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| Science-Fiction |
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| Fantasy |
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REPEAT PERFORMANCE
Rating:  
USA. 1947.
Director Alfred Werker, Screenplay Walter Bullock, Based on the Novel by William OFarrell, Producer Aubrey Schenck, Photography (b&w) Lew W. OConnell, Music George Anturel, Photographic Effects George J. Teague, Makeup Bud Westmore, Art Direction Edward C. Jewell. Production Company Eagle-Lion.
Cast:
Joan Leslie (Sheila Page), Louis Hayward (Barney Page), Tom Conway (John Friday), Richard Basehart (William Williams), Virginia Field (Paula Costello), Natalie Schaefer (Mrs Shaw)
Plot: Actress Sheila Page turns up just on midnight at a New Years Eve party to celebrate the arrival of 1947 and tells the poet William Williams that she has just shot her husband Barney. She wishes the previous year had not happened the way it did. And then suddenly she miraculously finds herself back at a New Years Party of 1946. She realizes she has somehow gone back in time and throws everything into trying to make the year not turn out the way it did. She tries to stop her husband from falling into alcoholism and having an affair with actress Paula Costello, and William from being taken on as a prodigy by the self-important socialite Mrs Shaw, something that causes him to end up in a psychiatric institution. But the more she attempts to prevent the circumstances from repeating themselves, the more events continue to keep turning out the same way.
This is an interesting variation on the 1940s light fantasy film. Although this has really been made more as a dark film noir melodrama and is light years away from the frothiness of other light fantasies of the era such as Topper (1937), Here Comes Mr Jordan (1941) and A Guy Named Joe (1943).
The films theme of one being able to relive their personal past and change the way the present transpires is a prefiguring of films like Peggy Sue Got Married (1986) and Twice Upon a Yesterday/The Man with Rain in His Shoes (1998). The film could easily have been an episode of The Twilight Zone (1959-63) in fact The Twilight Zones half-hour format would have been far better suited to the story than feature film length. The fantasy elements the means whereby Joan Leslie is allowed to rewind the past one-year are not explored and are set aside in favour of the soap opera plot about Leslie, her drunken, cheating husband Louis Hayward and Leslies attempts to keep him away from actress Virginia Field, knowing that he is going to have an affair with her.
At least the characters are crafted with some skill Richard Basehart as the lost puppy-dog William, sadly gone mad by the end (although the film irritatingly never says why); the upper-class Mrs Shaw chasing a piano player at the Thanksgiving Party with exactly the same patter she used on William, while giving meaningful glances of disappointment in his direction; and Barneys quite believable descent into madness, blaming Leslie for every thing. The ending is surprisingly downbeat for the period it was made and that alone makes the film worth seeing.
The film was later remade as the tv movie Turn Back the Clock (1989) with Connie Sellecca in the Leslie role.
Copyright Richard Scheib 1999-2012
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