A Farewell to Arms
Film Review
The
title of the film under consideration is A Farewell to Arms. It is a 1957
American drama film directed by Charles Vidor. The screenplay by Ben Hecht, based
in part on a 1930 play by Laurence Stallings, was the second feature film
adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's 1929 semi-autobiographical novel of the same
name. The previous one dates back to 1932.
It is distinguished by its hand-picked cast - Rock Hudson as Frederick
Henry, Jennifer Jones as Catherine Barkley.
First
of all, let me give you the brief reconstruction of the events. Frederick Henry
is an American serving as an ambulance driver for the Italian Army during World
War I. He fell in love with a nurse - Catherine Barkley. During the retreat of
the Italian Army Henry deserted, and he and pregnant Catherine make their way
to neutral Switzerland. For some months they live happily, but in the spring
Catherine gives a birth to a still-born child, and dies shortly afterward.
The
main thing, I‘d like to mention is the play of the actors who managed to feel
their characters, their souls, mood and the way of thinking even. I am amazed
by the way they took the message of the writer. However, sometimes the
development of the love affair did not seem natural, they overacted.
Further,
I’d like to concentrate exactly on this overacting. In my opinion, the director
shifted the accents a lot. This film lacks that all-important awareness of the
inescapable presence and pressure of war. It focuses on the love affair of 2
characters. The essential excitement of a violent love is strangely missing
here. Mr. Hudson is most noticeably unbending, as if he was cautious and shy, but
Miss Jones plays the famous Catherine Barkley with bewildering nervous moves
and grimaces. The show of devotion between two people is intensely acted, not
realized, but, as I’ve already mentioned, it was a peculiar feature for me in
their acting.
To
conclude, the film helped me to imagine the main heroes, the events described
in the book. I really enjoyed watching the film because I watch such “old”
films rarely but always admire the work and skillfulness of the actors.