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Of Human
Bondage (1934)
In director John Cromwell's pre-Code tale, a fallen-woman
romantic melodrama about an obsessive romance, adapted from the tragic,
classic literary novel by W. Somerset Maugham, with issues such as
promiscuity, adultery, a birth out-of-wedlock, naked drawings, a
mutually-destructive relationship, and retributive death from TB/syphilis
during prostitution:
- in the late 1800s, club-footed, sensitive artist
Philip Carey (Leslie Howard), an Englishman who had been studying
painting in Paris for four years, was advised by his art teacher
Monsieur Flourney (Adrian Rosley) that his artistic work was mediocre
and second-rate, and that he lacked talent and promise: ("There
is no talent here, merely industry and intelligence. You will never
be anything but mediocre"); so Philip returned to London,
England to take up studies to become a medical doctor
- Philip became infatuated with blonde, lower-class,
pale and anemic, coarse, trashy, slatternly and vulgar, Cockney-accented,
pale-faced and illiterate tearoom waitress Mildred Rogers (Bette
Davis); he became preoccupied and smitten with the unfeeling and
shallow female, even though she was disdainful of his club-foot (she
sneered when he walked out of the tearoom) and his obvious interest
in her, although they had nothing in common
- the self-centered, disdainful and vindictive Mildred
made "I don't mind" her standard response to him when he would express
an interest in asking her out; in the first instance of asking
for a date in the tearoom, Philip requested: "I say, will you
dine with me some time? We'll go to the theatre?" - Mildred
responded: "I don't mind"
- although he was attracted to Mildred, she was manipulative,
repugnant, exploitative, callous, two-timing, shrewish and cruel
toward him, for example, she often insulted him and was unpleasant
toward him: "For a gentleman of brains, you don't use 'em!"
- after their first date, he asked for
another date: "May I see you again," and she responded: "I
don't mind" and then coldly and haughtily added: "If you
don't take me out, someone else will," and then promptly dismissed
him when he returned her home, leaving him standing outside on the
sidewalk
- when he met up with her again, he was frustrated and
angered by her "I don't mind" responses, and told her: "Look
here, don't say that any more, will you?"; she refused a good-night
kiss; and she stood him up for another theatre date - she claimed
her Aunt was ill, but her real excuse was that she had accepted a
date from loutish, boisterous, womanizing traveling salesman Emile
Miller (Alan Hale), another tearoom customer; Philip stalked her
that night and realized she had lied to him; when he threatened to
leave her for good, she delivered a nasty insult to the crippled
'hang-dog' Philip: "Good riddance to bad rubbish," for
becoming romantically-interested
in her, and for interfering with the start of
her promiscuous relationship with Emile
- however, he became obsessed and failed to get Mildred
out of his mind; his idyllic daydreams and night-dreams
about her were far from reality (as they danced in his dream, he
glowingly told her: "I've been looking for you all my life");
later, as he studied,
Mildred's image appeared over an illustration in his voluminous medical
school anatomy textbook, and a skeleton in the classroom where he
was taking his mid-year medical examination was transformed into
Mildred; these thoughts caused him to be distracted from his scholastic
studies and he failed his medical exams
Philip's Obsession with Mildred
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Night-Dream: Dancing Together
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Mildred's Image in
Anatomy Textbook
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Classroom Skeleton Transformed into Mildred
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- Philip's older age, sophistication, low self-regard
and self-deprecation, self-consciousness about his club-foot, and
his obsessive introspection made his relationship with Mildred
impossible and doomed from the start; he admitted to her that he
realized she was disdainful of him: "Of
course you don't like me. I'm a cripple"
- however, Philip contemplated marriage with Mildred
and told his school friends about his reasoning: "Because
I'm so in love with her"; he bought a 30 shillings ring and
proposed marriage to Mildred over dinner: ("I want you to
marry me"); she immediately declined his ring, telling him that she would instead
be marrying Emile Miller ("I'm so sorry, Philip...The fact is,
I'm going to be married...(to) A man I know. He earns very good money...I'm
getting on. I'm 24. Time I settled down. This gentleman earns 7 pounds
a week. He's got good prospects. Well, this is goodbye. I hate to
