IMDb RATING
7.2/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
A woman meets a man whose love she rejected years ago.A woman meets a man whose love she rejected years ago.A woman meets a man whose love she rejected years ago.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Hélène Burls
- Flowerwoman
- (uncredited)
Amy Dalby
- Lady on Underground
- (uncredited)
Lisa Daniely
- Cinema Usherette
- (uncredited)
Max Earle
- Third Man - Albert Hall
- (uncredited)
Edward Evans
- Underground ticket officer
- (uncredited)
Arthur Howard
- Smith - Butler
- (uncredited)
John Huson
- First Man - Albert Hall
- (uncredited)
Wilfrid Hyde-White
- Lawyer
- (uncredited)
Charles Lloyd Pack
- Man Drinking with Stratton
- (uncredited)
Guido Lorraine
- Hotel Manager
- (uncredited)
Ina Pelly
- Second Woman - Albert Hall
- (uncredited)
Helen Piers
- First Woman - Albert Hall
- (uncredited)
Marcel Poncin
- Hall Porter
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie is based on the 1913 novel "The Passionate Friends" by H. G. Wells, who also wrote "The Invisible Man", which was made into a 1933 hit movie starring Claude Rains, one of the stars in this movie.
- GoofsWhen Steven barges into Howard's office, he is shown starting to close the door, followed by the sound of a door closing. However, in the subsequent shot, the door is open again.
- Quotes
Mary Justin: I'm not a very good person, Steven. I wanted your love - and I wanted Howard's affection and the security he could give me.
Professor Steven Stratton: I can give you security too, and more than affection.
Mary Justin: You don't really know me at all. My love isn't worth very much.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Phantom Thread (2017)
Featured review
For The Passionate Friends David Lean treads similar ground as he does in his masterpiece, Brief Encounter, although here the source material is an HG Wells story as opposed to a Noel Coward play.
The post-war Lean, with his attention to psychology and emotions, handled these stories of problematic romance brilliantly, and The Passionate Friends is a great example. We open with clouds and snow-capped mountains, a holiday location that foreshadows Lean's Summertime (1955), straight away giving us a sense of dreaminess and soaring emotions.
This is Lean at his most psychological and expressionist. The sound and imagery is always calculated to mirror feelings – like the abruptness of the plane wheel touching the ground when Claude Rains returns from his trip abroad. The acting really supports this too. Considering it's a story about a love triangle, a large amount of the story is told through scenes in which one of the three principal characters is alone, or at least unobserved, and the actors convey inner thoughts through subtle expressions and gestures.
Also, like the bulk of Lean's pictures from this era there are references to the war and the impact it had on British society. It's probably no coincidence that the decision was made to set the flashbacks of the affair in 1939 (Wells' original story was decades older), the year that war broke out. The cold, bureaucratic Claude Rains seems to be in part symbolic of the necessity in wartime to be rational and emotionless, and the story is an allegory for the need to break away from that.
While it is a good story and very well-made, The Passionate Friends is unfortunately no Brief Encounter. On the acting side, Claude Rains is brilliant as always, but I'm less convinced by Ann Todd, who perhaps got the part more because she was Mrs Lean that for her talent. The plot can be a bit confusing with its flashbacks within flashbacks. Probably the biggest problem though is that we never get to totally empathise with the characters. While Brief Encounter's sheer ordinariness made it so universal, you don't get this to the same degree here, and that makes it by far the weaker of the two pictures. Still, it's by no means a disaster, and still one of the better films of David Lean's 1940s output.
The post-war Lean, with his attention to psychology and emotions, handled these stories of problematic romance brilliantly, and The Passionate Friends is a great example. We open with clouds and snow-capped mountains, a holiday location that foreshadows Lean's Summertime (1955), straight away giving us a sense of dreaminess and soaring emotions.
This is Lean at his most psychological and expressionist. The sound and imagery is always calculated to mirror feelings – like the abruptness of the plane wheel touching the ground when Claude Rains returns from his trip abroad. The acting really supports this too. Considering it's a story about a love triangle, a large amount of the story is told through scenes in which one of the three principal characters is alone, or at least unobserved, and the actors convey inner thoughts through subtle expressions and gestures.
Also, like the bulk of Lean's pictures from this era there are references to the war and the impact it had on British society. It's probably no coincidence that the decision was made to set the flashbacks of the affair in 1939 (Wells' original story was decades older), the year that war broke out. The cold, bureaucratic Claude Rains seems to be in part symbolic of the necessity in wartime to be rational and emotionless, and the story is an allegory for the need to break away from that.
While it is a good story and very well-made, The Passionate Friends is unfortunately no Brief Encounter. On the acting side, Claude Rains is brilliant as always, but I'm less convinced by Ann Todd, who perhaps got the part more because she was Mrs Lean that for her talent. The plot can be a bit confusing with its flashbacks within flashbacks. Probably the biggest problem though is that we never get to totally empathise with the characters. While Brief Encounter's sheer ordinariness made it so universal, you don't get this to the same degree here, and that makes it by far the weaker of the two pictures. Still, it's by no means a disaster, and still one of the better films of David Lean's 1940s output.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- One Woman's Story
- Filming locations
- Le Brévent, Chamonix, Haute-Savoie, France(cable car outing at Brévent in front of Pic du Midi)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $40,335
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Passionate Friends (1949) officially released in India in English?
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