THE THREE FACES OF EVE: Blu-ray (2oth Century-Fox 1957) Fox Home Video
Nunnally
Johnson’s The Three Faces of Eve
(1957) seems an odd duck for the Cinemascope treatment; its narrative neither
enhanced nor compensated by the expansive 2.35.1 aspect ratio; the Fox and
Cinemascope logos looking starkly out of place in black and white. Fox’s
patented widescreen process may not have been the most capable (the warping of
vertical lines to the extreme right and left of center, and the infamous
‘mumps’ syndrome two of its biggest drawbacks), but it remained the
most popular throughout the 1950’s, readily licensed to rival studios. After
1954, all movies made at 2oth Century-Fox became Cinemascope movies as well.
One can choose to regard this as either a plus or a minus. In fact, not every
movie needed the massive frame to tell its story. But Fox needed to illustrate
the superiority of the motion picture format. Hence, if ‘bigger’ equated to
‘better’ then Cinemascope was undeniably at the forefront of a motion picture
revolution.
In hindsight, The Three Faces of Eve is thoroughly in
keeping with the edict for telling stories committed to expanding the social
conscience and moral character of the nation. Darryl F. Zanuck may not have
been Fox’s driving force by 1957, but his imprint is arguably all over this
production. The studio had, in fact,
explored the plight of the mentally disturbed ten years earlier with Zanuck’s
personally supervised production of Anatole Litvak’s Oscar-winning The Snake Pit (1948). Until The Snake Pit, mental disease was
considered taboo subject matter for the movies.
Yet, The Snake Pit changed
both audience and Hollywood’s perceptions about the mentally ill. In fact, the
film’s critical and financial success ensured that other like-minded movies,
intelligently scripted, would follow, including The Three Faces of Eve; the first movie to openly address multiple
personality disorder.
But in
retrospect, The Three Faces of Eve
seems to be encumbered by Nunnally Johnson’s rather heavy-handed direction and an
inherent rigidity to its source material; a treatise written by psychiatrists
Corbett H. Thigpen and Hervey M. Cleckley. The film is rather awkwardly
prefaced by no less an authoritative personality than Alfred Alistair Cooke;
the famed British/American journalist, television personality and radio broadcaster;
Johnson adding credibility to the screen credit reading ‘based on’ and ensuring that audiences knew the story about to
unfold was arguably ‘true’ to the circumstances of one Chris Costner Sizemore –
rechristened for obvious reasons in the movie as Eve White.
Purely from an
acting standpoint, The Three Faces of
Eve is on very solid ground. Joanne Woodward’s enactment of the
common Southern frump plagued by reoccurring voices in her head and the
manifestation of three distinct personalities trapped from within is often
chilling and ultimately dramatically satisfying. Woodward genuinely commands the screen. And a
good thing it is too, for nothing else in the movie can sell its wares quite so convincingly. Lee J. Cobb is exquisite as the
attentive Dr. Curtis Luther, and David Wayne – as Eve’s befuddled but rather
thuggish husband, Ralph – provides uncharacteristically strong support (Wayne’s
repertoire usually relegated to a series of ‘feel good’ Johnnies or
ingratiating, but bumbling buffoons). Still, the show clearly belongs to Woodward
and the three women she readily conjures to life with terrifying transitional
clarity.
The chief
problem herein is that for large portions of the narrative Stanley Cortez’
cinematography is so static, so uninspired, so content to remain focused in
medium long shot or even long shot, relying almost exclusively on the actors
within his frame to occupy its space in interesting ways, that the cumulative
effect is akin to observing a moving tableau; stage bound and, at least from a purely
cinematic critique, frightfully anesthetizing. The camera is never involved in
the story; the principles rarely photographed in close up, the lay of the land filling
the Cinemascope aperture with stagnant compositions that concentrate on
establishing distinct fore, middle and backgrounds without allowing the
audience beyond its well-established proscenium.
