| Gregory Peck, Ann Todd, Charles Laughton
, Charles Coburn, Louis Jourdan , Ethel Barrymore
Based on a novel by Robert Hichens, The Paradine Case concerns
Anna Paradine (Alida Valli), on trial for the murder of her wealthy
husband. British barrister Anthony Keane (played by the aggressively
American Gregory Peck) takes on the case-and in the process, falls
in love with Anna, despite being married himself. Despite his client's
protests, Keane summons Anna's lover, unkempt stableman Andre Latour
(Louis Jourdan), hoping to prove in court that Latour was the killer.
Only after a series of stunning upsets does Keane realize that,
for the first time in his career, he has allowed his heart to rule
his head. In a typically perverse Hitchcockian development, the
film's most unpleasant character, an autocratic, vindictive judge
played by Charles Laughton, is one of the few who can see through
Anna's facade. Hitchcock had wanted Greta Garbo to play Anna Paradine,
and indeed a screen test was filmed, but Garbo ultimately declined.
At the time of filming, Hitchcock was enamored with uninterrupted,
10-minute takes (later used to the extreme in Rope); thus, the Old
Bailey courtroom set where much of the action takes place was designed
to accommodate multiple cameras and elaborately conceived crane
movements. Such techniques were cumbersome in 1947, and as a result
the over-illuminated set ended up costing $70,000, jacking up the
film's overall budget to a whopping $3 million (quite a pretty penny
in those days). The film was a box-office disappointment, spelling
the end of the always-rocky association between Alfred Hitchcock
and producer David O. Selznick. |