Deep Valley (1947) Poster

(1947)

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7/10
Well-acted
planktonrules23 March 2011
This film was a nice showcase for Ida Lupino--who normally was in second-tier films or played supporting roles in most of her films. Here, despite a relatively low budget, she has a nice opportunity to show her acting prowess.

The film is set in rural America. A road crew with convict labor is working near Lupino's home. She lives with her parents--an ineffectual and sickly mother (Fay Bainter) as well as an often cruel and moody father (Henry Hull). The father sees the foreman of the road crew (Wayne Morris) as a likely candidate to take his 'stupid' daughter off his hands--so he tries very hard to convince the two to spend time together. Odd, then, that instead of Morris, Ida falls in love with one of the convicts--one who has escaped and befriended her (Dane Clark). Much of the movie is spent with Clark hiding and meeting Lupino on the sly.

The plot is okay but the best part of the film is clearly Lupino--who plays a brow-beaten young woman extremely well. A great film? Nah...but for lovers of classic cinema, one well worth seeing.
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7/10
How deep was my valley
jotix10020 December 2005
Ida Lupino was one of the best screen actresses of her generation. If one should doubt it, take one look at "Deep Valley", which was filmed when she was about 32 years old. Ms. Lupino transforms herself into a much younger woman, who makes the viewer believe she is a girl in her late teens, or early twenties.

Jean Negulesco had a lot to do with the good work he extracted from his players. The film, which is rarely seen these days, presents us with a dysfunctional family living in an isolated farm in California. Libby, the young daughter of the family is seen tending to her sick mother who is bedridden; her father doesn't seem to talk to the mother, leaving Libby in a difficult position. To make matters worse, Libby suffers from stuttering and from shyness, as she feels trapped into duty and not having the same things other girls, her age, can do.

"Deep Valley" is a film that presents a plausible romance between Libby and Barry, a convict working on the road construction nearby. Also, Jeff Barker, one of the men from the highway project falls for the young woman's beauty. Things become entangled as Libby finds the escaped man, Barry, and they fall in love. The lovers are doomed from the start, as one realizes Libby and Barry have no chance in being together. What Libby feels for Barry makes her speech problem go away as she regains a confidence she never had.

The film is worth a look because of Ida Lupino. As Libby, she makes this girl come alive without ever striking a wrong note. Dane Clark is also quite good as Barry, the convict. Wayne Morris plays Jeff Barker, the man that loves Libby, but he realizes she doesn't care for him. Fay Bainter and Henry Hill play the older Sauls.

The film is helped by the musical score of Max Steiner and the black and white cinematography created by Ted McCord.
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6/10
If you go down to the woods today
AAdaSC10 September 2017
Ida Lupino (Libby) plays the socially isolated daughter of Henry Hull (Cliff) and Fay Bainter (Ellie). They live in the middle of the nowhere and Lupino is the glue that keeps the family together as her parents don't speak to each other and live on separate floors. She acts as a go-between. One day, after wandering through the woods, which is her only enjoyment in life, she stumbles across some convicts who are building a road. One of them, Dane Clark (Barry) takes her fancy. Can these two misfits get together? Wayne Morris (Jeff) also takes a shine to Lupino and her father wants to encourage this relationship. Lupino has other ideas.

The cast are good with the central performance of Lupino leading things along as she develops a relationship with Clark and we see her change into a happy girl. However, this is ultimately an unhappy story that you will probably be able to predict. It does provide tense moments, though. Personally, it was too obvious for me and I would have preferred a different ending. It's still worth keeping onto.
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A performance to cherish
jaykay-1026 April 2004
A touching story of people finding (or re-discovering) within themselves a capacity for love: low-keyed, underplayed, and presenting an extraordinary challenge to Ida Lupino as a young woman totally lacking in confidence or a sense of self-worth, an emotionally stunted creature whose needs and aspirations are internalized, until.....

Her marvelous performance must rely on nuance to acquaint us with what is going on within the character: a lowering of the eyes, a tilt of the head, an ungainly walk without swinging her arms, a halting, inarticulate stammer, and more - much more - the types of things that define excellence in acting, absent of any opportunity to chew the scenery.