The debut of
Cinemascope often had this stifling effect on directors; Vincente Minnelli’s
famed comment (that the elongated shape was only fit for
photographing funeral processions and snakes) rather evocative in summarizing
the approach Johnson and Cortez have taken in staging virtually all of The Three Faces of Eve. Action moves on
a horizontal plain, the actors either walking left to right or vice/versa. Tracking and dolly
shots are nonexistent. I may seem to be dwelling on this point, but watching The Three Faces of Eve made me acutely aware that something was remiss. You get the distinct sense that Johnson
and Cortez would have been much contented exploring their story in the standard
Academy ratio of 1.33:1. It’s just that obvious.
Once again,
the plus is Joanne Woodward – both Oscar-worthy and winning the coveted Best
Actress statuette. Woodward is utterly magnetic within each of Eve’s
turmoil-stricken mechanics of survival; her alter egos (Eve Black and Jane) are
made distinctively whole with shocking clairvoyance. The balancing act in
Woodward’s portrait cannot be overstated. She is exceptional in the part, and
her penultimate success with it instantly catapulted the relative unknown to
prominence – although, arguably (and curiously in hindsight) not into super
stardom. For whatever reason, Woodward is largely remembered today as the other
half in a marriage to megastar/philanthropist, Paul Newman. But Woodward most
definitely deserves her place among the greats for The Three Faces of Eve – a breakout with plenty of opportunity for
the actress to exercise her formidable acting chops.
The trick of
it is Woodward never appears to be grandstanding; her carefully placed nuances
always genuine and mesmerizing. She commands our attention seemingly because
she isn’t trying to, or rather – is – but in an unaffected naturalist approach
to the material. There is a counterbalance to Woodward’s Eves – White or Black
– the former, rather tragically humbled by her ogre of a husband, the latter
deviously seeking escape from that self-imposed marital rigidity. It could have
so easily become rank parody or, at the very least, obvious. Woodward is neither. The rest of the cast are just window-dressing
for what is essentially a ‘one woman’ (well…alright…three in one) show.
Our rather
turgid introduction to the source material is read with leaden severity by
Alistair Cooke, casually leaning against empty theater seats with a blank movie
screen behind him. It’s a very odd prologue indeed; for Cooke is neither a
movie personality nor an authoritative source on psychoanalysis. He was,
however, under contract to 2oth Century-Fox. Cooke stresses the facts, suggesting that only
the slightest alterations have been made to accommodate the artistic
requirements of cinema. Yet we are only superficially informed of the
particulars of Eve’s case before the screen fades into an idyllic small town;
the bulk of the specifics regarding Eve’s struggle left for kindly Dr. Curtis
Luther (Lee J. Cobb) to piece together and then deconstruct.
We are
introduced to the Whites. Ralph (David Wayne) has brought his wife Eve (Joanne
Woodward) to Dr. Luther mostly to satisfy his own dissatisfaction with her
seemingly dysfunctional lying. Ralph’s withered grasp on Eve’s condition is so
pedestrian he really does come across as an uncompromising clod. Our hearts and
sympathies are therefore with Eve. We regress in flashback to an incident where
Ralph discovers their young daughter, Bonnie (Terry Ann Ross) clomping about
the house in a pair of decidedly ritzy high heel shoes.
Asked to
explain herself, Bonnie tells Ralph that ‘mommy’ said she could wear her shoes.
Ralph makes a B-line for the bedroom where he discovers several large boxes
from a local retailer containing various flashy frocks. Confronting Eve with a
belligerent ‘snap to it’ edict to explain herself, Eve denies knowing anything
about the purchases. In fact, she tells Ralph she thought he was just ‘being
sweet’. To get to the bottom of things, Ralph telephones acquaintance, Effie
Blanford (Mary Field) a salesgirl at the store who gloats about how wonderful
Eve looked in the dresses she tried on and bought earlier in the day. Ralph is
incensed, partly over the exorbitant $200 price tag attached to the fashionable
clothes, but moreover because he feels Eve has deliberately deceived him and is
now compounding the insult by considering him too much the fool to follow up on
her deceptions.
