The Story of Three Loves,
USA 1953, technicolor
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German title: | War es die große Liebe? |
Distributed by: | MGM (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer) Picture |
Produced by: | Sidney Franklin |
Genre / keyword: | Drama / trilogy |
Runtime: | 122 |
Photographed by: | Charles Rosher and Harold Rosson |
Music by: | Miklós Rózsa |
Film Editing by: | Ralph E. Winters |
The Story of Three Loves is the trilogy of romances covers a wide assortment
of sensations-tragic, whimsical and suspenseful. Each of the three stories is told in flashback - always an effective in relating romance. | |
The Jealous Lover | |
Directed by: | Gottfried Reinhardt |
Written by: | John Collier |
Cast (in credits order): | James Mason ... as Charles Countray |
Moira Shearer ... as Paula Woodward | |
Agnes Moorehead ... as Aunt Lydia | |
Summary:
|
James Mason appears as a ballet composer-impresario who falls in love with
a lovely but frail dancer, beautifully played and danced by Moira Shearer.
Because of her love for him she ignores medical advice and dances his ballet,
bringing on the heart attack that ends her young life. |
Madmemoiselle | |
Directed by: | Vincente Minnelli |
Written by: | Jan Lustig and George Froeschel (b. on a story by Arnold Philips) |
Cast (in credits order): | Ethel Barrymore ... as Mrs. Pennicott |
Leslie Caron ... as Mademoiselle | |
Farley Granger ... as Tommy | |
Ricky Nelson ... as Tommy (age 12) | |
Zsa Zsa Gabor ... as Girl at Bar | |
Summary:
|
Ethel Barrymore is a genial witch who grants the wish of a twelve-year-old
boy that he suddenly become a grown man in order that he can escape the
strict supervision of his governess. Since the governess is Leslie Caron
and the boy turns into Farley Granger, romance is inevitable. The whimsy
turns poignant when the wish runs its course after four hours and Leslie
is left wondering where her lover has gone. But Barrymore promises a real
love if the pretty governess will wait a year. |
Equilibrium | |
Directed by: | Gottfried Reinhardt |
Written by: | John Collier (from a story by Ladislas Vajda) |
Cast (in credits order): | Pier Angeli ... as Nina |
Kirk Douglas ... as Pierre Narval | |
Richard Anderson ... as Marcel | |
Summary:
|
The most impressive episode is the last one, Equilibrium, with Kirk Douglas
as a virile trapeze artist and Pier Angeli as a wistful girl he rescues
from suicide and trains as his partner. The role required Douglas to perform
trapeze stunts, and, as he had before with other roles requiring specific
skills, he trained until he could actually per- form the needed tricks. This part-film might well have been a full feature, it tells a good story and it is well paced with excitement and suspense. Douglas plays a famous circus performer who retires when his ambition to be the greatest practitioner of his art brings about the death of his partner. Known to be ruthlessly daring, he finds no trapeze girl willing to become his partner. But he comes across a sad little girl about to take her life because she believes herself guilty of unwittingly sending her husband to his death in a Nazi concentration camp. Douglas decides to make her his partner; the scenes showing him training her for the trapeze are tense and interesting, thanks to the director. Assumin that her indifference to death will make her the perfect partner, Douglas coaches her to become a thrilling performer. What he does not reckon with is love. Angeli becomes so precious to him that after only one performance Douglas retires the act and gives up his ambition. |