☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Now,
Voyager (1942) – I. Rapper
The title comes from a Walt Whitman poem
about unfulfilled desires -- and Charlotte Vale (Bette Davis) has them. She’s been held back (all the way into her
thirties) by her domineering mother, so much so that she plays the first scenes
of the movie in ugly drag (with unruly eyebrows) on the verge of a nervous
breakdown. Fortunately, Charlotte’s sister-in-law brings sensible psychologist
Dr Jacquith (Claude Rains) into the picture and he rightly identifies, as Carl
Rogers might later deduce, that internalizing her mother’s expectations for her
is the crux of the problem. So, he
proposes that she escape away on a South American cruise – where, transformed
miraculously into the Bette Davis we know, she meets and falls in love with, an
unfortunately married man played by Paul Henreid. I wonder why the most emotionally stirring
films are always about those impossible loves that are never to be, never
fulfilled (although there are some innuendoes here about a stormy night in
Rio), never ending in a life-long pairing.
Is it because these possible futures remain in the land of “what might
be” keeping expectations and dreams high, even when all loves that do result in
relationships must crash down to reality and become an everyday, if not
humdrum, thing? Thus the sad dreams
continue, unchecked by life. Charlotte
manages to sublimate her longing for Jerry (Henreid) into a mothering instinct,
taking over guardianship of his younger daughter for whom her own mother seems
to hold no interest. An unusual arrangement to be sure, and probably one that
would not, could not, exist today. So,
Davis takes it on the chin, as she does in so many movies, but she comes
through tougher than before. With its sweeping Max Steiner score and numerous
touching and portentous moments, Now, Voyager, ends up being inspiring to those
who want to take control of their own lives and navigate to the points beyond
where they might currently be stuck. Onward!
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