Long acknowledged as a first-rate talent who never received her due (and whose career was never properly promoted), Ida Lupino demonstrates in this film just how much she was capable of achieving, if given the opportunity.
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6/10
Timid love story, oddly lax but often lovely...
moonspinner5511 March 2008
Director Jean Negulesco always worked well with actresses and had a pretty eye for story detail, yet his visual flair never compensated for his narrative structure, which was shaky and lacking both suspense and (when needed) a touch of light relief. The intensity of his films usually slipped right through his hands, which is why "Deep Valley" is only good up to a point. Ida Lupino stars as a backwoods farm girl who falls in love for the first time with convict Dane Clark, who just escaped from a work camp. Handsome, well-written drama combines adventure and romance, though Lupino is ultimately too refined and intelligent to be convincing as a stutter-prone illiterate. Her performance improves as the picture continues, but Clark has the opposite problem: he strains too hard for effect, though his inadequacy is nearly poignant. Negulesco, true to form, smoothly transports the viewer back to another time and place, but the picture is so tremulous it tends to fade in the memory. **1/2 from ****
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7/10
A Rare Treat
Old_Movie_Man25 June 2012
My vote would be less if this movie was made 10 or 20 years later, but the plot would not have survived 10 or 20 years later because of the setting. Well written, good casting, and some of my favorite actors -- Ida Lupino and Wayne Morris. I didn't recognize Morris at first; I loved him in "Kid Galahad" with Barbara Stanwyck, and I believe he was one of the most handsome actors that ever graced the silver screen. The plot was believable and there sure wasn't much that needed to be done to create the set, since most of it was outdoors. The costumes couldn't have been a challenge either. Overall, the story was believable when you consider the movie code in 1947. Good job again Ida Lupino!
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7/10
Worthy but hard to work up much enthusiasm
bmacv3 December 2001
Deep Valley is a kind of pastoral noir set in a mountainous glen right out of the Brothers Grimm. Isolated with her valetudenarian mother and coarse father in a tumbledown farmhouse, Ida Lupino is an introverted, unsocialized young woman whose awkwardness is symbolized by a stutter. Nearby a new highway is under construction by a forced-labor gang of convicts. One of them (Dane Clark) escapes; Lupino shelters him. Nature takes it course, as does the long arm of the law. The cinematography in Deep Valley is lush and evocative, and its score, by Max Steiner in an access of Wagnerism, may blow you out of your easy chair. Jean Negulesco directs with his usual high-gloss professionalism. But worthy as Deep Valley is, it's hard to work up much enthusiasm for it. Basically it's a quiet and sad little story that remains in its rural backwater and doesn't beckon us in.
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9/10
Lupino at her Peak
abooboo-26 August 2000
I caught this on Turner Classic Movies, during a showcase of movies that are not yet available on video. And what a shame, because this is a remarkably vivid, extremely well produced effort, featuring a typically marvelous performance from the so called "poor man's Bette Davis" Ida Lupino - her last as a Warner Brothers star. As well as an intense, believable turn from one of the WB's preferred non-glamour, refreshingly regular Joe's, Dane Clark.

She plays a stuttering, socially backward young woman living in a dark household where her petty, nagging father (Henry Hull) gloomily inhabits the first floor and her helpless, self-pitying mother (Fay Bainter) occupies the second one. Her only function, beyond tedious daily chores, is to be the convenient target of her parents' scorn and disappointment, the scorn and disappointment they actually intend for each other but are too weary to express - as they literally haven't spoken for years. Not helping matters is the fact that there are no other neighbors for miles, as the three of them are fenced in, both physically and now emotionally by the surrounding hills.

Lupino's only refuge is the woods, where she often blissfully roams for hours with her dog. During one of her excursions she stumbles across a work crew of convicts on a construction project, supervised by an agreeable WW2 veteran played by Wayne Morris. She is instantly captivated by one of the men (Clark, who is friendly towards her dog) despite the fact that the undoubtedly more respectable Morris soon drops by the house to get water for the crew and is clearly taken with her. But she prefers the dangerous Clark (from afar - they've only made eye contact) and is concerned that he has been placed in isolation as a result of a violent, if provoked, rage.

Soon, a terrible storm hits. Clark escapes his confinement in the mayhem, as does Lupino, deciding she can no longer withstand the unrelenting hopelessness her parents are inflicting on her. She and Clark run into each other in the woods and ... well, they fall in love.

