Leave Her to Heaven

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Leave Her to Heaven
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn M. Stahl
Screenplay byJo Swerling
Based onLeave Her to Heaven
1944 novel
by Ben Ames Williams
Produced by
Starring
Cinematography
20th Century Fox
Release dates
  • December 20, 1945 (1945-12-20) (Carthay Circle Theater, Los Angeles)
  • December 25, 1945 (1945-12-25) (New York City)
Running time
110 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$8.2 million (worldwide rentals)[1]

Leave Her to Heaven is a 1945 American psychological thriller film noir melodrama[2] directed by John M. Stahl and starring Gene Tierney, Cornel Wilde, Jeanne Crain, and Vincent Price. It follows a socialite who marries a prominent novelist, which spurs a violent, obsessive, and dangerous jealousy in her. It is based on the 1944 novel of the same name by Ben Ames Williams, adapted by screenwriter Jo Swerling.

Shot in

Twentieth Century-Fox
's highest-grossing film of the entire decade.

In the decades following its release, Leave Her to Heaven garnered a

Queen Gertrude
, but rather to "leave her to heaven, and to those thorns that in her bosom lodge to prick and sting her."

In 2018, the film was selected for the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."[3][4]

Plot

While traveling by train in New Mexico, novelist Richard Harland meets Ellen Berent, a beautiful socialite from Boston. She is particularly drawn to him, as he reminds her of her deceased father, to whom she had an obsessive attachment. Ellen is visiting New Mexico to spread her father's ashes, accompanied by her aloof mother and her cousin Ruth, who was adopted by Mrs. Berent (Richard is surprised when Ruth tells him this, and wonders why she did not say "Mr. and Mrs. Berent" adopted her).

Richard and Ellen discover they are staying with the same friends, and begin a whirlwind romance. He is fascinated by Ellen's exotic beauty and intense personality. The couple's affair is interrupted when Ellen's fiancé, attorney Russell Quinton, from whom she is separated, arrives unexpectedly. Ellen announces at that time that she and Richard are to be married, to Richard's surprise.

Ellen and Richard marry in Warm Springs, Georgia before staying at his lodge on a lake in northern Maine. Their domestic life is copacetic at first, but it becomes gradually apparent that she is pathologically jealous of anyone and anything he cares about, including his family and career.

During an unexpected visit from Ellen's family, her mother attempts to warn Richard that Ellen is prone to obsessiveness and a compulsion to "love too much". Ellen's resentment only grows when Richard's beloved teenage brother, Danny, crippled by the effects of polio, comes to live with them. One afternoon, Ellen follows him on the lake in a rowboat as he attempts to swim from one end to the other. She knowingly encourages him to press on, even as Danny begins to struggle to stay afloat. Ellen watches from the boat as he sinks below the surface and drowns.

Gene Tierney and Jeanne Crain in Leave Her to Heaven

Danny's death is presumed an accident, and Ellen feigns sympathy. After settling at their home in Bar Harbor, Richard is despondent. At Ruth's suggestion, Ellen becomes pregnant in an attempt to please Richard, but later confesses to Ruth that she does not want the child, likening it to a "little beast".

One afternoon, Ellen throws herself down a staircase to induce a miscarriage. She succeeds in terminating the pregnancy, and after recovering in the hospital, accuses Ruth of being in love with Richard, citing a dedication in his new novel that alludes to her. Ruth rebukes Ellen by accusing her of causing the misery that has befallen the family. Richard overhears the argument, and begins to suspect Ellen is responsible for the deaths of Danny and of their unborn child.

When Richard confronts Ellen about Danny, she admits without remorse to having let him drown, and cruelly tells Richard she would do it again if given the chance. Following the confession, Richard leaves Ellen, but does not pursue criminal action as he does not believe there is sufficient evidence.

After Richard departs, Ellen sends a letter to Russell—now the county district attorney—in which she accuses Ruth of plotting to murder her. While on a picnic with Ruth and her mother several days later, and unbeknownst to them, Ellen deliberately ingests sugar laced with arsenic. The poison causes her to go into multiple organ failure over several days, and doctors are unable to save her. When Richard visits Ellen on her deathbed, she requests in his confidence that she be cremated, and that he scatter her ashes where she spread her father's in New Mexico, to which he agrees.

After Ellen dies, Ruth has her remains cremated at Richard's instruction. She is subsequently charged with Ellen's murder, prosecuted by Russell. During the trial, Russell proposes that Ruth plotted to kill Ellen so she and Richard could be together, and frames Ruth's cremation of Ellen as a calculated decision to prevent an autopsy.

A recalcitrant Richard testifies regarding Ellen's psychopathic jealousy, insisting that she made her own suicide appear as a murder to punish him and Ruth. Ruth is ultimately acquitted, but he is sentenced to two years imprisonment as an accessory in Danny's death, as he withheld his knowledge of Ellen's actions. After completing his sentence, Richard returns to his lodge, where he is welcomed lovingly by Ruth.

