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Destiny (1944 film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Destiny
Theatrical release poster
Directed byReginald Le Borg
Julien Duvivier (uncredited)
Screenplay byRoy Chanslor
Ernest Pascal
Story byJean Levy-Strauss (uncredited)
Produced byRoy William Neill
Howard Benedict (uncredited)
StarringGloria Jean
Alan Curtis
Frank Craven
CinematographyPaul Ivano
George Robinson
Edited byPaul Landres
Music byFrank Skinner
Alexandre Tansman
Production
company
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • December 22, 1944 (1944-12-22) (United States)
Running time
65 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Destiny is a 1944 American drama film noir directed by Reginald Le Borg and starring Gloria Jean, Alan Curtis, Frank Craven, and Grace McDonald.[1]

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Transcription

>> GLORIA JEAN: Welcome to YouTube. I'm Gloria Jean. I hope you enjoy some of my favorite film clips from my movies. >>ANNCR: This is Cliff Banks, who knew only one kind of woman until fate gave him three. One woman to hate. >>CLIFF: I gotta blow this town. >>PHYLLIS: Just when we got acquainted? >>ANNCR: One woman to kill. >>ANNCR: And one who brought him the strangest love a man ever knew. >>CLIFF: Did you ever come up here with a fellow? >>JANE: No. >>CLIFF: Wouldn't you like to have a fellow, somebody who'd look after you in case anything happened? >>ANNCR: Starring Gloria Jean, in her first great dramatic triumph. Alan Curtis. Frank Craven. Grace McDonald. Vivian Austin. Minna Gombell. >>CLIFF: Keep going, sister. Don't be scared. >>BETTY: I don't think I'm too frightened. >>CLIFF: I like a dame with nerve. >>BETTY: You have the look of a man who likes a ... dame. >>CLIFF: Jane, I can't go into town. >>JANE: But my father, he'll die! Why can't you go into town? >>CLIFF: I'm not going to put my neck in a trap for anybody. >>CLIFF: You kinda like me too, don't you? Sure you do. A fellow can tell when a girl likes him. >>GLORIA: This is Gloria Jean, thanking you for watching.

Plot

Cliff Banks is a hard-luck drifter, wanted by the police after becoming an unwitting accomplice in a bank robbery. He encounters a succession of women: a showgirl who steals his money; a librarian who listens to his story sympathetically but is left stranded when Cliff takes off with her car; a roadhouse proprietor who tries to turn Cliff in for a reward; and finally Jane Broderick, a blind girl who lives with her father at a secluded farmhouse. Cliff intends to rob the farmer and move on, but Jane discovers the theft and compels him to stay. When the bank robber confesses, Cliff is exonerated and begins a new life with Jane.

Cast

Background

Destiny was originally planned as the opening segment of the episodic all-star drama Flesh and Fantasy (1943), directed by Julien Duvivier. Universal Pictures previewed the film to enthusiastic response; Gloria Jean's performance received the highest praise, but the studio recut the feature from four sequences to three and shelved the first half-hour.

Two years later, the studio assigned producer Roy William Neill to expand the half-hour Gloria Jean sequence into a full-length feature. Neill produced the new material but did not direct; the project was rushed through production in two weeks while Gloria Jean was available, so Neill had no time to plan his artistic, carefully composed scenes. The new director was Reginald Le Borg. Screenwriter Roy Chanslor wrote additional material: his action-melodrama script covered the first half of the new feature, with Alan Curtis the focal point; Gloria Jean does not appear until the second half, constituting the original Flesh and Fantasy footage with the blind girl and her father. Chanslor tacked on a new, happier ending to replace the tragic ending staged for Flesh and Fantasy.[2] Because the new footage had not only a different director but also a different cameraman and art director, sharp-eyed viewers can easily tell the new LeBorg scenes photographed by George Robinson (which have the "flat" look of most of that era's Universal crime thrillers) from the Duvivier sequence photographed by Paul Ivano, which is much more atmospheric and shadow-laden. The new footage for Destiny (under the working title The Fugitive) was filmed in September 1944; the film was released to theaters in December.

Reception

Critical response was generally very good to excellent. The Independent: "Here's a gem of a sleeper in the program division... a sterling attraction for the lower half of any bill. As a matter of fact, in the average house, it will serve very nicely as a topper."[3] Showmen's Trade Review: "Well above the average in general entertainment. A picture most theatergoers will enjoy so much that they'll carry the 'must-see' message to their friends... Alan Curtis gives an unusually strong characterization of the ex-convict. Gloria Jean is excellent as the blind girl and Frank Craven unusually good as her father."[4] Charles Ryweck of Motion Picture Daily was more discerning, noticing the film's patchwork: "The transition from a tough, fast-moving thriller, depicting Alan Curtis as an innocent who has twice been implicated in crimes, to idyllic sequences between Curtis and Gloria Jean, playing a straight role as a sensitive, blind girl who is instrumental in purging Curtis of any impulse to do wrong, is difficult to follow... The parts are more interesting than the whole as the sharp break in mood mitigates against the film."[5]

Gloria Jean singled out Destiny as her favorite performance and her greatest professional disappointment. She recalled seeing Destiny in a studio projection room: "First I got the shock that it was cut out of Flesh and Fantasy. They said it was so good they had to make a full-length movie out of it... They didn't tell me it was going to be a B with a bad ending!"[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Destiny at the TCM Movie Database.
  2. ^ Weaver, Tom; Brunas, Michael; Brunas, John (2007). Universal Horrors: The Studios Classic Films, 1931-1946. Jefferson, NC: Mcfarland & Co Inc. pp. 463–468. ISBN 978-0786429745.
  3. ^ The Independent, Dec. 9, 1944, p. 31.
  4. ^ Showmen's Trade Review, Dec. 9, 1944, p. 12.
  5. ^ Charles Ryweck, Motion Picture Daily, Dec. 7, 1944, p. 6.
  6. ^ Scott MacGillivray and Jan MacGillivray, Gloria Jean: A Little Bit of Heaven, iUniverse, 2005, p. 168. ISBN 978-0-595-37080-1

External links

This page was last edited on 7 March 2024, at 23:37
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