Review of Kings Row

Kings Row (1942)
6/10
Unmistakably a 1940s-era Hollywood movie
8 September 2015
The story takes place in a small town at the turn of the 20th century and centers on the relationship between two friends, Drake (Ronald Reagan) and Parris (Robert Cummings), and their lives and loves from early childhood to young adulthood. There is enough turgid melodrama here to satisfy any soap opera fan.

Given its cast, a score by Eric Krongold, and cinematography by James Wong Howe, I was hoping for more. I found Robert Cummings to be weak, always effecting the demeanor of an eager Boy Scout; he always seemed to be just reciting lines, without any real feeling. This was particularly true in one of his final scenes where he took it upon himself to recite the first two stanzas of "Invictus," coming across as a middle school student rushing through memorized lines. After saying that he couldn't remember all the words, he recited the first two stanzas word for word, but then did not even recite the most famous final lines:

I the master of my fate:

I am the captain of my soul.

Parris' final words to Drake had a miraculous effect, in the literal meaning of "miraculous." Unbelievable, actually. At the other end of the acting spectrum I thought Claude Rains was very believable in the role of a psychologically tortured medical doctor. Between the bad and good of Cummings and Rains the other actors did well enough, except the child actors were a bit stilted. In the time since this movie was made the quality of child actors as advanced dramatically.

Released in 1942 this is prototypical of movie-making of the time, which may make it worth watching for film history buffs. The acting styles are dated--millennials will have a hard time with this, being astonished by its lack of realism and its deus ex machina ending. A quote that will have modern audiences reeling was when Drake's wife told him, "Of course you'd have to tell me everything to do, I'm only a woman." I did not detect any tone of irony in her delivery of this line. I found the Korngold score repetitive and intrusive, common features of scores for 40s movies.

Given the world situation at the time this was released (shortly after Pearl Harbor) I imagine audiences at the time felt it was oddly irrelevant. On the DVD is an extra that has the United States Marine Band playing several rousing tunes, starting with the Marines' Hymn--this segment was filmed in 1942 and I suspect that it might have been commonly shown along with "Kings Row."
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