Ralph
confronts Eve and she descends into a minor hysteria from which her first alter
ego – Eve Black – quickly manifests. As Ralph begins to pack the dresses for
their return to the store he hears Bonnie’s blood-curdling screams in the next
room and emerges to discover Eve wrapping the cords of a Venetian blind around
their daughter’s neck. Racing to Bonnie’s rescue, Ralph casts Eve to the floor;
the shock bringing Eve back to herself as Ralph threatens to kill her if she
moves from the spot where she lays.
We regress to
Dr. Luther’s office with Ralph challenging Eve to explain herself and/or deny
that she intended to harm their child. Dr. Luther comforts Ralph, but ushers
him from the office to question Eve alone. He quickly discovers Eve has been
prone to frequent headaches and lapses of memory – what she calls ‘blackouts’ with
no recollection of her actions. Dr. Luther presses the point and Eve confides
in him. Ralph may wish to have her legally declared mad and committed so that
he can gain sole custody of Bonnie. But Eve also sincerely fears that she is
losing her mind. She tells Dr. Luther she hears voices – then further confesses
that the voices seem to belong to her, or at least parts of her consciousness
that remain separate and apart from her own sense of self.
Dr. Luther
comforts again, explaining that if Eve were going mad she would have rather
embraced this inner spiral out of control as a pleasurable experience. Before long, Eve Black emerges to take Eve
White’s place; slipping out of her nylon stockings and turning up the radio. As
Eve suddenly expresses a rather laissez faire attitude toward both her marriage
and Eve White, Dr. Luther realizes he is no longer dealing with the same woman.
He hurries to an adjoining room to consult with his colleague, Dr. Francis Day
(Edwin Jerome), leaving Eve alone for just a moment or two. The psychiatrists
quickly deduce that although Eve Black seems to know virtually everything about
her alter ego, Eve White is completely unaware Eve Black even exists.
Regrettably, The Three Faces of Eve devolves from
this rather facile non sequitur into an even more lumbering exposé reporting to
be gleaned from the conflicted mind of a schizophrenic. Yet one can sense the
artistic struggle within Nunnally Johnson as both the film’s director and
writer as he flirts with the more salacious aspects of Eve Black’s adulterous
scandals (picking up a rather brutish sailor played by Joe Rudan in a seedy
bar, meeting Ralph at a disreputable motel only to be physically assaulted by
him, Ralph abandoning Eve and Bonnie in a flurry of rage, self-pity and abject
disgust). Johnson’s initial approach to the story is leaden, academic and
highbrow. But he is also unable to resist an inkling to indulge the tawdry
(after all – it sells tickets). The
insurmountable regret is that in the final analysis, The Three Faces of Eve is neither a clinical evaluation of Eve
White’s crumbling mental state, nor a Hollywood-ized version of mental disease
appropriated for its pure entertainment value. Instead, it remains a mutt; its artistry polarized
and tugging against the middle; the movie becoming little more than a weak absorption
never fully expressed beyond these preliminary stages.
Dr. Luther’s
regression hypnotherapy leads to the inevitable Freudian conclusion (that Eve
White’s split personality stems from a traumatic watershed that happened in her
youth; in this case, the death of Eve’s beloved grandmother, who died when Eve
(played in flashback by eight year old Mimi Gibson) was only six years old. Eve’s
parents (Nancy Kulp and Douglas Spencer) tried to get the terrorized girl to
kiss the body lying in its casket. Instead, this fright led to Eve’s mental
implosion, the manifestations of Eve Black and the more astute and clear-eyed
Jane helping Eve White to cope with and release her anxieties; albeit in some
very unhealthy ways.
Nunnally Johnson
baits the audience with his ‘surprise’ ending. Having exorcised her inner
demons and made sense of it all…well…sort of, Dr. Luther asks to speak to Eve
and is amazed when only Jane – the most sensible of the trio – responds.
Realizing that the three personalities have become one, Dr. Luther pronounces
Even/Jane cured. She departs his clinic with renewed optimism on the arm of a
young man, Earl (Ken Scott) who promises to be more understanding and
compassionate than Ralph ever was. Eve is also reunited with Bonnie, this new
family unit departing for a much more promising future. This ending is a bit
too simplistic, moreover clichĂ©d than anything else in its proverbial – though
mismanaged – attempt at establishing a ‘feel good’; desperate to suggest some
sort of clarity has emerged from the convoluted mire that was, and in fact,
remains Eve’s precarious mental state.
