| Lana Turner, John Gavin, Juanita Moore,
Sandra Dee, Dan O'Herlihy, Robert Alda, Susan Kohner
The last film in Hollywood of director Douglas Sirk (Written on
the Wind), the 1959 Imitation of Life--an adaptation of Fannie Hurst's
novel--is an endlessly fascinating film that speaks volumes about
the American journey toward materialism and the racial tensions
that are inseparable from it. Lana Turner plays a white single mother
and aspiring actress who takes in a black housekeeper (Juanita Moore)
and her daughter (played by an adolescent Susan Kohner), the latter
so light-skinned she passes for white. As the years pass and success
mounts for Turner, Moore also becomes more comfortable but her status
as a domestic never changes. Meanwhile, Kohner's character, chafing
against social constraints, rebels at every opportunity and throws
a wrench into the perfect order Sirk chillingly captures through
the precise, architectural design of his images. On one hand a '50s
weepie and on the other a daring allegory, Imitation of Life is
an unusual masterpiece. |