Malignant
Obsession-Bette Davis and Leslie Howard’s Film Adaptation of W. Somerset
Maugham’s “Of Human Bondage” (1934)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Film Critic Sam
Lowell
Of Human Bondage,
starring Bette Davis, Leslie Howard, based on W. Somerset Maugham’s novel of
the same name, 1934
No question love can take
some funny turns from eternal bliss to the malignant obsession of medical
student Phillip Carey, played by Leslie Howard, for waitperson (then known as
waitresses) Mildred Rogers, played in an incredible performance by Bette Davis
in the film adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham’s Of Human Bondage. The human, the very human capacity to find love
in some very wrong places gets a full-throated workout in this 1934 film. Moreover
even though the smitten and tortured character here is a man the feelings know
no gender boundaries.
The first problem for
our troubled medical student is the class issue in very class-bound England
then, and now. The play between the up and coming doctor and the tart-like
waitperson could only spell trouble even if Mildred had been half as perfidious
as she was-always looking for the main chance-for the next Mister Big. The
second problem was that the very smitten Phillip was physically- challenged
(then called crippled which Mildred at one point made a point of being
disgusting to here). The combination would have been daunting even if Mildred
had been less of an opportunist. See while she was leading Phillip on she was
also seeing her meal ticket-her Mister Big. Phillip played the sap for her on
that one thinking he would marry her when all she was doing was making moves to
marry Mister Big. Well Mildred should have checked his credentials or at least
his marriage because Mister Big dumped her-turned out he was already married.
All he did was leave her to the wind with child. Still Phillip took her back.
Okay once is okay but
then the next best thing came along, a fellow medical student of Phillip’s and
she was off again. Still once it was question of helping or her on the streets
with an unwanted child he succumbed again. But he was getting wiser. At least
he wasn’t as smitten as in those fresh bloom days. All she kept doing though
was holding him in contempt while feeding off his feelings for her. At some
point, a point where a young gentile women is interested in him, he begins to withdraw,
begins to break from his feverish desire for Mildred as she begins her descent
down into well, the gutter, the ”life,”
the hard streets. In the end T.B got her (then called consumption and if
I recall earlier called the vapors), left her on deep cheap street and an
unloved grave. Phillip, well Phillip finally got himself free, got free once
Mildred passed the shades. Took life in his own hands and grabbed that gentile
woman who was made for him. Still Mildred let him a not so merry chase. An
excellent performance by Miss Davis especially one scene when she went berserk
and cut up all of Phillip’s precious nude paintings (he had started out as a
failed art student) and another when after she had been finally rebuffed by
Phillip she spewed forth her utter contempt from day one. Watch this one-and
read the book too.
the third one, I noted that in reviewing Harrison Ford’s cinematic
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