Leave Her to Heaven is one of the most unblinkingly perverse movies ever offered up as a prestige picture by a major studio in the golden age of Hollywood. Gene Tierney, whose lambent eyes, porcelain features, and sweep of healthy-American-girl hair customarily made her a 20th Century Fox icon of purity, scored an Oscar nomination playing a demonically obsessive daughter of privilege with her own monstrous notion of love. By the time she crosses eyebeams with popular novelist Cornel Wilde on a New Mexico-bound train, her jealous manipulations have driven her parents... apart and her father to his grave. Well, no, not grave: Wilde soon gets to watch her gallop a glorious palomino across a red-rock horizon as she metronomically sows Dad's ashes to the winds. Mere screen moments later, she's jettisoned rising-politico fiancé Vincent Price and accepted a marriage proposal the besotted/bewildered Wilde hasn't quite made. Can the wrecking of his and several other lives be far behind? Not to mention a murder or two. Fox gave Ben Ames Williams's bestselling novel (probably just the sort of book Wilde's character writes) the Class-A treatment. Alfred Newman's tympani-heavy music score signals both grandeur and pervasive psychosis, while spectacular, dust-jacket-worthy locations and Oscar-destined Technicolor cinematography by Leon Shamroy ensure our fixed gaze. Impeccably directed by the veteran John M. Stahl (who'd made the original Back Street, Imitation of Life, and Magnificent Obsession a decade earlier), the result is at once cuckoo and hieratic, and weirdly mesmerizing. Bet Luis Buñuel loved it. --Richard T. Jameson [show more]
On the surface, Leave Her to Heaven looks like one of the most beautifully gorgeous movies of its era. The rich Technicolor is put to great use in the many outdoor scenes. We see vivid blue skies, rippling water, and rugged mountains. Then we have Gene Tierney, certainly one of the most luminous presences to ever appear onscreen. Just one year prior, Dana Andrews was so taken with her in Laura that he fell in love with her picture despite thinking she was dead. By being so closely associated with her attractive looks, Tierney was the perfect choice for the role of Ellen in Leave Her to Heaven. It continued the misleading aesthetic of plastering beauty on the screen despite the film"s inherent nastiness and parallels to film noir.
In the film, Ellen meets Richard Harland (the bland Cornel Wilde) on a train when she drops a book, of which he happens to be the author, in front of him. This is the type of first encounter perfectly suited for a romantic comedy, yet Leave Her to Heaven is neither of these. That"s not apparent throughout most of the first half, however, as we see the couple fall for each other, culminating in Ellen breaking her engagement to a fledgling district attorney (Vincent Price) via telegram and quickly marrying Richard. This all happens just days after spreading her father"s ashes on horseback, which we see in a scene that"s memorable for both its cinematography and as a testament to Ellen"s peculiar feelings for her father.
Things begin to go awry shortly after the marriage, when Ellen feels Richard"s brother Danny (a "cripple," as Ellen describes him) is infringing on her time with her new husband. Hints of sexual frustration run rampant as Ellen"s morning approach into Richard"s bed is interrupted by Danny pecking on the thin walls right behind them. The younger brother"s chilling fate is sealed, but Ellen"s jealousy and paranoia (hints of which are shown in the stories she tells about the time she spent with her father) will continue until she"s no longer capable of such emotions. Her idea to substitute a new baby for the loss of Danny is a momentary solution until she realizes how much attention a child would divert from her. By the time her jealousy reaches its zenith, as she suspects Richard has fallen for her adopted sister Ruth, Ellen decides to get back at both of them regardless of the personal consequences.
Tierney"s performance is best appreciated on a second viewing, I think, after the viewer already knows the lengths in which her character goes to keep her husband to herself and, then, punish him for his perceived neglect. Being aware of Ellen"s future actions makes Tierney all the more chilling early on, especially when she describes her future husband"s physical resemblance to her recently deceased father. The seemingly innocent suggestion, met with uncertain glances by the rest of her family, becomes a warning sign for Ellen"s future actions. Likewise the unexpected engagement thrust on the couple from Ellen"s seemingly impulsive rationale to dump her fiance serves as an ominous foreshadowing of things to come. Tierney"s sunny demeanor in these first several scenes, along with the idea that she"s acting just as an audience would expect from a lead actress in a Technicolor melodrama, make for a greater jolt of an impact once she puts on those dark sunglasses and transforms into an icy murderess.
The courtroom scenes at the end, as well as the ridiculous bookends of Richard returning from two years in prison, are by far the film"s weakest segments. By no coincidence, those happen to be the only times when Gene Tierney isn"t on the screen and they make you realize how important her presence is to elevate Leave Her to Heaven above the corny and dated melodrama of other similar movies. Vincent Price hammily questioning witnesses is just not as captivating as Gene Tierney doing pretty much anything.
Leave Her to Heaven is an interesting spin on both melodrama and film noir, as though the two sub-genres gave birth to a beautifully disturbed slice of cinema. The focus on a jealously paranoid (and beautiful) murderer as a heroine makes the film much more compelling than it would have been if she were a peripheral character. It twists the preconceived notions the audience has about main characters in movies, as well as about beauty, by offering up a lead actress who ably transforms herself into the opposite of what we"ve come to expect from movies of the 1940s and earlier. She"s the well-liked gunfighter with the white hat who carries himself like a sheriff, but then shoots an unarmed man in the back. Just as we don"t often see such activity in westerns, it"s rare to find a movie that so willfully turns assumptions upside down as Leave Her to Heaven.
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