Magnificent Obsession Movie Review
Magnificent Obsession Review
"Magnificent Obsession" Overview

Rating: NR
1954
Cast and Crew
Director : Douglas SirkProducer : Ross Hunter
Screenwiter : Robert Blees,Sarah Y. Mason,Victor Herman
Starring : Jane Wyman,Rock Hudson,Barbara Rush,Agnes Moorehead,Otto Krüger,Gregg Palmer,Sara Shane,Paul Cavanagh,Judy Nuget
Restrained passion, brooding desire, and undying love are painted on the screen
in glorious Technicolor. Obsessed with the suffering of the American
over-privileged upper class of the 1950s, director Douglas Sirk created several
Hollywood blockbusters that subversively tackled topics ranging from race to
age in relationships. And while All That Heaven Allows (1955) and Imitation of
Life (1959) are beloved by cinephilies as "masterpieces," Magnificent Obsession
is not among that canon.
That's not to say that Sirk's 1954 remake of a 1935 film, and adaptation of the
1929 novel by Lloyd C. Douglas, is not a melodramatic gem. The story focuses on
reckless playboy Bob Merrick (Rock Hudson, in his first leading role), whose
boat-crashing antics inadvertently kill Helen Phillips' (Jane Wyman) husband.
When Merrick falls for the widow, he learns a lesson in selflessness and giving
to others -- but not before Helen is blinded in an accident that was once again
a result of Merrick's actions. Whereas the melodrama in Sirk's major works are
supported by substantive themes that still resonate today -- the racism that
forces Sarah Jane to abandon her mother in Imitation of Life, for example --
Magnificent Obsession drowns in its sentimentality.
Although Sirk and company shoot for a theme of redemption, they fall short. The
fundamental plot flaws are to blame for this one. While the dark cloud of a
clichéd blindness plot device that allows Merrick to become a part of Helen's
life without her knowing overshadows Merrick's do-gooder lessons, the cloud
that shuts out any hope of thematic light comes in the final third when Merrick
becomes a doctor. Degrading nearly to an episode of TV's General Hospital,
Merrick -- now, an accomplished brain surgeon -- is the only one that can save
Helen's life. Not only does that, he restores her vision to boot!
Appreciation for Sirk as a director comes from his ability to deliver
tear-jerking melodrama with genuine emotion. Magnificent Obsession doesn't
quite hit all the marks, but it still sends enough emotion through its
performances and beautifully-compositions to make the eyes swell, just before
you remember how silly it all is in the first place. For Sirk fans, it's a
chance to see the first pairing of Rock Hudson and Jane Wyman before they once
again ignited the screen in All That Heaven Allows. For everyone else, it's a
shameless emotional escape on a lazy Saturday afternoon.
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Review by Jason Morgan
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