Thursday, March 25, 2010

A Place in the Sun (1951)

To be perfectly honest, I didn’t like this movie at all. I felt very disappointed and distracted by various elements of this film, especially the music. It always seemed to be overly dramatic at points in the film that weren’t THAT dramatic, like the instance where George and Alice go to the courthouse to get married. The marriage licensing office is closed due to the Labor Day holiday, and the only thing the director really needed to do was show the sign and then the characters’ reactions to the office being closed. But instead, the camera zoomed into the sign and played some of the most dramatic music I’ve ever heard. It was music I would imagine would be playing if the world were about to end, but really, the marriage license office was just closed for the day. Even though this was meant to be a dramatic film, I just thought the use of drums and string instruments used were too dramatic for it.


I was also extremely disappointed in the lack of character development. For such a lengthy movie, you would think the director would have focused a bit more on certain character development. But at the end of the movie, I felt like I barely knew George, who the movie was entirely about! It was obvious that he led a double life with two girlfriends and was dealing with the consequences of his choices, but it seemed as though he had underlying issues with his mother from whom he was distanced. Every time he would call her, he never seemed like he wanted to talk to her or update her on his life, but it’s never clear why he doesn’t want to talk or what happened in his past that made him and his mother so estranged. It just seemed weird to me that this relationship was never really discussed in depth, and it truly bothered me that the audience never finds out more about his mother.


Elizabeth Taylor’s character of Angela is also not very well developed. It’s clear that she comes from a wealthy family that likes to throw extravagant parties and have a good time, but the audience never really finds out about her personal life. She falls in love with George, at which point she has only known for a few days, and then seems to dedicate herself to him and make him happy. The audience never learns about her personal goals, hopes, dreams, or anything else like that, and I really wanted to know more about her. She seemed almost mysterious, but I hated that we didn’t get a chance to learn more about her. The audience knew much more about her overall family and their lifestyle than they did this main character, and this seriously bothered me.


Although based on a true and tragic story, this movie was a flop for me. I had high hopes for it, but the lack of character development and overuse of overly dramatic music seemed to kill it for me.

3 comments:

  1. Ahhh...the music! I agree. KILLIN ME! I felt like you were reading my mind when I read this blog, honestly. Good to know we're on the same wavelength and that I wasn't the only one disappointed by the film.

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  2. I completely agree as well! the music was WAY over the top .. and I think it would have been extremely better if they did have better character development, then you might actually care about them, because of the lack of definitely made the characters seem unreal and you couldn't relate to them so when it comes to the end and your supposed to care it's really hard to which again I agree makes the movie a complete disappointment.

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  3. I'm sorry you didn't like the movie, Megan, but judging from others' blogs, you have a lot of company in your dislike for it. If it helps, Angela is probably an underdeveloped character on purpose: she's really just an embodiment of the American dream as George perceives it--beautiful, rich, and able to lift him "up here with us" as her father puts it.

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