I'd hate to give any more away but, as with all good movies, there are surprises in store and events to unfold. The characterizations are three dimensional, lived in, particularly those of Bainter and Hull as Lupino's folks. It would've been all too easy for them to have come across as simply nasty and grotesque, but they both do a wonderful job of shading their performances so that you can sense the buried humanity, the regret, the slender possibility of some kind of redemption. There's a tantalizing hint of mystery in Morris' nice guy supervisor as well. It's a relatively small role, but he seems TOO nice, TOO forgiving of and understanding of Lupino's stuttering and social backwardness. Though it's understandably left largely unexplored, you find yourself wondering about the guy's true intentions.

Wonderful film. There's a good amount of suspense too in the second half, as the authorities keep closing in and things get very tense. A colorful, cagey sheriff who appears to enjoy his work a bit too much comes out of nowhere and almost steals the show.

The director, Jean Negulesco, has put together a beautiful film. It's worth seeing for the stunning cinematography alone. Couple that with flawless performances across the board and an insightful, nuanced script ... "Deep Valley" has the richness and texture of an old hardback novel you pick off the shelves of a good used bookstore and can't put down. How do movies like this get so lost when mediocrities abound? (Didn't mean to rhyme.)
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7/10
A more sylvan "High Sierra"
weezeralfalfa4 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
The basic theme much reminds of the prior "High Sierra". In both films, Ida Lupino plays a girl who, by chance, becomes involved with an escaped convict, on the run. We correctly sense that their desperate relationship will end in heartbreak in the not too distant future. Of course, the details of the 2 films are quite different. I would say that this film is the more interesting, of the 2. For one thing, the romantic attachment clearly is much stronger . Then, Ida's character here: Libby is much more repressed, due to her physical isolation in this remote forest, and the emotional isolation between her parents, and between them and her. Dane Clark plays Humphrey Bogart's role, in the prior film, as the escaped convict, and looks rather like him. His name is Barry. He and Libby are like 2 wounded animals who happen upon each other in an obscure forest setting, and it doesn't take long for them to establish a romantic connection. Later, Libby has a chance to escape her miserable life by marrying road construction engineer Jeff Barker(Wayne Morris). But, she doesn't feel a connection with him, like she does with Barry. However, at film's end, Libby and Jeff are seen walking off together., suggesting that Libby finally faced the reality that her imagined future with Barry would amount to a continuing nightmare, as long as law enforcement was hot on his trail..........Fay Banter plays Libby's mother, while Henry Hull plays her father..........I fell in love with Ida many years ago. She was so cute, with a pug nose and those gorgeous eyes. And, she usually seemed to play hard luck girls. Actually, I think this was her most sentimental role that I remember.
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10/10
Ida Lupino at her best facing hopeless challenges
clanciai11 October 2017
I was always a fan of Ida Lupino as she never disappointed me but on the contrary always excelled herself, and here in this film more than ever. In the beginning she is a plain girl suffering from a stutter, which she gradually overcomes by the shock of some hard experience. As she gets involved with the ordeals of a convict, she starts developing her character and ends up a mature woman ready to meet life.

The story is not very remarkable but actually rather banal, but the great tempest scene changes everything and especially the character of the film from rather a dull account of simple life out in the wilderness of pettiness and stagnant patterns into a thrilling drama.

The music by Max Steiner and especially the photography makes this film a great experience. It develops into something of a Frank Borzage style saga of great human pathos, and in every scene with Ida Lupino you shiver and feel her torture and anguish as her situation continuously grows more complicated and inextricable in its hopelessness, but somehow she comes out of it alive after all, and you can give a sigh of relief that at last the tremendous suspense is over.

Every actor besides makes a perfect job, they are all convincing in their very tiny world, the provincialism is extreme, but it is very well caught and realized in the film with great understanding. No one is entirely bad, and no one is entirely good, but they all have their problems. It's a very human film transcended into a masterpiece on a smaller scale by Ida Lupino and the director Negulesco.
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7/10
Deep in my heart there's a story untold
sol-kay28 September 2010
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Powerful drama of forbidden love that leads to disaster to those two unfortunate souls involve in it. 22 year old Libby Saul,Ida Lupino, has had it rough all her life living in a severally dysfunctional family with her mom & pop Elie & Cliff Saul, Fay Bainter & Henry Hull haven't spoken much less seen, she lived upstairs and he downstairs, each other in years. This caused Libby to become very introverted as well as developed a severe speech impediment that caused her to stutter her words.

