Sail is set in World-War-II New Zealand. Paul Newman plays been-there-done-that U.S. marine captain Jack Harding, assigned to investigate servicemen's requests to marry local girls. An unemotional cipher, Harding begins to warm up when he meets war widow Barbara Leslie Forbes (Jean Simmons), a woman with three sisters (played by Joan Fontaine, Piper Laurie, and Sandra Dee -- what a gene pool!). The Newman-Simmons relationship is played against the romance between uptight spinster Anne Leslie (Fontaine) and good-natured officer Richard Bates (Charles Drake), and the dysfunctional marriage between the emotionally desperate (and nymphomaniacal) Delia Leslie (Laurie) and slimy Shiner Friskett (Wally Cassell), who is off in battle. The fourth sister, Evelyn (Dee), watches her sisters' amorous pursuits longingly, her mind occupied by her own true love, who is off to war. Until They Sail was a copacetic reunion between star Newman and director Robert Wise, who'd previously collaborated in Somebody Up There Likes Me. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Sandra Dee - Evelyn Leslie; Wally Cassell - Phil "Shiner" Friskett; Alan Napier - Prosecution; Ralph Votrian - Max Murphy; John Wilder - Tommy; Tige Andrews - US Marine; Adam Kennedy - Lt. Andy; Mickey Shaughnessy - US Marine; Nicky Blair - US Marine; William Boyett - US Marine; James Douglas - Marine with Girl; Jimmy Hayes - US Marine; Kendrick Huxham - Judge; Robert Keys - Maj. Campbell; Patrick Macnee - Private Duff; Roger McGee - US Marine; Vesey O'Davoren - Reverend; Pat O'Hara - Policeman; Hilda Plowright - Woman; David Thursby - Trainman; James Todd - Attorney; Anne Wakefield - Mrs. Campbell; Patrick Waltz; Ben Wright - Defense; Don Eitner; Phyllis Douglas - New Zealand Girl; Stanley Fraser - Court Crier; Pamela Light; John Rosser; Morgan Jones - US Marine; Jim Cox - Marine

Credit

Paul Groesse - Art Director, William Horning - Art Director, Robert Wise - Director, Harold Kress - Editor, David Raksin - Composer (Music Score), Sammy Cahn - Songwriter, David Raksin - Songwriter, Joseph Ruttenberg - Cinematographer, Charles Schnee - Producer, Robert Anderson - Screenwriter, James Michener - Short Story Author
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Until They Sail

Original poster
Directed by Robert Wise
Produced by Charles Schnee
Written by Robert Anderson
Based on a story by James A. Michener
Starring Jean Simmons
Joan Fontaine
Paul Newman
Piper Laurie
Music by David Raksin
Cinematography Joseph Ruttenberg
Editing by Harold F. Kress
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) October 8, 1957  United States
Running time 94 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Until They Sail is a 1957 American drama film directed by Robert Wise. The screenplay by Robert Anderson, based on a story by James A. Michener included in his 1951 anthology Return to Paradise, focuses on four New Zealand sisters and their relationships with Allied sailors during World War II.

Contents

Plot

The film opens in a Wellington courtroom, where testimony prompts Barbara Leslie to flashback to the events that led to the trial. She and her sisters Anne, Evelyn, and Delia live in Christchurch, where most of the male residents, including their brother Kit and Barbara's new husband Mark, are preparing to leave for World War II duty. Delia announces her engagement to Phil Friskett, aka Shiner, who is one of the city's few remaining bachelors, but word of Kit's death dampens the celebration. Repressed and judgmental spinster sister Anne disapproves of the upcoming nuptials, but Barbara defends Delia's decision.

Within weeks of the marriage, the sisters come to resent Shiner's abuse and are happy to see him leave for active duty. Delia moves to Wellington to work for the Navy. When several hundred United States Marines are shipped to Christchurch following the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, the lonely local women are flattered by the attention they pay them. When Evelyn invites Capt. Richard Bates to dinner, he declines the offer, but not without attracting Anne's eye.

Concerned about Delia, Anne sends Barbara to Wellington, where she discovers her sister is registered at the St. George Hotel under her maiden name. Shiner is now a prisoner of war, and Delia has become involved with an American lieutenant named Andy. She plans to divorce Shiner and emigrate to the United States. Andy introduces Barbara to his friend Jack Harding, a soldier investigating the prospective New Zealand brides of American soldiers. Although Barbara intends to remain faithful to her husband, she finds herself attracted to Jack.

Back in Christchurch, Anne is outraged by the lewd comments made by American servicemen in the lingerie shop where she works and writes a letter of complaint to the local paper. Following its publication, Richard is sent to the Leslie home to deliver a formal apology on behalf of the Marine Corps. Anne invites him to dinner, and Richard arrives with a gift of perfume for each sister. Anne accuses him of trying to seduce them.

Soon after, Barbara and Anne learn of Mark's death and Richard's departure for active duty. He eventually returns to New Zealand to recuperate from an injury, and a romance between him and Anne blossoms. He proposes, but before the required marital investigation can take place, he is given offshore duty, leaving Anne expecting their child and unsure of what the future holds for them.

Jack arrives at the Leslie home to conduct his investigation of Anne, and he advises her that wartime romances stem from loneliness rather than love. Barbara tells him his assessment is heartless. Shortly after she discovers Richard's name on the latest casualty list. Weeks later, Jack meets Barbara at a local dance, where she suggests he uses alcohol to avoid intimacy. He breaks down in her arms, and a strong friendship between the two blossoms.

Jack celebrates Christmas Eve with the Leslie family, which now includes Anne's newborn son. When he announces his imminent departure for duty, he and Barbara share an amorous embrace. Months later, Evelyn's sweetheart Tommy returns from war and proposes to her. Barbara sees an ad from Richard's mother in a newspaper column containing personal notices from American families and writes to her. Mrs. Bates sends money to finance Anne and her baby's move to Oklahoma to live with Richard's family.

As Anne's departure approaches, Delia goes to Wellington to see her off and to meet Shiner, who has just returned from war. He accuses her of infidelity and she demands a divorce so she can leave for America with her lover. Infuriated, Shiner kills his wife with a Japanese sword he brought back from the war.

Weeks later, during the murder trial, Jack is forced to reveal his investigation report detailing Delia's many affairs with American soldiers. Upset that her sister's infidelities seemingly have justified her savage murder, Barbara refuses Jack's invitation to leave New Zealand with him. Upon reflection, she packs her belongings and arrives at Jack's hotel to tell him she's ready to embark upon a new life with him.

Cast

Music

The score for the film was composed and conducted by David Raksin. The title song included lyrics by Sammy Cahn and was performed under the main titles by vocalist Eydie Gorme.[1]

The complete score was issued on cd in 2009, on Film Score Monthly records.

Critical reception

Bosley Crowther of the New York Times observed, "The genuine tugs at the heart are few and far between in this bittersweet but basically restrained chronicle. Robert Anderson's adaptation . . . is honest and straightforward . . . Unfortunately there is a good deal of introspective soul-searching before this narrative arrives at its sad and happy endings." [2]

William K. Zinsser of the New York Herald Tribune said the film "has moments of genuine tenderness and truth." [3]

References

  1. ^ Bettencourt, Scott (2009). Release notes for David Raksin at MGM (1950-1957) by David Raksin (CD online notes). Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.: Film Score Monthly (Vol. 12, No. 2).
  2. ^ New York Times review
  3. ^ Until They Sail at Turner Classic Movies

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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