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  • THE SEVENTH SIN is a remake of the Greta Garbo vehicle, "The Painted Veil", taken from a Somerset Maugham novel about a woman's journey to redeem herself. This time the unhappily married woman is ELEANOR PARKER and the husband is played by BILL TRAVERS (rather than the jilted dullard Herbert Marshall played in the Garbo version). Obviously designed to satisfy movie-goers who loved romantic stories of this sort, it manages to hold interest without ever becoming a great film.

    Parker is poised and beautiful throughout, giving a very understated performance as a woman caught in the throes of what she believes is a great romance with JEAN-PIERRE AUMONT, who disappoints her when he refuses to divorce his wife. She flees to China with her doctor husband who is going to administer to those caught in a plague of cholera, eventually realizing that her selfish nature is capable of undergoing a change and working at a convent for orphaned Chinese children.

    The plot resolution is a bit disappointing for anyone expecting a happy ending, but it's all tastefully handled material performed admirably by Parker and Travers. GEORGE SANDERS, as a brandy guzzling friend with some acid comments (in the Sanders manner), gives the story a lift with his wit and cynical charm.

    Not bad as these sort of melodramas go, but nothing really special.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is a movie that would seem to have everything going for it -- great cast, great story, great score, great photography! But the film is actually not all that gripping or entertaining. So I asked Vincente Minnelli what went wrong. "I didn't direct the whole film. Ronald Neame did that." So I asked Minnelli how he happened to become involved. I assumed that Neame delivered a final cut to MGM but that the studio was not happy with it, so they asked Minnelli to liven it up. Minnelli didn't answer my question directly but what he said was this: "I did quite a lot of work near the beginning, and also a lot of work towards the end. I also directed all Francoise Rosay's scenes. But really there were little bits all over the place that I directed, like odd establishing shots, inserted close-ups and so on." As the film was photographed in CinemaScope, Minnelli and his cameraman were very meticulous in staging the action and the players to take full advantage of the wide screen.
  • "The Seventh Sin" from 1957 stars Eleanor Parker, Bill Travers, George Sanders, Jean-Pierre Aumont, and Francoise Rosay.

    Parker plays Carolyn Carwin, living in postwar Hong Kong with her husband, Dr. Walter Corwin (Travers) but is having an affair with Paul (Aumont). She never really loved her husband - she used him to get away from her family - but he has always loved her. For reasons known only to herself, she finds him physically repulsive. Bill Travers? That was the first dumb thing.

    Walter is going into a remote village to fight the cholera epidemic. He gives Carolyn a choice - she can accompany him or he will cause a huge scandal in the divorce. Then he suggests a third option - if Paul will divorce his wife and marry her immediately, he won't give her any trouble. He knows full well that Paul won't divorce his wife and is proved correct. The two leave for the village.

    Once there, they meet Tim Waddington (Sanders) who picks up on their marital problems. Gradually Carolyn becomes aware of her husband's dedication to his work and her own selfishness and narcissism.

    Previous versions of The Painted Veil take place in an earlier time, and the trip to the village is harrowing. It becomes obvious that Walter hopes his wife dies, or he doesn't care, and he certainly doesn't care if she contracts cholera when they arrive. Post- WWII, they don't have a bad time of it travel-wise.

    Parker is beautiful as the imperious Carolyn, who finds the village a growing experience, and Sanders cast against type is a real bright spot, giving a wonderful performance. There are nice scenes between Carolyn and the nun at the orphanage (Rosay) who understands Carolyn better than she thinks. Travers is sympathetic as the hard-working doctor who only wanted to love his wife and have her love him.

    The Maugham story of The Painted Veil is a strong one, but it's hard for this version to compete with either version, the 1934 with Greta Garbo or the 2006 with its brilliant cinematography. Though it's not as good, it is still absorbing. I haven't read the story, so I'm not sure what the original ending is - all three versions have different endings.
  • Originally, I had no intention of watching this film on TCM, but the presence of Bill Travers got my attention, and I gave the movie a shot.