It's when Libby got unloved with escaped convict Barry Brunett, Dane Clark, that her life turned around for the better. But that didn't last for to long as the movie unfolded. Barry escaping from a San Quentin work gang run into Libby when she was together with her dog Joe hanging out at her secret hideout in the woods, an abandoned log cabin, after she ran away from home. Libby just about had it in her not being ale to take her parents non-stop bickering any longer.

At first only looking to make it to freedom, in far off San Francisco, Barry fell in love with Libby because she was the only person who really understood him. Libby saw in Barry much of herself in how he got a raw deal in life by being in the wrong place at the wrong time. That's when Barry, dead drunk and not knowing where he was at, was attested by the police in an armed robbery of a jewelry store where the owner was found shot and beaten to death. Hiding Barry from the sheriff's posse Libby soon realized that Barry was not the sweet and kind person that she at first thought that he was. That's by Barry going off the handle at the slightest fear that entered his mixed up and confused skull.Even to he point of almost decapitating Libby when she unexpectedly showed up at his now new secret hideout at the her parents barn.

In fact it was the man who was in charge of the work gang that Barry was a member of all American and war hero in real life as well as in the movie Jeff Baker played by Wayne Morris, who shot down 7 Jap Zero's in the war, came on he scene that things started getting a little sticky for the two of them. You see Jeff like Barry was nuts about Libby who by now overcame her stuttering and by prettying up herself started to look like a movie star and wanted to marry her!

***SPOILERS*** This all lead to all kinds complications in Libby's relationship with Barry who, being the violent and crazy guy that he was, resorted to type by blowing his big chance of not only winning Libby over but her parents who really had no use for the guy as well! THe movie ends a lot like Ida Lupino's previous 1941 gangster film with Humprey Bogart, as Mad Dog Earl, with Barry getting gunned down by members of the sheriff' posse when he's trapped in the mountains and ending up dying in Libby's arms. At least as Barry now knowing that it will soon be all over for him said when he was just about to kick off for good that they, the law, wont have me Barry Brunett to kick around anymore!
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10/10
Ida Lupino Makes It Work
robert-temple-18 November 2009
This story, based on a novel by California author Dan Totheroh, could have failed miserably if it had not been cast correctly, since the entire tale hangs on the believability of the girl played by Ida Lupino. Jean Negulesco does his usual excellent job of directing. But directing would not have sufficed, if the entire film had not been suffused with the mysterious 'Lupino Essence'. Many words come to mind to try to describe what she does on screen, words like 'integrity', 'intelligence', perceptive', 'authentic', 'genuine', 'spontaneous and uncontrived'. But how does one define magic? Lupino is the traumatised daughter of two quarrelling and cantankerous people who live on different floors of a tumbledown farmhouse in a deep and isolated valley in the north of California. The mother and father have not gone upstairs or downstairs to see one another for seven years, and Lupino is their only go-between, which has reduced her to extreme shyness, withdrawal, and stuttering. Fay Bainter plays the mother very well, with her expressive eyes the size of saucers, that is, saucers which are always sliding around all over the place, as if on shipboard in a storm. The profound isolation of the family is shortly to come to an end, because one of those California coastal highways is being constructed, with much dynamiting, landslides, and convict labour with picks on the obdurate rocks. The road will go through their front meadow, and they will actually see people! The love-starved and pathetic Lupino falls for an escaped convict, brilliantly portrayed by Dane Clark. Lupino's father is played by Henry Hull, who is chiefly remembered for appearing in 'The Fountainhead' (1949), two years later. Here he has little scope to be memorable. This is a very harrowing and moving tale of desperation, both emotional and of the life-and-death variety, as Lupino and Clark struggle to prevent his being shot or captured. It is a doomed love story between two young people who are at the very extremes of life. The film is superb in every way, and qualifies as a minor classic. If only Negulesco had stayed with this kind of intense dramatic films instead of wasting his time with such later things as the appalling and revolting cream-puff, 'Daddy Long Legs' (1955).
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7/10
Deserves rerun after rerun
mollytinkers22 September 2021
This 1947 release shines when taken in context. Yes, it's Ida Lupino's show. Plenty of Hollywood formula here, but it's done in an enticing way.

Good story; good script. Good acting; good actors. Good production; good directing. Good music. Good costuming and cinematography.

