A Thoroughly Modern Romance-Ingrid
Bergman And Cary Grant’s “Indiscreet” (1958)-A Snap Film Review
DVD Review
By Associate Film Editor Austin Riley
Indiscreet, starring Ingrid Bergman, Cary
Grant, 1958
Everybody knows, or should know, at least
those who have been to the cinema enough times that half of what passes for
plotlines in many stories is the old boy meets girl (or reverse it if you like)
trope .That notion has held together more lame (and more beautiful) films than
the most cynical producers could dream of in a million years. It all depends on
how the whole thing is carried off. With a sledge-hammer or as in the film under
review, Indiscreet, with some style.
Of course adding to the style factor is having a suave and dashing older Cary
Grant, last seen in this space trying to steal half the jewels on the French
Rivera (or was it Monaco I will have ask my editor Sandy Salmon about that
since he did the review) to impress and win the heart of fetching Grace Kelly
in To Catch A Thief . And to receive those
manly attentions Ingrid Bergman last seen in this space torn between her duty
to liberation fighter Victor Lazlo and her passion for hard-nosed café owner Rick in Casablanca.
(I think that is right I will have to ask film critic emeritus Sam Lowell about
that one since he did the original review on that one.)
Although I did not going kicking and
screaming about having to do a review on this film unlike with a documentary about
Janis Joplin when I erroneously confessed to Sandy that I did not know who she
was since I knew who both of the actors here were I still felt that a 1950s
film when I had not even been born was a stretch. A stretch because after watching
the thing under today’s social and moral standards I do not understand the
indiscreet part-the supposed illicit love affair between two consenting adults.
What was the big deal these type of affairs are like rainwater today. Sandy
assured me that such affairs had to be discreet back then especially in high
society since divorce (and accompanying alimony) was a hard nut to crack.
But style is what really drives this
romantic comedy from the first minute Phillip, Cary’s role, steps into Anna’s,
Ingrid part, apartment to change clothes before a speech he is to give. Anna, unlucky
in love of late, was easy pickings for the jut-jagged suave Phillip. And so
after very few preliminaries they become lovers. There is one little problem though
which twists around the plot a bit. Phillip is married, very married, meaning
he cannot get a divorce from that scorned wife. Can’t even when Anna puts a full-court
press on to get him to the altar. Except that little problem is not really a problem
since in a reverse of what usually happens which is the man says he is single
when he is really married just to get at the unsuspecting woman Phillip is not
married, very not married meaning he can get married. When Anna finds out all
bets are off as she plots her revenge. Almost off that is. Yeah, a boy meets girl
vehicle but it’s all how you pull it off.
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