    Frankly, I am surprised at how much I enjoyed it. All of the leading performances are excellent, and the back lot filming appropriately evokes the implied locations. Sanders is, indeed, the most thoroughly explored character, supporting or not. Travers portrays the brooding husband quite effectively, and Parker has perfected the role of a selfish woman in many films.

    Having not read the original novel, I cannot comment on the translation to the screen. However, as a stand-alone film, the results are intriguing, and well done. "The Painted Veil" certainly makes a better title, however.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Nothing like adversity to show people caught up in a bad marriage about piety in this world.

    This is exactly what occurs in this film with Bill Travers, a physician and bacteriologist married to the selfish Eleanor Parker, the latter caught up in an affair with Jean Pierre Aumont. Aumont might better have been suited for the Travers part in the movie.

    As part of an unusual bargain so as to avoid scandal,Travers has parter accompany him to a cholera infested area in Hong Kong. It is there that the selfish Parker learns humility as well as her own self-identity.

    As the mother superior, Francoise Rosay was terrific here. Watching her on the screen made me think of the role that Peggy Wood had as the mother superior in "The Sound of Music."

    Even George Sanders is greatly toned down here. As a gossipy person with snide remarks, Sanders showed remarkable humility at film's end.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Fans of Greta Garbo, the exotic and mysterious actress who captivated the world in a somewhat brief film career, will probably be agape to find one of her films ("The Painted Veil") remade and starring Parker, who couldn't be more opposite a persona than Garbo. However, this film, on it's own terms, does justice to the story and pays tribute to the skill of Parker, a different but very talented actress in her own right. She plays a woman in Hong Kong married to a chemist, but who enjoys an affair with another married man (Aumont.) When the husband (Travers) discovers the affair, he coerces Parker to join him in fighting a cholera epidemic in a far off village. She very reluctantly accompanies him and is bored out of her skull except for the visits of a local cad (Sanders) who seems to understand her predicament. Eventually, her eyes are opened to the squalor and pain around her and she begins to find redemption in helping others, though it may be too late to save her own marriage. Parker is exquisitely beautiful and poised in the film. The script has a tendency towards the pat and trite, but she rises above it, giving a solid, multifaceted performance. Travers is rather one-note and somnambulistic throughout and is never really given an opportunity to gain any audience affection. Parker works overtime to creates some sparks between them, but, only once ina while, does he rise to the occasion. One flaw of the film is its lack of a scene that really demonstrates that these characters have a chance at reconciliation or understanding. Sanders is always terrific and has many snarky, textured moments here. He and Parker work well together. Aumont is slick, but a little slight and mealy-mouthed to convince viewers that he has what it takes to satisfy Parker. Rosay has a nice role as a straight-talking nun and Corby has an amusing part as a kind and easily-tickled fellow sister. The production is well-appointed (despite some rather obvious backdrops and studio sets) and features a decent score by Miklos Rozsa. The original film varied from the book and this one tries to correct that somewhat, though any Hollywood interpretation is likely to stray from the source novel to some degree. This story actually has some parallels to the one in Parker's "The Naked Jungle", but she was better served there by a stronger leading man and the benefit of gorgeous color photography. Still, this is a fairly compelling film that, once started, is pretty hard to turn off.
  • Somerset Maugham's taste for exotic locales is used to good purpose in this story of how a doctor's wife "finds" herself after an extramarital affair. I happened to catch this film half-way through (missed Parker's affair with Aumont), however, the Chinese locale and the level of acting kept me watching until the end, especially as I had just seen John Ford's "Seven Women" recently on the TCM channel. The question is, why did Ford's movie fail (for me), and this one succeed? Both were shepherded by distinguished directors, and the casting in both is impressive --so should we fault the script? In fact, one might say that the Neame & Minnelli team elicted better performances than did Ford in his China setting. Despite the impressive cast and Bancroft's intensity, everything about Ford's film seemed "wrong," and the setting in China was totally incidental to the struggle between the two leading ladies. In "Seventh Sin," however, Parker's struggle seemed very real, despite her cool demeanor (what would Deborah Kerr have done with this role?), and her inter-action, and later friendship with the Mother Superior appears honestly won.