If it feels a little dumbed-down, it's actually not. Dane Clark works it in this movie. A huge shout-out to Fay Bainter.
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5/10
Will love bring the living dead back to life?
mark.waltz4 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Depressing and often melodramatic, this well acted tale of unexpected love has its good points, but even with its California mountain setting often feels claustrophobic and moody. 22 year old Ida Lupino (nearing 28 in real life) is a lonely and miserably unhappy mountain girl, stuck in the loveless home with two parents who hate each other, and thus she has come to no longer love them. The sudden glimpse of a prison work crew scraping out the sides of a mountain range overlooking the ocean draws her curiosity in on one man, the violent Dane Clark, who escapes and hides out in her secret cabin where she finds him. They naturally fall in love, ans she hides him from the posse after them.

It comes to life here and there, with parents Henry Hull and Faye Bainter finding each other as a result of her sudden absence, and Lupino's pursuit by foreman Wayne Morris pushing her closer to Clark. We're supposed to believe that simply by her daughter's sudden absence that Bainter decides out of the blue to get out of bed, put on a new dress, and smile at a husband she has obviously despised for years, and everything between them will change.

Sort of a follow-up to "High Sierra" for Lupino, this has an often inappropriate musical score that sounds too happy for the dramatic scenes it plays during. Technically superb and frequently romantic, it's still difficult to accept the usually tough Lupino as a stuttering mountain gal, although a scene where she allows a squirrel to climb on her is cute.

There's also no exposition as to why Hull and Bainter have come to hate each other and how Lupino's stutter, so prominent in the opening scenes, will disappear much like how Emperor Claudius of Rome lost his when not around people who considered him a fool. I appreciate the attempt to go down John Steinbeck territory in the style of "Tortilla Flat" and "Cannery Row", but it ultimately ends up slightly disappointing in spite of some obvious qualities.
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Lupino Showcase
dougdoepke20 September 2006
A down-trodden girl, a mutt dog, and a criminal fugitive on the run. Sounds a lot like 1941's High Sierra, even down to lead actress Ida Lupino. But it doesn't matter that these elements got recycled, because Deep Valley is a really watchable 90 minutes of Hollywood melodrama. Sure, it's hokey at times, especially the weepy ending that's squeezed for all its worth. But the movie is also a testimonial to the demandingly high standards of Hollywood studio production-- scope out the great farm house that almost looks like Katrina hit it, and the road project that looks so real, I expect it was. There's also the exquisite b&w photography from cameraman Ted Mc Cord, along with expert direction from studio ace Jean Negulesco. But most of all, it's the absolutely luminous performance from Lupino in the central role. Was there anyone ever better at playing soulful parts. Here, her stuttering, long-suffering farm girl whose only joy is her dog and the great outdoors, is enough to move the Rock of Gibraltar, and is surely Oscar-worthy. Speaking of the outdoors, it's also a measure of the film's underlying romanticism that the lovers seek refuge in the liberating openness of nature, and away from the blessings of civilization. For each has been brutalized by societal forces larger than themselves. Dane Clark is very good too, even if he never got past second fiddle to John Garfield-- then too, his strictly blue-collar personality was a poor fit for the upwardly mobile 1950's, and by that white-collar decade, he was gone. Anyhow, this super-slick film again demonstrates how wonderfully vital B-pictures of the studio era could be, and is well worth a look see.
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6/10
Just average
gbill-7487714 February 2018
An awkward young woman (Ida Lupino) growing up in an isolated area between estranged parents unexpectedly finds love with a convict who has escaped a coastal road project (Dane Clark). The law is closing in, and to add to the drama, the woman has another suitor in the man who was engineering the effort (Wayne Morris).

It's an atmospheric film noir, one where shadows and darkness emphasize a feeling of being trapped in a world with few choices, but ultimately it falls a bit short. I liked seeing Lupino, but her range is limited, and I don't think this was all that fine a performance from her. It's interesting to consider her as being in a prison of her own, and indeed she identifies with Clark for that reason, but the film gets predictable and melodramatic as it plays out.