Cast

Analysis

Mythical allusions

The film features a number of allusions to classical Greek mythology, largely the protagonist, Ellen Berent's exhibition of an Electra complex, displaying an obsession over her deceased father.[2] The sequence in which Ellen is shown carrying her father's ashes in an urn, held at her waist while she rides on a horse, is a visual reference to the Greek goddess Hippolyta and the magical girdle bestowed upon her by her father Ares, the god of war.[2]

Scholar S. T. Joshi likens the character of Ellen to a Siren, a mythical water creature who lured sailors to their deaths.[5] This allusion is supported by film noir scholar Imogen Sara Smith, who notes that Ellen is frequently associated with water and shown swimming, "like a mermaid, cold-blooded and alien, preying on a hapless human male."[6]

Ellen's scheming alludes to Medea, an intelligent and cunning figure in Greek mythology who, by some mythological accounts, willfully murders her children.[2]

Genre and the femme fatale

Leave Her to Heaven is often described as the first

thriller, a melodrama (Walker), a psychological melodrama (Turim), a women's film (Morris), or a romantic drama (Bourget). Scholar Emanuel Levy notes that the film embodies both "conventions of the noir and psychological melodrama," blurring the distinction and resulting in a unique, one-of-a-kind work.[7]

Joshi identifies Ellen Berent as one of the prime examples of the femme fatale in film history.[5] Film and feminist theorist and writer Mary Ann Doane notes that Ellen's "excessive desire" for Richard is signaled by her "intense and sustained stare" at him in the beginning of the film.[8] Over the course of the film, Ellen reveals her possessiveness in increasingly violent and destructive ways, rendering her, in Doane's words, "the epitome of evil."[9] Smith notes that Ellen is an atypical example of the femme fatale as, unlike with many of her contemporaries, her impulses to kill and wreak destruction are driven purely by a pathological yearning for love, whereas the prototypical femme fatale is often motivated by financial or other social reasons.[10] Critics who argue that the film is not a film noir note that Ellen does not seduce Richard into acting against his interests or breaking the law (in short, that she is not a femme fatale) (Walker).

Production

Development

Theatrical advertisement from 1945

In May 1944,

Twentieth Century Fox executive Darryl F. Zanuck purchased the rights to Ben Ames Williams then-unpublished novel, Leave Her to Heaven, planning a screen adaptation.[11] The studio spent an exorbitant $100,000[2] to acquire the rights to Ames' novel, which was published the following month in June 1944.[2] The title of the film and its source novel is derived from William Shakespeare's Hamlet: In Act I, Scene V, the Ghost urges Hamlet not to seek vengeance against Queen Gertrude, but rather to "leave her to heaven, and to those thorns that in her bosom lodge to prick and sting her."[2]

In November 1944, the

Production Code Administration (PCA) approved Jo Swerling's screenplay adaptation of the novel, though they strongly encouraged the studio to minimize the depiction of Ellen inducing her own miscarriage.[11] In their response, the PCA noted: "It will be absolutely essential to remove any flavor... that Ellen plans to murder the unborn child merely because she is misshapen. It should be definitely established that her reason for murdering the child is that she thinks that the newborn will replace her in her husband's affections. This is important in order to avoid any of the flavor that is normally connected with what could be termed 'abortion'."[11]

A subsequent draft submitted to the PCA in February 1945 was disapproved as it overtly implied that Richard and Ellen had engaged in an illicit sexual affair before their marriage.[11] After the affair was minimized in a subsequent draft, the screenplay was approved for shooting.[11]

Casting

Producer Zanuck offered the leading role of Ellen Berent to Gene Tierney, based on her performance in Twentieth Century Fox's film noir Laura (1944).[12] Faye Marlowe was originally cast in the role of Ruth, but ultimately replaced by Jeanne Crain.[11] Thomas Mitchell was cast as Glen Robie, though he too was replaced by Ray Collins.[11]

Filming

Principal photography of Leave Her to Heaven took place between May and August 1945.[11] The production initially planned to shoot the lake and surrounding outdoor sequences in the Pacific Northwest states of Washington and Oregon, though the planned locations in the region were ultimately not utilized.[11] Instead, these scenes were filmed in Northern California at Bass Lake in the Sierra Nevada.[11] Additional photography took place in Monterey.[11]

The desert sequences that take place in New Mexico were filmed in several locations in Arizona, including Sedona, Flagstaff, and the Granite Dells north of Prescott.[11] The sequences set in Warm Springs, Georgia were filmed at Busch Gardens in Pasadena, though long shots and process plates were shot on location at the actual Warm Springs Foundation.[11]

Release

Cornel Wilde and Gene Tierney in a scene from the film

Box office

Leave Her to Heaven premiered in the United States on December 20, 1945

Christmas Day 1945.[11] It was the second highest-grossing film of 1945, second only to The Bells of St. Mary's,[7] earning $5,505,000 in domestic rentals.[15] Internationally, the film earned $2.7 million in rentals, making for a worldwide rental gross of $8.2 million.[1]

