Uncertain Glory (1944 film)

Summary

Uncertain Glory is a 1944 war crime drama film,[3] directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Errol Flynn and Paul Lukas.[4]

Uncertain Glory
Directed byRaoul Walsh
Written byLászló Vadnay
Max Brand
Based onoriginal story by Joe May and László Vadnay
Produced byRobert Buckner
StarringErrol Flynn
Paul Lukas
CinematographySidney Hickox
Edited byGeorge Amy
Music byAdolph Deutsch
Production
company
Thomson Productions
Distributed byWarner Bros.
Release dates
  • April 22, 1944 (1944-04-22)
(US)
1951 (France)
Running time
102 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office1,022,524 admissions (France)[1][2]

Walsh later called the movie a "quickie".[5] François Truffaut admired the film.[6]

The title is a reference to a line from Shakespeare's play Two Gentlemen of Verona (Act 1, Scene 3): "O, how this spring of love resembleth/ The uncertain glory of an April day,/ Which now shows all the beauty of the sun,/ And by and by a cloud takes all away!"[7]

Plot edit

In Vichy Paris of World War II, career criminal Jean Picard (Errol Flynn) awaits execution. French Sûreté Inspector Marcel Bonet (Paul Lukas) has followed Picard for 15 years, apprehending him this final time for murder.

An air raid delivers a direct hit to the prison when Picard is at the guillotine. He flees to the apartment of his best friend, Henri Duval (Sheldon Leonard), unsubtly threatening exposure to the police in return for forged papers and 5,000 francs. While Duval is gone Picard seduces his willing girlfriend, Faye Emerson. In return, Duval rats on Picard to the Sûreté.

Bonet tracks Picard to a hotel room in Bordeaux, taking him at gunpoint. Their trip back to Paris is delayed en route by a bridge being out, blown the night before while carrying a German troop train by an unknown saboteur. 100 Frenchmen held hostage by the Gestapo, 25 culled from the local village, will be executed in five days unless the perpetrator is found. Thinking he can use his wiles to elude Bonet, Picard offers to give himself up as responsible to evade the guillotine in favor of a "more respectable" German firing squad.

Extremely skeptical, Bonet nonetheless agrees, and prepares Picard for interrogation by going to view the bridge site together and drilling him in canned answers, as the Germans must be confident he is the real saboteur and not just a martyr or crackpot.

To evade suspicious authorities Picard - now going by the name Jean Emil Dupont - duck into a shop, where Jean is immediately taken with the attractive young innocent behind its counter, Marianne ( Jean Sullivan ). She is a ward of its owner, Mme. Maret, whose son is one of the hostages. Three days remain till the executions.

While Jean works Bonet for some time to dally with Maryanne before turning himself in, Mme. Maret continues her effort to find a fall guy to hand to the Germans in return for the freedom of her son and the rest of the men being held. Her first pigeon, Brenoir (Joel Friedkin), proved too cowardly to sacrifice himself as a scapegoat.

In order to put an end to "Picard" and leave the path clear for their gambit, Bonet sends word to his superiors in Paris that he had to shoot the escapee in flight, with his body washing down a river unretrieved.

Evidence gathered by the local gendarmes suggests three men were in the sabotage party. Noting two strangers in town who had not reported to submit their identification papers, its commander leads a detail to Bonet's hotel room, bringing a captured suspect and seeking to arrest the two others for the crime.

Thinking fast, Jean reveals Bonet's real identity to the police commander, giving Bonet a chance to claim both Jean and the captured man are both with the Sûreté as part of its undercover effort to capture the fugitive. Released, the "team" of Bonet and Dupont discover the man to be Major Andre Varenne (Ivan Triesault) of the Free French Army, and aid him in his air evacuation back to England.

The next morning Jean frees himself from his handcuff and leaves a flu-ridden Bonet behind to make his rendezvous with Maryanne after Sunday mass. He has once again convinced Bonet to trust him. Instead, he plans to use a picnic with the guileless young girl - whom he has grown quite fond of - as a guise to show him an unguarded way out of town.

Meanwhile, the local priest, Father LeClerc (Dennis Hoey), discovers a second plot by Mme. Maret, this time seeking to get three local men to frame the "innocent" Monsieur DuPont for destroying the bridge. He rails that it would be murder, and swears God's wrath upon any who dare take justice into their own hands.

Bonet's illness worsens and he is confined to bed. This time Jean uses the ruse of wanting to have the priest hear his confession before turning himself in to be allowed to leave on his own. Instead, he joins up with Maryanne, who helps him evade a mob of locals once again incited by Mme. Maret into turning Jean in. Again Father LeClerc quells the uprising.

When Jean announces he is leaving for Paris Maryanne pleas to accompany him. He seeks to dissuade her with a confession that he is an unreliable and disreputable character. She is undaunted, and he takes her along.

By morning they are clopping along in a farmer's wagon. The old man offers breakfast. Afterwards, while he and his wife join with their hands outside to say prayers for the hostages, Marianne lights a candle for their son, as he too will die. One more time Jean is cornered by the tragedy he had promised to avert, and an ever-growing flicker of conscience he cannot ignore.

Promising Maryanne he will go on his own to Paris to get money from friends there for the two of them to flee to a new life together in Martinique, he leaves her behind.