My favorite shot from director Jean Negulesco is at dusk, low angle, with the barn and plants in shadow and the mother (Fay Bainter) approaching. My favorite quote was from the mother, as she's adjusting one of her dresses for her daughter, and says, "All you young girls want everything lower in the front, and tighter in the back. What are you so proud of?" Unfortunately, there are just not enough of these moments to strongly recommend the film. It's not awful, but just average.
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6/10
BEAUTY AND THE BEAST
stusviews10 August 2023
Part fairy tale romance, part road gang movie, "Deep Valley" stars Ida Lupino (young and fetching) as Libby, a quiet girl living a sheltered existence with her unhappily married parents in a cabin deep in the woods. While off exploring one day she spies a road gang working nearby and can't take her eyes off the group's troublemaker, a stubborn con played by Dane Clark. Sensing an opportunity to experience something new, she helps him when he tries to escape. Lupino is lovely and fragile, Clark is all grit, grime, and determination, and the scenes of the men toiling away in the sun may be enough to make you want to mop your own brow once or twice. The cinematography is wonderful, too. As Libby's mother says of their remote surroundings, there's "no way to get in, no way to get out"; part of the excitement stems from seeing if Libby can get out. Not a great movie, but certainly watchable. See it.
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6/10
Workin' on the Chain Gang
evanston_dad1 April 2024
Though "Deep Valley" aired as part of TCM's Noir Alley, it's really more moody romantic melodrama than true noir for my taste.

Ida Lupino seems too old for the role she's playing, a young woman bored to sobs on her parents' run down farm who gets the hots for a chain gang fugitive (Dane Clark) who hides out in her barn. This movie goes about where you'd expect it to, but it does have the guts to go for the downer ending.

There's a sweet little side story about the parents who rediscover affection for each other when their daughter becomes too distracted to continue being their go-between.

Even if she's not the right age, Lupino is an appealing actress and makes pretty much anything she's in worth watching, and she and Clark have chemistry together.

Grade: B.
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8/10
Ida finds a kindred spirit
bkoganbing21 June 2012
The new Pacific Coast highway is being built and a meadow is being sacrificed from Henry Hull's farm for the job though he got some good money for it. Looking at the place it's kind of depressing and hopefully he'll fix the place up.

It's probably most depressing for Ida Lupino in one of her best films Deep Valley. She's a shy withdrawn girl with a stammer and she doesn't have outlets for socialization. She lives on said farm with her parents Hull and Fay Bainter who is one of those women perpetually sick. With a road crew under the direction of engineer Wayne Morris all of them at the farm actually lighten up with the arrival of human contact.

The crew on the road is convict labor and one of them, Dane Clark is a person of violent temper which is why he's there on a manslaughter rap. He escapes during a landslide and the whole county under sheriff Willard Robertson is on the hunt.

The shy and and backward Lupino discovers Clark and befriends him. She just wants to see the world and Clark is really a tragic figure, as socially regressed as she except that his temper makes him lash out.

Though some of the character development of the supporting players isn't quite well rounded when director Jean Negulesco is concentrating on his stars Lupino and Clark he's got a winner in Deep Valley. Color cinematography might have really given this film a boost, especially the outdoor scenes. On the other the black and white does accent the tragic elements of the story so take your choice.

This is definitely one of Ida Lupino's five best roles. For her fans Deep Valley is a must.
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7/10
LUPINO IS TOPS HERE...!
masonfisk26 March 2024
A film noir from 1947 starring Ida Lupino. Lupino is a downtrodden, plain daughter living at home w/a bedridden mother, Fay Bainter & an abusive father, Henry Hull. What brings a ray of hope to her life is the passel of convicts near their home on an extended stay (they're constructing a highway road) where she befriends one of the cons, played by Dane Clark who she feels sorry for after he gets reprimanded for an infraction (he's locked in a toolshed for it). After a row in the family partners w/some extreme weather outdoors, several convicts & their guards are killed in a landslide where the toolshed is demolished as well but Clark is nowhere to be found w/the edict going out that the presumption is that he's alive until a body is discovered. Lupino ends up at a remote cabin to calm down & after a swim in a nearby lake, she encounters Clark hiding out there but instead of turning him in, they appeal to each other's damaged upbringings & circumstances which eventually turns to love. After a posse nearly gets him at the cabin, Clark backtracks it to Lupino's manse where she hides him in a barn but w/the local sheriff & his posse closing in, it's only a matter of time before the lovers are caught. Lupino essentially would play the same part in a Western w/Joel McCrea called Colorado Territory 2 years later (which itself is a remake of High Sierra w/Humphrey Bogart) but instead of focusing on Clark, Lupino is front & center w/the outcome virtually the same. Director Jean Negulesco (Johnny Belinda/Three Coins in a Fountain) gets a lot of mileage out his dark compositions & Max Steiner's score w/Lupino a standout as a brittle woman finally coming into her own by falling in love w/the wrong man.
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8/10
Ida Lupino and Dane Clark score
blanche-27 October 2021
From 1947, Warner Brothers' Deep Valley is a bit of a High Sierra ripoff, but the story is beautifully told by director Jean Negulesco.