Critical response

The staff at Variety magazine gave the film a positive review, writing "Sumptuous Technicolor mounting and a highly exploitable story lend considerable importance to Leave Her to Heaven that it might not have had otherwise...Tierney and Wilde use their personalities in interpreting their dramatic assignments. Crain's role of Tierney's foster-sister is more subdued but excellently done. Vincent Price, as the discarded lover, gives a theatrical reading to the courtroom scenes as the district attorney."[16]

The New York Times's Bosley Crowther was less enthusiastic about the film, writing: "Christmas Day was an inauspicious moment to bring in a moody, morbid film which is all about a selfish, jealous and deceitful dame... The fact is, however, that this picture would be little more congenial at any time, for it is plainly a piece of cheap fiction done up in Technicolor and expensive sets."[17]

The film was cited by acclaimed director Martin Scorsese as one of his favorite films and assessed "Gene Tierney is one of the most underrated actresses of the Golden Era."[18]

Rotten Tomatoes reported that 85% of critics gave the film a positive review, based on 65 reviews. The consensus summarizes: "Leave Her to Heaven suffers from a surfeit of unlikable characters, but the solid cast – led by an outstanding Gene Tierney – makes it hard to turn away."[19]

In the decades after its release, the film garnered a cult following.[7] Critic Emanuel Levy attributes its cult status to its blurring of genres, ultimately resulting in a "one of a kind work."[7] In 2018, it was selected for the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[3]

Leave Her to Heaven was restored by the Academy Film Archive, in conjunction with Twentieth Century Fox, in 2006.[20]

Accolades

Institution Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
Academy Awards Best Actress Gene Tierney Nominated [21]
Best Art Direction – Color Lyle R. Wheeler, Maurice Ransford, Thomas Little Nominated
Best Cinematography – Color Leon Shamroy Won
Best Sound Thomas T. Moulton Nominated
Venice Film Festival Grand International Award John M. Stahl Nominated

Home media

In 2013, the independent home media distributor Twilight Time released a limited edition Blu-ray release of the film.[22] A new DVD and Blu-ray release was issued on March 24, 2020, by The Criterion Collection.[23]

Adaptation

In popular culture

Portions of the film are seen in the

Hawkeye to quip, "If he straightens out that overbite, I'll kill him." The episode originally aired February 4, 1975. Author Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni mentions this film in her novel Independence
(2022).

See also

  • Mental illness in film

References

  1. ^ a b Solomon 2002, p. 65.
  2. ^
    Filmsite.org. AMC Networks. Archived
    from the original on May 2, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  3. ^ a b "National Film Registry Turns 30". Library of Congress. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  4. ^ "Complete National Film Registry Listing". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  5. ^ a b Joshi 2007, p. 526.
  6. ^ Smith 2014, p. 79.
  7. ^ a b c d Levy, Emanuel (June 2, 2011). "Leave Her to Heaven: Cult Movie–Noir in Red Color". Emanuel Levy: Cinema 24/7. Archived from the original on May 2, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  8. ^ Doane 2013, p. 27.
  9. ^ Doane 2013, pp. 27–28.
  10. ^ Smith, Imogen Sara (2020). Imogen Sara Smith on John M. Stahl's Leave Her to Heaven (Blu-ray documentary short). The Criterion Collection.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Leave Her to Heaven". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Los Angeles, California: American Film Institute. Archived from the original on May 2, 2020.
  12. ^ Vogel 2010, p. 97.
  13. ^ Vogel 2010, p. 100.
  14. ^ "Thousands Gather For 'Leave Her to Heaven'". Austin American-Statesman. December 20, 1945. p. 10 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. – via Internet Archive.
  16. ^ Variety Staff (December 19, 1945). "Leave Her to Heaven". Variety. Archived from the original on July 24, 2009.
  17. ^ Crothwer, Bosley (December 26, 1945). "Six New Films Arrive on the Holiday in 'Midtown Houses – Gene Tierney Appears in 'Leave Her to Heaven' at Roxy 'Cornered,' With Dick Powell, at Palace – 'Seventh Veil,' a British Picture, Makes Its Debut at Winter Garden At the Winter Garden At the Palace At the Ambassador At Loew's Criterion At the World". The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 2, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  18. YouTube at 45th New York Film Festival
  19. ^ Leave Her to Heaven at Rotten Tomatoes. Last accessed: January 11, 2022.
  20. ^ "Preserved Projects". Academy Film Archive.
  21. ^ "The 18th Academy Awards (1946) Nominees and Winners". Oscars.org. Archived from the original on April 30, 2020.
  22. ^ Henderson, Eric (May 28, 2013). "Review: John M. Stahl's Leave Her to Heaven on Twilight Time Blu-ray". Slant Magazine. Archived from the original on May 2, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  23. ^ "Leave Her to Heaven". The Criterion Collection. Archived from the original on May 2, 2020. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  24. ^ ""Jawbreaker"'s Courtney Shayne is a Murderer & Sociopath — So, Why do We Still Love Her?".

Sources

External links