Back in Paris that evening, Bonet is desperate. He knows he cannot tell the truth of what he has conspired to allow with his once-prisoner; it will ruin his career and shame his family. He resolves to turn himself in to the Gestapo as the saboteur. As he stands to leave, in walks Jean, ready to do so himself, asking only that Bonet retrieve Maryanne from her futile vigil.

Jean successfully convinces the Nazis he was the sole saboteur. Six bullets await him. Bonet goes to Maryanne, who is heartbroken and confused that her Jean did not return. In tears, she asks Bonet, ”You were his friend, you knew him well. What is he really like, deep in his heart?” Bonet pauses for dramatic effect, and answers not her but a wartime movie audience: “He was a Frenchman.”

Cast edit

Production edit

In September 1942 it was announced that Flynn had signed a new contract with Warners for four films a year, one of which he was to also produce.[8] This was the first film produced under Flynn's new contract with Warners which allowed him a say in the choice of vehicle, director and cast, plus a portion of the profits. He formed his own company, Thomson Productions, to make Uncertain Glory and planned to make a series of films with director Raoul Walsh.[9]

Warners announced the film in June 1943. Flynn was assigned to it instead of Singing in the Wood, where he would have played John James Audubon, the naturalist.[10] That month Robert Buckner was assigned to produce.[11]

Max Brand reportedly worked on the script.[12]

Paul Lukas, who had just had a big hit with Watch on the Rhine, was attached in July 1943.[13] Faye Emerson and Jean Sullivan were signed to support.[14]

Shooting edit

Principal photography on Uncertain Glory started in August 1943.[15] During filming it was announced Warners would rush release plans on this and Passage to Marseilles, another drama set in occupied France.[16]

Some filming took place in the grape country in Escondido. While shooting there, labor-strapped farm hands insisted the unit had to pick grapes with them before they would allow filming to take place.[17]

Reception edit

A contemporary The Washington Post reviewer wrote "Flynn has never given a more restrained, earnest and believable portrayal ... there is guile, sly humour, an appealing bravado, grim rebellion, gentleness, charm, in his drawing of a character that is alternately enigmatic and transparent. Mr Flynn is more of an actor than many have thought."[18]

In 2019 Filmink magazine said "The story gets off to a terrific start" but that "about a third of the way in, it all goes haywire."[19]

Selected clip edit

Jean Picard (Errol Flynn), Inspector Marcel Bonet (Paul Lukas)


Clip: Jean Picard (Errol Flynn), Inspector Marcel Bonet (Paul Lukas)
Inspector Marcel Bonet: Well, it's been a long road, Jean. Hasn't it?
Jean Picard: Yes, but you see, it's come to the right ending.

References edit

  1. ^ "Box office results of Raoul Walsh films in France." Box Office Story. Retrieved: January 26, 2015.
  2. ^ "1951 Box Office Figures in France." Box Office Story. Retrieved: January 26, 2015.
  3. ^ "Uncertain Glory (1944) TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  4. ^ "Film reviews: Uncertain Glory". Variety. April 5, 1944. p. 14.
  5. ^ Walsh, Raoul (1974). Each man in his time; the life story of a director. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. p. 382.
  6. ^ Higham, Charles (1979). Celebrity Circus. Delacorte Press. p. 315.
  7. ^ "SCENE III. The same. ANTONIO's house". shakespeare.mit.edu. Retrieved 2020-01-23.
  8. ^ "Of Local Origin." The New York Times, September 30, 1942, p. 29.
  9. ^ Thomas et al. 1969, p. 136.
  10. ^ SCREEN NEWS HERE AND IN HOLLYWOOD New York Times 21 June 1943: 13.
  11. ^ "Buckner Guides Flynn". Variety. 30 June 1943. p. 16 – via Archive.org.
  12. ^ west view: Max Brand: the great storyteller who became reluctant 'king of the pulps' Nolan, William F. Los Angeles Times 6 May 1979: s3.
  13. ^ "Screen news here and in Hollywood." The New York Times, July 17, 1943, p. 8.
  14. ^ DRAMA AND FILM: Wally Beery, Daughter May Do Film Together Constance Moore Will Appear Opposite George Murphy in 'Show Business' Schallert, Edwin. Los Angeles Times 27 Aug 1943: 12.
  15. ^ "Film review: 'Uncertain Glory'." Harrison's Reports; April 8, 1944, p. 59.
  16. ^ DRAMA AND FILM: La Dietrich Will Give 'Three Cheers for Boys' Maureen O'Hara Today's Selection for Leading Femme Role in 'Army Wife' Scheuer, Philip K. Los Angeles Times 9 Sep 1943: 17.
  17. ^ ACTORS HAD TO HARVEST CROP Los Angeles Times 23 May 1944: A10.
  18. ^ "'Uncertain Glory' Is An Able 'Acting Piece'." The Washington Post, June 10, 1944, p. 7.
  19. ^ Vagg, Stephen (November 17, 2019). "The Films of Errol Flynn: Part 3 The War Years". Filmink.

Bibliography edit

  • Behlmer, Rudy. Inside Warner Brothers, 1935-51. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1987. ISBN 978-0-2977-9242-0.
  • Thomas, Tony, Rudy Behlmer and Clifford McCarty. The Films of Errol Flynn. New York: Citadel Press, 1969. ISBN 978-0-80650-237-3.

External links edit