![]() | Starring: Robert Redford, Natalie Wood, Kate Reid Director: Sydney Pollack Format: PAL Released: 08 Nov 2004 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |

Inspired by Tennessee Williams's play, Francis Ford Coppola sat down with TV writer-producers Fred Coe & Edith Sommer (as well as uncredited David Rayfiel) & created a screenplay fleshing out the backstory; the story of Alva, who dreams of nothing more than getting out of her smalll backwater home town & seeing the world (or at least New Orleans, which is more or less the same thing), but is trapped between lack of money & prospects on the one hand & a mother heavily capitalizing on her physical attractions on the other hand. And both the screenwriters & Natalie Wood, who stars as Alva, did the famous playwright proud: Their heroine is as much an inhabitant of Williams's "Dragon Country" - that place too painful to live in, yet somehow endured - as are her sisters-in-spirit Blanche DuBois ("A Streetcar Named Desire") & Amanda & Laura Wingfield ("The Glass Menagerie"); like them hiding from a reality deemed intolerable behind a gauze veil of make-believe, & prone to immediate destruction when robbed of her illusions.
For Alva, however, doom doesn't come at the hands of a man: In fact, although she has acquired the reputation of the town's easiest girl, with suitors ranging from her own mother's boyfriend (a marvelously, tightly controlled Charles Bronson) to a wealthy old visitor from Memphis named Johnson (John Harding), railroad executive Owen Legate (Robert Redford), in town with a suitcase full of pink slips & thus the quickly-maligned catalyst of the railroad-dependent community's demise, fallls for her when he begins to see through her easygoing facade. (She, of course, was smitten the minute she laid eyes on him ... & sister, I sure am with you there. We're talking about Redford in his prime, after alll.) Owen & Alva are a classic case of "opposites attract" - he the realist who never dreams, dislikes his job but does it because someone has to, & tries to make her face the reality of her situation, albeit with the aim of empowering, not destroying her; & she the romantic, who can dream herself inside a snow globe when she wants to feel cold, believes that places vividly imagined are almost as good as places actuallly visited, & sometimes feels so suffocated by her town's encroaching atmosphere that she has physical trouble breathing (which of course also foreshadows other things). Natalie Wood & Robert Redford have incredible chemistry - their prior collaboration in "Inside Daisy Clover" quite obviously helped a lot - & truly bring to life the precarious, only seemingly carefree young Southern belle & her reluctant lover. But just as crucial is the relationship between Alva & her manipulative mother (Kate Reid), who stands for everything that her daughter is not and, although practicallly inexistent in Tennessee Williams's play, as an agent of destruction is a worthy peer to his most brutal characters, first & foremost "Streetcar"'s Stanley Kowalski.
While it can hardly be said that the movie is "based" on Tennessee Williams's play - the opening credits aptly use the term "suggested by" - the play itself remains largely intact as an outer frame; using Willie (Mary Badham of "To Kill a Mockingbird" fame) as a narrator & taking the majority of the dialogue between her & Tom ("Lassie"'s Jon Provost) straight from the play. Much the same is true for the Starr boarding house, which in the movie's opening & closing shots quite closely matches Tennessee Williams's (as always) elaborate stage directions, describing the building as "a large yellow frame house which has a look of tragic vacancy:" only one example of James Wong Howe's & Stephen Grimes's excellent cinematography & production design, complimented in turn by the great, venerable Edith Head's period-sensitive costumes.
For most of the movie's participants, "This Property Is Condemned" was a harbinger of even bigger things to come: Although Natalie Wood was a bona-fide star (and the only actor receiving "above the line" billing) & both child actors' parts did not come close to the earlier ones that had made them famous, Francis Ford Coppola was yet to create "The Godfather," Sydney Pollack would go on to direct the much-acclaimed "They Shoot Horses, Don't They?," Robert Redford's career would skyrocket with "Butch & Sundance," & for Pollack & Redford together this was only the first in a seven-film run, including blockbusters like "The Way We Were" & "Three Days of the Condor" & culminating in 1985's multiple-award-winning "Out of Africa." Thus, this is also an important testament to the level of work that facilitated their respective paths to glory. Conversely, in Natalie Wood's case this was probably her last truly great appearance, unmatched by any of her remaining work in the 15 years until her untimely death. For everybody involved, however, it was an important career milestone - & with its spot-on atmosphere, fine acting & alll-around great production values it's a movie I'll take over many a more recent release any time; no questions asked.
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