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Easy Virtue |
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Easy Virtue - 1927 | 80mins | Drama | B&W - SilentThe Production TeamDirector: Alfred
Hitchcock. Assistant Director: Frank Mills. Producer: Michael Balcon. Script: Eliot Stannard. (from a play by Noel Coward) Cinematography: Claude McDonnell. Editing: Ivor Montagu. Art Direction: Clifford Pember. |
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The CastIsabel Jeans - Larita Filton Franklin Dyall - Mr. Filton Ian Hunter - The Plaintiff's Counsel Robin Irvine - John Whittaker Violet Farebrother - His mother Eric Bransby Williams - The Correspondent |
Plot SynopsisA Noel Coward play was the basis for Hitchcock's Easy Virtue. It is the tale of Laurita (Isabel Jean), a married woman who falls in love with a young artist. The young man kills himself and she divorces her alcoholic husband. To forget her woes, she travels abroad and meets another young man, John Whittaker (Robin Irvine), whom she marries. But his stuffy upper-class family investigates her background and compels him to divorce her. At the end we see she has nothing left but misery. Easy Virtue is possibly the finest example of the purely literary
film-making so prevalent in England during the twenties. It is a well-produced,
basically straightforward filming of the Noel Coward stage play. Yet
Hitchcock raises it above the norm. One scene of note involves a proposal
of marriage expected during a midnight phone call. The sequence opens
with a close-up of a wristwatch. it belongs to a switchboard operator.
We know that this is the call in question and can judge the outcome
by the expression on the operator's face as she listens in. The camera
does not linger over long silent shots of the couple broken by titles,
but stays with the simple, workable premise of the switchboard operator. |
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