If nothing
else, The Three Faces of Eve is an intriguing
character study; one turned down by virtually every top-flight actress in the
industry. Given what we know about multiple personality disorders (MPD) today
the film’s methodology is fundamentally flawed. Yet, this should not negate the
potency in either Joanne Woodward’s performance or the sincerity with which the
movie’s premise was assembled by Nunnally Johnson. In fact, Johnson remains
exceptionally faithful – if ever-so-slightly hazy of the particulars of this
case, providing a partly factual blueprint
of the process used to help restore the real Chris Costner Sizemore from her
own mental conflicts.
In retrospect,
it’s easy to see why Joanne Woodward walked away with the Oscar; a prediction
made by Orson Welles who was first approached to play the benevolent Dr.
Luther. Woodward’s iconoclastic performance remains the template by which all
other movies attempting to illustrate the perplexities of schizophrenia draw
inspiration. Moreover, in choosing Thigpen and Cleckley’s ‘A Case of Multiple Personality’ as his subject matter, Nunnally
Johnson was tapping into the public’s then beguilement with anomalies of the
mind; the probing begun in Shirley
Jackson’s novel ‘The Bird’s Nest’
(made into Lizzie the same year as The Three Faces of Eve). In preparing
for the role, Woodward carefully studied the regression therapy tapes made of
Sizemore’s startling transformations; Johnson encouraging his star to slow down
the shifts between personalities because he felt audiences unaccustomed to MPD
would find them otherwise unconvincing…or even, comical.
For all its
claims of fidelity to the source material it is important to remember that the
real Sizemore was never ‘cured’ of
her multiple personalities. She had, in fact, twenty-two living inside of her
(not three) and these continued to manifest themselves, albeit with less
frequency throughout the rest of her days. Johnson had hoped to have Sizemore appear
in the movie as her own commentator – a suggestion shot down by Thigpen and
Cleckley. In fact, Sizemore did not see the movie until 1974, admitting that it
highly fictionalized her bouts with schizophrenia. If anything, The Three Faces of Eve inspired Sizemore to set the record straight by writing her own autobiographical
accounts of the disease; 1977’s I'm Eve
and 1989’s A Mind of My Own.
Viewed today, The Three Faces of Eve remains a
respectful if slightly dull movie; factually flawed but ultimately capturing
the essential components of a very real and crippling mental disorder. At 91
minutes it doesn’t outstay its welcome. But it remains essentially compelling
because of Woodward’s performance. The rest doesn’t mean much or play half as
well. In the months leading to her Oscar win, Woodward, who would establish her
own sense of conflicted love/hate outspokenness in her condemnations of
Hollywood. But even before The Three
Faces of Eve had its premiere she was rather critical of both the movie and
her performance in it, telling one reporter, “If I had an infinite amount of respect for the people who think I gave
the greatest performance, then it would matter to me.”
Fox Home
Video’s 1080p rendering of The Three
Faces of Eve is pretty sweet. The Blu-ray exhibits a very smooth, very
crisp hi-def B&W transfer. The minimal appearance of film grain suggests
that some DNR has been applied. Thankfully, the image isn’t waxy and retains
fine details and a smattering of indigenous grain. Contrast levels are
exquisite. Blacks are velvety and rich. Whites are pristine. Age-related
artifacts are absent for a presentation that will surely not disappoint. Given Cinemascope’s 6 track capabilities, it
is a curiosity that The Three Faces of
Eve is released in standard mono. The DTS mono mix is solid. Fox’s DVD contained
a pseudo-stereo edit as well but this hasn’t made the transition to Blu-ray.
Extras are fairly limited and all imports from Fox’s DVD, including Aubrey
Solomon’s audio commentary and a scant Oscar presentation Movietones short.
Solomon speaks with integrity and a wealth of knowledge; truly a worth-while
listen. Bottom line: recommended.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3
VIDEO/AUDIO
4.5
EXTRAS
1
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