    Unlike another reviewer, I did not think that Bill Travers' performance was wooden. His reticent honesty works well here. It is a decided contrast to the stagy performance he gave with Jenifer Jones in "Barretts of Wimpole Street," where he seemed to shout through his role (this movie failed for me on other counts, too). In "Seventh Sin," the casting of George Sanders as the sympathetic local who marries a Chinese works quite well as a foil to the bluff but kind Travers, and for once, Sanders acts against type and gives a commendable, unmannered performance. In fact he is quite likable and also mastered some Chinese for the role. His Chinese wife is not credited, but I found her acting to be stiff and lacking in warmth or charm; her accent and the year 1957 when the movie was filmed made it likely that she was had spent at least a decade in Taiwan, rather than being born in the "imperial" family that Sanders claims and escaping to Hongkong.

    As for the Chinese/Hong Kong setting, one wonders whether it could have been interchangeable with Algeria, or Africa. Was it incidental to the plot, as one could argue with "Seven Women"? No, I don't think so.

    A character like the one Parker portrays had to discover her inner resources in a foreign country, and among persons who were less than amenable to her -- the Chinese, whose language she didn't understand, and the sisters of the convent -- definitely an essential feature of the Maugham original. Francoise Rosay is particularly convincing as the Mother Superior; this is a role that cuts to the heart of the character (unlike Margaret Leighton's role vis a vis Anne Bancroft's in "Seven Women"). The Mother Superior is not a one-dimensional person, but someone who has lived and who ultimately is the one who understands Travers' final words. She is able to interpret them correctly for the Parker, thereby absolving the guilty wife of her personal anguish. This is a very moving way to end the story, and contrasts with the heroic but blatant staging of Bancroft's suicide in "Seven Women." These parallels may not seem obvious to others, but they kept cropping up for me as I watched it.

    I think for those who are interested in how China/Hong Kong is presented in Western film (compare for example, with "Love is a Many Splendored Thing" or "Sand Pebbles"), and for the rendering of stories by literary authors such as Maugham, "Seventh Sin" carries a sincerity of tone which makes it notable. Also, anything directed by Ronald Neame ("Blithe Spririt," "Major Barbara," "This Happy Breed" and other distinguished films), not to mention Vincenti Minnelli, makes it is definitely worth a look.
  • I love Somerset Maugham's novels, but they tend to be full of internal monologues and emotional and spiritual struggles that can be difficult to dramatize (his short stories make much better material for movies). THE PAINTED VEIL is a terrific book and a good read, veering from sexual melodrama to spiritual regeneration, full of psychological insight, tension and vivid descriptions of life in China during a cholera epidemic.

    But this movie is just dreadful. It's dull, literal-minded and a travesty of a great story and promising concept. The credibility problems start (but don't end) with the fact that handsome Bill Travers was miscast as the cuckold. Tall and masculine with sensual features, a brooding sexiness, and a resonant, beautiful voice, it's absurd that we are expected to believe he is unappealing to Eleanor Parker. How can she not want to grab him and ride him ten ways from Sunday? I have often liked beautiful Eleanor Parker, but her archness here is hard to take and not what the part needs. The only bright spot is George Sanders, cast against type as a warm, sympathetic guy.

    One thing I'm curious about is why Vincente Minnelli abandoned the project (his name appears nowhere in the final credits). Had he directed it (preferably in Technicolor) it might at least have been more enjoyable. Skip this dreary soap opera. Or if you see it and actually like it, read Somerset Maugham's novel, which is far better and certainly more entertaining.