Libby Saul lives a lonely, sad life with her parents in the middle of nowhere, in a house that looks like it should be condemned. Her mother Ellie (Fay Bainter) lives upstairs, a quasi-invalid; her father Cliff (Henry Hull) downstairs. They don't speak. Her father is always angry. And Libby stutters. She is only happy when she is in the woods with her dog, Joe.

A new road is being built through the mountains, and Libby and Joe watch the construction nearly every day. The road is being built by prisoners. The foreman, Jeff Barker (Wayne Morris) befriends Cliff Saul, and Cliff sees him as a potential match for Libby.

Libby, however, has caught the eye of a prisoner, Barry, and when she sees him disciplined, it traumatizes her. One night, her father strikes her. Libby realizes that she can't stay there anymore and leaves for the woods with Joe. There she runs into the escaped Barry, and the two fall in love.

Ida Lupino gives a sympathetic performance as Libby - vulnerable, but smart enough to realize she can't stay in the life she has. Libby's falling in love brings about massive changes for her parents, though they don't realize that's why.

Without Libby around, Ellie has to go downstairs and actually communicate with Cliff. And the presence of Jeff brings hope from Ellie that Libby will have a different life. Meanwhile, she's helping Joe hide and bringing him clothes and food.

Dane Clark was a poor man's John Garfield - he was very good as the impulsive, short-tempered Barry, but he lacked the gravitas for stardom. Someone said that his "tough" guy type went out of style. I'd say not really - Marlon Brando could be pretty tough, as could Rod Steiger. Clark had a good career, but not as a movie star. Hull and Bainter are excellent, and Wayne Morris does well as a good guy.

Beautifully photographed with some stunning images. Ida Lupino never achieved superstardom, but she had an interesting career as an actress and director.

Highly recommended.
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7/10
great Ida Lupino
SnoopyStyle18 September 2020
Libby Saul (Ida Lupino) is a shy 22 year old spinster with a stutter. She lives with her emotionally abusive parents in a rundown farmhouse. It is a family of bitterness and anger. She likes to escape into the woods and watch the convicts constructing a nearby road. Her parents try to set her up with the road engineer Jeff Barker but he turns out to be a creep. Eventually, she has had enough and runs away to a cabin in the woods. She is shocked to find convict Barry Burnette (Dane Clark) who escaped after a deadly landslide. She was already taken with him from before and helps him to hide from the search party.

That family is so uncomfortable and so good. The only weak spot in the whole movie is Dane Clark. He has a sad face and isn't strictly leading man material. He's not physically impressive. He's being a poor man's James Dean before James Dean. On the other hand, Ida Lupino is amazing. She's great at projecting a lot of changes in the character. It gets a bit too melodramatic at times and a bit too long. The third act drags. The best is the uncomfortably dark first half. I really love the best parts and I can overlook some of its flaws.
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9/10
Lupino shines
thomreid2 June 2010
Once again, Ida Lupino shines in an understated, yet evocative role. She can do anything, from this to high glamor in "The Man I Love" or "The Hard Way." The story is interesting and showcases Dane Clark, who was a rising star then - holding his own with Ida here as he did with Bette Davis in "A Stolen Life". The rest of the supporting cast is also excellent, from the great Fay Bainter and Henry Hull to Wayne Morris.

I wonder what color would have done for this film, but it's good anyway. Again, thank God for TCM and now it's on WB archive video DVD, in a no frills package, but good enough. Jean Negulesco gives it a vibrant, professional treatment.

And, as always, Max Steiner's score puts the icing on the cake.
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6/10
Ain't no valley low enough - Ain't no river wide enough.
hitchcockthelegend19 May 2019
Deep Valley is directed by Jean Negulesco and adapted to screenplay by Stephen Morehouse Avery and Salka Viertel from the novel written by Dan Totheroh. It stars Ida Lupino, Dane Clark and Wayne Morris. Music is by Max Steiner and cinematography by Ted McCord.

Libby Saul (Lupino) lives in a run down farm house with her unfeeling and estranged parents. Having developed a stammer due to her stmyied life, her only solace comes from walking in the woods with her dog. Then one day she happens upon a convict work party and takes interest in one of them, Barry Burnette (Clark).