eat and run, Philip, but I have an engagement. I'm going to the theatre
with the gentleman that I'm going to marry")
Rejected Marriage Proposal
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"I want you to marry me"
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"I'm going to be married"
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Devastated and Heartbroken
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- later from afar, in front of the theatre, Philip
watched as she exited to a taxi-cab arm-in-arm with Emile - the love-sick,
tormented and crushed Philip stumbled along, imagining them getting
married (the camera image blurred)
- after the bitter rejection, Philip
forgot all about Mildred when he fell in love with the attractive,
gentle and considerate Norah Nesbit (Kay Johnson), an American romance-story
tabloid writer (working under a masculine pseudonym Courtenay Paget)
who was sympathetic toward him; she slowly cured him of his painful
addiction to Mildred and her abominable treatment of him, by falling
in love with Philip
- just when it seemed that Philip was finding love
and happiness, Mildred suddenly reappeared and returned to him, claiming
that Emile had abandoned her (and not married her because he was
already married), after impregnating her
- the weak-willed Philip
could not resist rescuing Mildred, and helping her to recover from
her failed relationship; he took pity on tearful Mildred's penniless
state and gave her apartment rent money and arranged to take care
of her financially; he completely forgave her when she turned contrite
and sorry for deserting him
- as a result, Philip broke up with Norah due to his "bondage"
- he told her: "I'm sorry. It's just over...You've been wonderful
to me. It's just that I..." - Norah interrupted and described
their imbalanced relationship: "Of course, I knew you never loved
me as much as I loved you," and Philip agreed: "There's usually
one who loves and one who is loved"; he confessed that Mildred
had come back and that he was "bound" to her; both admitted
how bondages existed in the interrelationships between people: (Norah: "After
all she's done, how could you?...It's just as though you were bound
to her in some way...as I am to you. As she was to Miller."
Philip: "As every human being is to something or other")
- after the birth of Mildred's child in the hospital,
she had a cold reaction to her baby, fathered out of wedlock with Emile: "Funny-looking
little thing, isn't it? I can't believe it's mine"; Philip's misguided
intention was to marry Mildred after her child was born, but a
bored and restless Mildred was a disinterested mother after the baby's
birth, and gave up the baby's care to a nurse
- during a dinner party with Mildred and Philip, one of Philip's fellow medical
student friends, Harry Griffiths (Reginald Denny), flirted in an
outrageous fashion with Mildred, causing her to ignore Philip, even
though he was supporting her; after Philip confronted Griffiths for
his behavior: ("Don't take Mildred away from me"),
his friend claimed: "She's nothing to me at all! Nothing at
all!"; however, after also confronting Mildred about her interest
in Griffiths, Mildred admitted that they mutually loved each other,
and she was sexually attracted to Griffiths unlike her 'friend'-type
love for Philip: (Mildred: "Can't help it if I love him, can
I?...It's no use going on about it, Philip. You said yourself that
I couldn't help it if I'm in love with him")
- Philip asserted that he had demonstrated his love
for her by supporting her with an
apartment, money and clothes; when he also implied that she was "cheap" and "vulgar" -
she slapped him, and announced her decision to run off with Griffiths
to Paris. He finally emphatically ordered her out: "Get out! GET OUT!"
- for a second time after Mildred's departure,
Philip again found some comfort in his studies, and with 20 year-old
Sally Athelny (Frances Dee) - the tender-hearted and sweet daughter
of one of his elderly patients Thorpe Athelny (Reginald Owen) in a
charity hospital ("Here I am in a charity hospital, because my father loved fast women and
slow horses"); the good-hearted Athelny family was caring and
affectionate, and warmly accepted Philip into their home
- however, it wasn't long before
Griffiths told Philip that they had broken up: "Mildred and
I are all washed up"; after being abandoned,
Mildred returned penniless, ill, and destitute - and now with her
baby in tow; Philip once again helped her to recover; after she moved
in with Philip (because he couldn't afford a separate apartment
for her) in exchange for housework, Mildred at first was conciliatory
to try and seduce him again: ("You've
always been much nicer to me than I deserved. I'm beginning to realize
how silly I've been") and promised to cook for him and clean: ("Maybe some day you'll...
