Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1941)
Directed by Victor Fleming

Drama / Horror / Sci-Fi

Film Review

Abstract picture representing Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1941)
MGM's expensive remake of the 1931 classic Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (which featured an impressive Fredric March in a career-defining role) is a generally uninspired affair that is only just salvaged by Spencer Tracy's bravura performance and some atmospheric camerawork.  The film adheres a little too slavishly to the screenplay of Paramount's 1931 version and lacks the inspired touch that director Rouben Mamoulian brought to that film.  There are one or two touches of brilliance, such as the expressionistic transformation dream sequences (one of which includes the darkly Freudian image of Ingrid Bergman as the cork of a champagne bottle), but otherwise Victor Fleming's direction is lacklustre and complacent to a fault.  Fleming's experience of working on the incredibly challenging The Wizard of Oz (1939) may have been the cause of this creative block.

The one notable sin which the film's producers made on this adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's famous story was the obvious miscasting of the two lead female roles.  The film would have worked better if Lana Turner had been given the part of Ivy; Bergman patently lacks the earthy touch needed to make her portrayal convincing (besides, who ever heard of a cockney with a Swedish accent?).  One of the biggest (and bravest) departures from the 1931 film is the minimalist make-up for Mr Hyde.  In contrast to Fredric March's Neanderthal-like Hyde, Tracy plays Jekyll's evil alter ego just as intensely and chillingly with comparatively little make-up.  Tracy's portrayal of Hyde is fascinating to watch and is the main reason for seeing this film, although, at the time, the actor loathed his performance and described it as the worst of his career.
© James Travers 2010
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Film Synopsis

Dr Henry Jekyll is a highly respected Harley Street practitioner but he risks jeopardising his reputation with his unorthodox scientific opinions.  At a society dinner party, he creates offence by suggesting that man would be better if the two sides of his nature, the good and the evil, could be separated.  Sir Charles Emery, the father of Jekyll's fiancée Beatrix, begins to wonder if Dr Jekyll is a suitable son-in-law and contrives to delay the marriage by taking his daughter on a tour of Europe.  With his love life put on hold for several months, Jekyll resumes his experiments and ultimately succeeds in creating a potion that can free his darker inner self.  Unfortunately, in doing so, Jekyll unleashes a cruel and sadistic monster...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.


Film Credits

  • Director: Victor Fleming
  • Script: John Lee Mahin, Robert Louis Stevenson (novel), Percy Heath, Samuel Hoffenstein
  • Cinematographer: Joseph Ruttenberg
  • Music: Franz Waxman
  • Cast: Spencer Tracy (Dr. Henry Jekyll), Ingrid Bergman (Ivy Peterson), Lana Turner (Beatrix Emery), Donald Crisp (Sir Charles Emery), Ian Hunter (Dr. John Lanyon), Barton MacLane (Sam Higgins), C. Aubrey Smith (Bishop Manners), Peter Godfrey (Poole, Jekyll's Butler), Sara Allgood (Mrs. Higgins), Frederick Worlock (Dr. Heath), William Tannen (Intern Fenwick), Frances Robinson (Marcia), Denis Green (Freddie), Billy Bevan (Mr. Weller), Forrester Harvey (Old Prouty), Lumsden Hare (Colonel Weymouth), Lawrence Grant (Dr. Courtland), John Barclay (Constable at Church), Rudolph Andrean (Art Student), Jimmy Aubrey (Hanger-On)
  • Country: USA
  • Language: English
  • Support: Black and White
  • Runtime: 113 min

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