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Hobson's Choice - Criterion Collection Reviews
July 12, 2009 at 6:43 am
Pros: grand direction; expert star performances
Cons: nothing to speak of
Cons: nothing to speak of
Blustering boot shop owner Henry Hobson (Charles Laughton) depends on his three daughters to run his business, cook his meals, and keep the house in order. The daughters are all of marriageable age, but it’s the eldest Maggie (Brenda De Banzie) who’s the mastermind of both the business and the household. Though pegged by her father as an old maid (she’s thirty and has no prospects), Maggie sets about to mold a man to her specifications and chooses Hobson’s boot smith Will Mossop (John Mills). Outraged by her selecting a man below her station, Henry banishes her from the shop and the home, but that’s all right with Maggie. With her new husband Will, she intends to beat her father at his own game, and in the process, transforms her unassuming cipher of a husband into a confident, wily businessman.
Where to start in describing this wonderfully intelligent and wholly captivating comedy-drama? Lean begins with a remarkable, slow investigation around the boot shop premises before we finally stumble into its drunken proprietor. But throughout the running time of the film, Lean’s camera investigates rooms and parks and streets with that striking eye for detail that he would bring to his later epics which always gave them that enigmatic quality of intimacy despite being painted on a large canvas. Here, within a smaller frame of reference, we’re thrust directly into the midst of the battles: Maggie against her father, Maggie convincing Will that she’s the best thing for him, Maggie arranging her sisters’ happiness while they sit inertly clueless. Yes, Maggie is the true focus of the picture, and Lean makes sure that the character holds her ground through clever framing of her when she’s dealing with others. He also stages some remarkable set pieces that are unforgettable. Especially noteworthy is Hobson’s drunken walk home after a night of celebrating at the local pub Moonrakers, following the moon in a series of puddles in the street and then performing a balletic pratfall down a loading chute. There’s another breathtaking moment when handbills for Will’s new boot shop go blowing through the city streets like a blizzard raining down on poor, defeated Hobson.
Charles Laughton gives an entertainingly broad music hall performance as the boisterous but bluffing Hobson, fighting the encroachment of his male domain by his determined daughter with all the forces at his disposal. Though he disliked her intensely, he plays particularly well with Brenda De Banzie as Maggie, their off-screen animosity serving them well in the film as she continually thrusts and parries with him. John Mills makes a triumphant transformation from the unassuming simple obedient worker to a man of pluck and promise that is a career high point for him. Helen Haye as the imperious dowager Mrs. Hepworth who finances the Mossops to a place of power and notoriety makes a very favorable impression in her two scenes.
Video Quality
Audio Quality
Special Features
A 1978 documentary on Charles Laughton produced by the BBC is the other primary bonus feature in the set. Forthright about the actor’s infamous insecurities, his homosexuality, and his legendary career on stage and screen, the biography features many interviews with people who knew Laughton best including wife Elsa Lanchester, friend Christopher Isherwood, actors Shelley Winters and Lillian Gish, and director Billy Wilder and features quite a few film clips from some of his famous movies. The feature runs 44 minutes and is in 4:3.
The film’s theatrical trailer (in rough shape) is interestingly framed at 1.78:1 (presented nonanamorphically) and runs 2 minutes.
The enclosed 16-page booklet contains some wonderful stills from the movie and a lengthy analysis of the movie by film critic Armond White.
In Conclusion
Matt Hough
Charlotte, NC
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