you'll feel better about me and things will be like they used to
be"), but soon things took a turn for the worse; she became very critical and abusive of
him - and especially toward his "drawings of naked people" on
the mantle, and his coldness to her ("He's not in love with
anybody")
- in the film's most famous sequence, when
she became sexy and flirtatious with him in a low-cut negligee and
draped herself next to him, he pushed her away in disgust: "Please
get up. You're making a fool of yourself and a fool of me...You disgust
me"; she viciously retaliated and berated him, ending her tirade by calling
him a cripple: "Me?! I disgust you? You, you, you're too fine! You'll have none
of me, but you'll sit here all night looking at your naked females...You
cad! You dirty swine! I never cared for you, not once. I was always
makin' a fool of ya. You bored me stiff! I hated ya! It made me sick when
I had to let ya kiss me. I only did it because ya begged me. Ya hounded
me and drove me crazy! And after you kissed me, I always used to
wipe my mouth! WIPE MY MOUTH! I made up for it. For every kiss, I
had a laugh. We laughed at ya, Miller and me, and Griffiths and me,
we laughed at ya! Because you were such a mug, a mug, a mug! You
know what you are? You gimpy-legged monster? You're a cripple! A
cripple! A cripple!"
The Most Famous Sequence
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"Just let me stay here. Phil..."
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"Phil, I love you so...I can't live without ya"
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"Please get up. You're making a fool of yourself and a fool of me"
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"You disgust me"
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"Me? I disgust you?"
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"I always used to wipe my mouth! WIPE MY MOUTH!"
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- the next day after Philip departed, she spitefully
wrecked his apartment (with his nude drawings and books) and burned
the securities/bonds he was given by his Uncle William Carey to
finance his medical college tuition expenses, before leaving with
her baby
- without the bonds, Philip became destitute and was
forced to quit medical school and vacate his apartment; before leaving
the school, Philip was fortuitously offered a foot operation to rid
himself of his deformity
- although he sought employment, he couldn't find work
and became mentally depressed; Sally's father offered him room in
the Athelny home ("You're to stay until you get your bearings"); he accepted a job for
Sally's father as a department store's shopping window designer (or
dresser)
- in the film's ending, Mildred
had again located Philip; she was sick, distraught, unwell, ill (with
a deep cough) and destitute (with black circles under her eyes);
presumably, she was living as a streetwalker and living in a dingy
brothel, working as a cheap prostitute, although she was portrayed
as suffering from tuberculosis (it had been changed from neurosyphilis
or locomotor ataxia to satisfy the demands of the Hays Code); she
asked: "It's not...me lungs, is it?" Mildred's baby had died the previous
summer; he gave her some money and a medical prescription, but denied
her any other assistance, and left
- finally freed from Mildred, Philip passed his exams
and finished medical school (after receiving an unexpected inheritance
from his deceased uncle), and was hired to be a ship's physician
on a cruise boat sailing for Sydney, Australia; Philip had a choice
- should he remain in London and make plans to marry Sally who was
in love with him, or accept the cruise job and sail away?
- in the film's last few moments, Mildred was found
close to death (the attending medical personnel commented: "Well,
this is what you might call the irony of fate"), and she was
taken to a hospital charity ward, where Philip soon learned of her
death (from TB or syphilis?)
- he was liberated and freed at last from his
obsessive bondage, and decided to remain in England and propose marriage
to Sally right away: ("I had to be free to realize that. I had
to be free to understand that all those years I dreamed of escape
was because I was limping through life...That's all over. I'm not
limping any more. My life's all right....everything that's beautiful
to me is right here. Won't you please marry me, Sally?")
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A Future with Sally!
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Aspiring Painter Philip Carey (Leslie Howard) in Paris
- and Studying to be a Medical Doctor
English Tearoom Waitress Mildred Rogers (Bette Davis)
Mildred's Standard Response: "I don't mind"
After First Date:
"If you don't take me out, someone else will"
Emile: "We are both interested in the same
thing" (Mildred)
Philip's First Breakup with Mildred: She Was Engaged
to Marry Emile Miller
Philip's New Relationship with Norah (Kay Johnson)
Mildred's First Return: Unmarried, Abandoned and
Pregnant
Philip's Breakup with Norah
Mildred's Disinterested Reaction to Her Out-of-Wedlock
Baby
Griffiths' First Flirtations with Mildred
2nd Breakup: Mildred Admitted Her Interest in Griffiths
- Philip Called Her
"Cheap" and "Vulgar"
Philip's 2nd New Relationship with Sally Athelny
(Frances Dee)
Mildred's Return: Again
Spiteful About His "Naked Drawings"
With Hate, Mildred Wrecked Philip's Apartment (Ripping
Up Drawings, etc.)
Mildred: Suffering and Dying
Last View of Mildred Close to Death
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