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The Shining Hour

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The Shining Hour

A nightclub dancer shakes the foundations of a wealthy farming family after she marries into it.

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Release : 1938
Rating : 6.4
Studio : Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Art Direction, 
Cast : Joan Crawford Margaret Sullavan Robert Young Melvyn Douglas Fay Bainter
Genre : Drama Romance

Cast List

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Reviews

Nonureva
2018/08/30

Really Surprised!

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WillSushyMedia
2018/08/30

This movie was so-so. It had it's moments, but wasn't the greatest.

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Arianna Moses
2018/08/30

Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.

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Jerrie
2018/08/30

It's a good bad... and worth a popcorn matinée. While it's easy to lament what could have been...

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jjnxn-1
2014/01/17

High class soap opera with the MGM sheen and a cast of great actors. Joan's a respectable if restless performer who marries Melvyn Douglas on a whim and goes back to his family home where trouble awaits and that's when the fun begins. The story of family animosity and dangerous attraction isn't anything new but as presented here by these super professionals and director Borzage they find ways to make it compelling. Joan is unquestionably the star of this enterprise and she holds her own with the strong cast that surrounds her while looking glamorous and suffering nobly.Fay Bainter turns her usual warm and understanding persona on its ear as a harridan twisted by jealousy and bitterness. Robert Young turns in good work as a bit of a weasel and Melvyn Douglas although Joan titular co-star really doesn't have much to do and is absent from a good deal of the film but he does what is required of him with his usual skill. The marvelous Hattie McDaniel has a tiny role as Joan's maid with the improbable name of Belvedere and injects a small dose of levity into the heavy going dramatics.Good though they may be and Joan is the queen of this little opus they are all outshone by one of their fellow actors. Margaret Sullavan as Young wife gives a performance of such quiet beauty she wipes anyone else off the screen whenever she's on it. An actress of great skill and subtle intensity she makes her Judy a character that seems far more real and relatable than anybody else on screen. Her output was small, only 16 films in total, but she always had a vivid and alive presence on screen. If you enjoy dramas with an adult, if a tad melodramatic, outlook enacted by talented performers this is for you.

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mark.waltz
2012/01/09

When dancer Joan Crawford enters high society by marrying wealthy Melvyn Douglas, his sister (Fay Bainter) sends their brother (Robert Young) to try and pay her off. But Crawford stands tall, marries the brother (sans the rest of his family) and enters the social world run by the Mrs. Danvers like Bainter. Only Young's pleasant wife (Margaret Sullavan) likes her, and they become quick friends (which is a rare thing for Crawford, who admittedly despises her own sex). Bainter is passively aggressively chilly with Crawford, drops all sorts of innuendos of her disapproval, and finally, all explodes when Crawford (obviously attracted to the indifferent Young) convinces Douglas to move away, seemingly for an extended honeymoon. Before you can break into a chorus of "Burning Down the House", Bainter turns into Norman Bates' mother, and Crawford is ready to pack it in.Packed with major star power (four Academy Award Winners), "The Shining Hour" is a fast-moving camp classic where Crawford, pre-Crystal Allen ("The Women") gets to be pretty bitchy, but not nasty. It is Bainter who wins that title, giving a performance far from her kindly mother role which won her an Oscar for the same year's "Jezebel". (Working with Crawford AND Bette Davis the same year....) The following year's Best Supporting Actress winner Hattie McDaniel is amusing as "Belvedere", Crawford's faithful maid. The reason for Young's initial distaste for Crawford is never really explained other than being manipulated by his sister, although there is all sorts of interesting characterization development for Margaret Sullavan's sister-in-law who is seemingly overly noble but never sickeningly sweet.Worth repeated viewing for its cast, melodramatic performances and a few funny lines, "The Shining Hour" isn't a very sunny 79 minutes, but moderately enjoyable.

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blissfilm
2008/01/10

Contrary to most of the opinions I read here, I did not find this film "soapy." I found it, refreshingly, a film for adults. For me, that's all too rare. I think it's about what relationship is, what love is and isn't, and most of all about the experience it takes and the resulting wisdom to build relationship beyond an adolescent understanding of love and attraction. And the great value of the self-knowledge that results. For me, that adult perspective was so refreshing and so rare that it beats out every other consideration. (Especially given the idiotic popular fare we're used to these days which substitutes a junior high school age cynicism for the difficult work of love.) Along with, say, "Dodsworth," for some reason Hollywood in this period was capable of some genuinely mature work for adults. The popular culture could use a little more. With Ogden Nash in the writing credits, I shouldn't be surprised at what I found valuable in this film.

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theowinthrop
2006/12/07

It's soap opera, but it is good soap opera, with several good performances in it.Joan Crawford is a Broadway dancing star, helped on her way up by Allan Joslyn. Joslyn would like it to be the start of a marriage, but his cynical frame of mind is not what Crawford can accept (outside of friendship). She meets wealthy Wisconsin gentleman farmer Melvin Douglas, and he gets her to agree to marry him (Joslyn is uncertain about the wisdom of the move, not only from self-interest but from concern that Crawford will be a fish out of water). Another party who is troubled by the marriage is Douglas's brother Robert Young, who thinks Crawford will be too like her friends. Despite this Young and Douglas marry, and soon are in Wisconsin. They bring with them Hattie MacDaniel, Crawford's smart maid.(A small point about the film - MacDaniel had not gotten her Oscar yet for GONE WITH THE WIND but there are moments when the camera is concentrating on her, and when she is involved in scenes, where any other African-American actress of the period (say Louise Beavers) playing a maid would not have gotten camera time - I wonder if this was because Hattie was photogenic and the movie crews were noticing this, or because David Selznick may have noticed her and requested some additional footage for her. She handles the role with customary humor and spice.) Crawford finds (although she has had hints) that Douglas' older sister (Fay Bainter) is cold and hostile. More about this later. Young's wife (Margaret Sullivan) is very friendly and sweet. But although Crawford warms up to Sullivan, Young (who had been initially cold to the marriage) begins showing a different attitude: he is falling in love with Crawford. Bainter takes an "I told you so!" attitude to this, and Sullivan becomes increasingly miserable. Only Douglas seems oblivious - in particular because Crawford is making every effort to remain faithful.The climax concerns the dream house that Douglas and Crawford were planning to build a few miles from Bainter's home. Instead of being a solution to the twisted mess, it becomes a magnet for the coming disaster. It is only with the disaster that the relations are sorted out.Now about Bainter: This film was made within three years of the renewal (and new teeth) to the Hollywood Production Code. As such, certain things could be said and certain things couldn't. In terms of the code, the film fits properly. But with Bainter, they managed (or that fine actress did) to push the envelope a little. In a confrontation scene with Douglas, Bainter reveals something about her private feelings. She hates Crawford, and tells Douglas to get rid of her, eventually saying, "I'm your sister and I love you!" Her character is a repressed spinster type (she is the oldest of the siblings), and she has never really been close to Sullivan (although the latter grew up in the area). One gets the impression Bainter has certain incestuous feelings for Douglas and even Young (and that the former chooses to overlook these, and the latter resents them). This seems to be the first time this kind of situation arises in a film prior to Geraldine Fitzgerald's performance as George Sanders' possessive sister in THE STRANGE AFFAIR OF UNCLE HARRY, but that at time was slightly more explicit.With Frank Albertson in a supporting part as a rustic with jazz trumpet ambitions (who momentarily makes the situation for Crawford get a bit murkier).

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