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Magnificent Obsession

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Magnificent Obsession

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Magnificent Obsession (1935)

December. 30,1935
|
6.8
|
NR
| Drama Romance
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A playboy tries to redeem himself after his careless behavior causes a great man's death.

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ChampDavSlim
1935/12/30

The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.

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pointyfilippa
1935/12/31

The movie runs out of plot and jokes well before the end of a two-hour running time, long for a light comedy.

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Sameer Callahan
1936/01/01

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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Payno
1936/01/02

I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.

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vincentlynch-moonoi
1936/01/03

I note that many prefer this version of the film, rather than the Rock Hudson/Jane Wyman version. I totally disagree. And what makes me so dismissive of this version is humor the first half of the script that is inappropriate to the story line, as well as clear flirting by Irene Dunne. Right after her husband dies, Dunne is flirting (in the car scene) with Robert Taylor...highly inappropriate. In terms of the attempted humor, take -- for example -- the drunken car scene with Taylor's compatriot falling into the sewer. This film is not about humor or flirting. It is about moral character and redemption. So why is Robert Taylor smiling so much throughout the movie, even though he is the cause of another man's death and the cause of a woman going blind? She finds surgery will not restore her sight (and he knows it), yet he is smiling like a lovesick fool on a date in the moonlight...a moonlight she can't see because of him.I make these criticisms even though I have often admired Miss Dunne's work in films. And while Robert Taylor is not one of my particular favorites, he was a fine actor and made some great films.Despite my criticism, I'm not saying you shouldn't watch this film. It's quite watchable, and an interesting contrast if you also watch the 1954 Sirk version, which takes things far more seriously and dramatically. And, in the second half of the film the inappropriate humor and the silliness of the flirting disappears and movie gets more serious, and is really gone quite nicely.So again, watch this film, but also consider watching the Hudson/Wyman version.

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blanche-2
1936/01/04

"Magnificent Obsession" is a 1935 film starring Irene Dunne and Robert Taylor; it was remade in the '50s in Technicolor and starred Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson. The story is preposterous, the melodrama is over the top, but this film gave both Taylor, a farm boy from Nebraska and Hudson, a truck driver from Illinois, their big breaks.Robert Merrick (Taylor) is a drunken playboy who, one afternoon, falls off his sailboat and has to be resuscitated with the use of what's called in this film a "pulmotor," a device that forces oxygen into the lungs.Unfortunately, the pulmotor was needed across the lake for an older man, a Dr. Hudson, who has had a heart attack, but because one isn't available, the man dies. When his wife (Dunne) and daughter (Betty Furness) arrive home, they get the horrible news. There is bitterness everywhere because Dr. Hudson was beloved, a fine doctor and an exceptional man, and Merrick is a drunken, rich loser.At one point, Merrick meets a man (Ralph Morgan) who gives him the secret philosophy that Dr. Hudson lived by and taught him - give anonymously and without expecting repayment.When Merrick spots Mrs. Hudson, he has no idea who she is and tries to pick her up. One day, he offers her a ride and "runs out of gas." As she's leaving the car to take a ride with someone else, a car hits her and she is badly injured - in fact, she's blinded.Merrick now befriends her in the park, where she sits practicing her Braille. He doesn't identify himself - she calls him "Dr. Robert"; he tells her that he once had aspirations to be a doctor himself. He arranges for her to have a steady income, since Dr. Hudson gave most of his money away and only has worthless stocks - she thinks her husband's copper stocks are now worth a lot -- and then he arranges for some of the finest doctors in the world to meet in Paris and study her. She thinks it's because her husband was so highly regarded. Alas, the prognosis is that the doctors see no point in surgery. It goes on from there, assuming fabulous aspects.This kind of melodrama was extremely popular in the 1930s; director Douglas Sirk loved this type of film and remade some of them in the '50s, giving them big, glitzy productions, and made some new ones as well.Though today the plot seems ridiculous, because of the commitment and likability of the actors and the spiritual undertone that goes throughout the film, somehow one doesn't stop watching, and it sure worked well in 1935 and 1954.Robert Taylor is gloriously handsome, known for his perfect profile, resonant speaking voice, and charming presence. I have never considered him much of an actor, but he was my mother's favorite, and I watch him every time he's on TCM in her honor. He holds the record for being employed by a studio the longest - 24 years with MGM, until it dissolved, and went on to more films, a successful television show, and he replaced Ronald Reagan on Death Valley Days.Irene Dunne gives a lovely performance without histrionics or being overdone in any way.Good movie? For what it is, yes.

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Minerva Breanne Meybridge
1936/01/05

Magnificent Obsession concerns a reckless playboy named Merrick, who drowns and is resuscitated with equipment that might have saved the elderly doctor to whom it belonged. Falling in love with the doctor's beautiful young wife, who hates the very thought of him, he learns the reason for her love of the man who died...a philosophy of helping other people, without ever letting them know. When the women loses her sight in a car accident, Merrick takes advantage of her blindness by befriending her. Pretending to be a doctor, he determines to become a surgeon to restore her vision at the risk of losing her love.

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melvr1967
1936/01/06

I saw this movie only once while in high school, many years ago. I have many times seen the Rock Hudson/Jane Wyman version and re-watch it, just because the story is so good in its purest form. The RH and JW version is truly sappy, and must have been one of the top ten to help coin the phrase "Chick Flick". The story is so much better told through it's literature, but like so many, I love to see literature come to life, and see if the Director and Producers have any likenesses to my own imagination. Lloyd C Douglas was a dear man, I'm sure, as an author I found him a bit sophomoric, but nonetheless, enjoyable. His others books, are in the same vein, and worth reading, especially "White Banners", which is also made into a film, with the same overtones as "Magnificent Obsession". Another one of his books worth noting, is "Dr. Hudson's Secret Journal", which isn't a true sequel, but sheds light on the theory that lights M.O.'s fire.

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