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Humoresque
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Directed by Jean Negulesco.
Fannie Hurst's novel Humoresque is the lachrymose tale of a famed Jewish-American violinist who forgets all about his friends and family in his rise to fame. Screenwriters Clifford Odets and Zachary Gold refashioned this timeworn material into a first-class, big-budget soap opera, completely dominated by the high-octane talents of Joan Crawford and John Garfield. A gifted musician, Garfield rises from the slums to the upper echelons of society, thanks to the patronage of wealthy, alcoholic Crawford. Virtually ignored by her husband Paul Cavanaugh, Crawford adopts Garfield as her lover as well as her protégé. He is only mildly offended by the setup; she, on the other hand, becomes jealous and possessive. It is not a woman who comes between Crawford and Garfield: it the intensity of his talent, not to mention the spectre of the great composers whose works he interprets so brilliantly. Garfield's virago of a mother (Ruth Nelson) feeds upon Crawford's jealousy, planting the seeds of guilt for (allegedly) holding her son back. The ultrastylish suffering of Joan Crawford and the street-punk insouciance of John Garfield (who looks like a "Dead End Kid" even while wearing a tux) is counterpointed by the phlegmatic comedy relief of Oscar Levant. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
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For the second film adaptation of Fannie Hurst's bestseller about a rising violinist and his forceful mother, screenwriters Clifford Odets and Zachary Gold added a dipsomaniac patroness of the arts, and Humoresque (1946) became a classy Warner Bros. vehicle for Joan Crawford as well as John Garfield. Stylishly directed by Jean Negulesco, Garfield's struggle between art and ambition is played out through his financial and then adulterous relationship with Crawford's glamorous socialite Helen, accompanied by Isaac Stern's violin dubbed in for Garfield's convincingly mimed performances of Anton Dvorak and Richard Wagner. Even as the deadpan comic presence of Oscar Levant as Paul's accompanist and best friend Sid occasionally leavens the atmosphere, the melodrama reaches its apex when Helen takes a last walk on the beach with Paul's rendition of the "Liebestod" from Wagner's Tristan und Isolde playing on the radio. Ernest Haller's dramatic chiaroscuro photography and Crawford's intense performance elevate that suicidal walk into compelling tragedy. Humoresque scored only one Oscar nomination, for Franz Waxman's score, despite doing brisk business and featuring some of Crawford's finest work, arguably even better than her Oscar-winning title role in Mildred Pierce a year earlier. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
 



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