He's free too...

Off the bat you have to be warned that this is very slow going for the first two thirds - almost painfully so. So with the story hardly being compelling in the first instance, or credible of course, it's on shaky ground and becomes tough to recommend with confidence. However, there's plenty to enjoy as it plods along and the final third is well worth waiting for.

The whole look of the piece is an atmospheric delight, McCord bringing some monochrome magic. The inside of the cottage is oppressive, director and cinematographer neatly marrying the visuals up to how Libby feels. Other scenes are pure visual treats, such as out in the barn as the sunlight shines through gaps in the wood to reveal a ghostly mist, or subtle shots like river ripples reflected onto Libby's face, there's enough tech skills on show to keep you interested. Add in yet another superb performance from Lupino and you should want to stay all the way here.

Narratively it comes down to finding love under trying circumstance, and that of the big decisions we face in life. Libby is faced with a choice, the bad boy or safe boy conundrum rearing its potent head. It all builds to a finale of substance that tantalises the heart and head in equal measure. No great film by any stretch of the imagination, the tech credits better than the actual play itself, but it warrants respect and worth a viewing for sure. 6/10
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4/10
The highlight of this less than compelling and incredible drama is its cast
jacobs-greenwood18 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by Jean Negulesco, with a screenplay co-written by Stephen Morehouse Avery, this below average drama's high point is its recognizable cast, which includes the lovely and delicate Ida Lupino, Dane Clark, Wayne Morris, Fay Bainter, Henry Hull, and Willard Robertson. Unfortunately, the story is neither compelling nor overly credible, and the acting is ordinary despite the aforementioned actors.

Lupino plays Libby Saul, the daughter of an estranged couple who are still living under the same (albeit dilapidated) roof. Because she's spent a third of her 22+ years taking care of her mother Ellie (Bainter), who never leaves her upstairs room, and the fact that she stutters after she'd witnessed her father Cliff (Hull) hitting Ellie all those years ago, Libby's social development was stifled. This makes her ripe for a relationship with quick tempered escaped convict Barry Burnette (Clark), from a nearby highway construction project run by Jeff Barker (Morris). Robertson plays Sheriff Akers, the lawman in the remote area where the Sauls live that's hunting Burnette.

Because life at home is so unhappy, Libby escapes to the woods with her dog every chance she gets. There is even a rundown cabin in the woods near where they live. The area is so remote that the (Pacific Coast?) highway is being built along the ocean by convicts. The guards move their prisoners to whatever area lead engineer Barker tells them needs work. Convict Barry notices Libby and her dog above them on a ridge, where she watches them work to spend the time. One day, Barker & crew drive up to the Saul home which they assume is empty & abandoned because it's falling apart. However, Libby and then Cliff come out to find out what they want. Barker's team needs water and Cliff offers to sell it to them before he changes his mind and offers it for free. After this "misunderstanding", Cliff asks Barker if he would like to come by some evening to see Libby and play some cards with him. Libby witnesses Barry punch one of the guards over a wisecrack, which causes him to be handcuffed and, later, locked into a hillside shed.

When Barker does visit the Sauls, the socially immature Libby is put off by his too quick physical advances; she becomes standoffish. That night, there's a storm that causes an avalanche which frees Barry. Fed up with her parents' unhappy home & non-existent relationship, Libby runs away with her dog to the remote cabin. Surprise, surprise, Barry turns up there too AND they fall in love! Even more incredible is the fact that when she returns home to get supplies for them to run away together, Libby sees that her mother is not only downstairs for the first time in years, but she's having breakfast with her father! To top it off, Barry later comes to live in the family's barn loft while law enforcement officers scan the area for him. The family dog is suddenly absent or not able to detect the presence of the stranger in their midst (or perhaps the dog is just not disturbed by his smell because it had met Barry with Lucy at the cabin previously?).

Predictably, crime doesn't pay. It is Ellie, and then Barker, not Sheriff Akers, who discovers and chases Barry into the inevitable, and surprisingly brief chase scene. Even though Barry is shot (and, ultimately, mortally wounded), he is temporarily able to escape the amazingly mobile old Sheriff to the (who'd have thunk it?) same remote cabin in the woods where only Libby seems to be able to find him so that they can share a last tender moment before he dies, remorseful of course.
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