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Of Human Bondage 1934 123movies

Of Human Bondage 1934 123movies

The Love That Lifted a Man to Paradise......and Hurled Him Back to Earth AgainJul. 20, 193483 Min.
Your rating: 0
8 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Of Human Bondage 1934 123movies, Full Movie Online – Abandoning artistic ambitions, sensitive and club-footed Philip Carey enrolls in medical school and falls in love with a waitress Mildred Rogers. She rejects him, runs off with a salesman and returns unmarried and pregnant. Philip gets her an apartment and they become engaged. Mildred runs off with another medical student. Philip takes her back again when she returns with her baby. She wrecks his apartment and burns the securities he needs to pay tuition. He gets a job as a salesman, has surgery on his foot, receives an inheritance, and returns to school where he learns Mildred is dying..
Plot: A young man finds himself attracted to a cold and unfeeling waitress who may ultimately destroy them both.
Smart Tags: #based_on_novel #obsession #skeleton #limping_man #love_triangle #stalking #wipe_editing_technique #painting #cigarette_smoking #pipe_smoking #destroying_property #montage #pince_nez #opening_someone_else’s_mail #reference_to_tahiti #calendar_shows_passage_of_time #foot_surgery #seeking_a_job #death_of_uncle #uncle_nephew_relationship #marriage_proposal


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Ratings:

7.0/10 Votes: 7,553
86% | RottenTomatoes
N/A | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 90 Popularity: 6.577 | TMDB

Reviews:


I can tell when I am engaged with a film if I want to get off the chair and strangle one of the cast… Well Leslie Howard engenders exactly that feeling as he plays the hapless, lovestruck “Philip” who has fallen in love with the nasty, scheming “Mildred” – Bette Davis (with a rather dodgy English agent). The chemistry between the two of them is great. She treats him appallingly, yet like a doting puppy he comes back for more each time. John Cromwell keeps this going deftly; we see the characterisations from W. Somerset Maugham’s novel unfold before us and I felt genuinely invested.
Review By: CinemaSerf

Early on in Of Human Bondage Philip Carey (Leslie Howard) is told “You will never be anything but mediocre.” Soon after, Mildred Rogers is described as “anemic … ill-natured and contemptible.” Neither will ever do anything to disprove these assessments. Carey especially will never be able to overcome his weakness; he was literally born with a clubfoot, but his real problem is that he never develops a figurative spine. We leave the film convinced that, had Mildred not died, Carey would have kept taking her back in at the expense of far worthier women – worthier than Mildred, yes, but worthier than him as well.

Now, as mediocre and contemptible as Carey and Mildred are – and they take mediocrity and contempt to heights, or rather lows, that arguably have yet to be matched almost a century later –, there is a sort of astronomical fascination in watching them follow their preordained trajectories; they’re like heavenly bodies fixed in their orbits, she a star going supernova and he a barren planet becoming engulfed in the ensuing blast.

Bondage is a mixed bag to say the least for Howard, even if Philip Carey isn’t – though not by much either – the most thankless role in his career; five years later he would go on to play the equally insipid Ashley Wilkes in Gone with the Wind, opposite two other legends in the same league as Davis.

I will say a couple of things for the Carey character, though; number one, he’s fun to watch, not because of what Howard does with it (which is, wisely as it turns out, next to nothing), but because of what goes on in his febrile mind – i.e., his obsession with Mildred, whom he sees everywhere when awake and dreams about when asleep, and which the film manifests through some very neat optical effects (my favorite is a classroom skeleton that takes on Mildred’s likeness, in what may be construed as a bit of reverse foreshadowing). And number two, Howard’s pale shadow of a man makes Davis look even better than she already does – which is a lot –, not that she really needs the help.

Beautiful though she was, Davis always had a gift for the grotesque (which reached its zenith in What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?), and with Mildred she has no trouble conveying, through her faux ingénue façade, the character’s inner moral corruption and physical decay; of particular note is her climactic The Reason You Suck Speech to Carey (and even then it’s hard to sympathize with him, since most if not all the s— that she calls him on is pretty much true).

Review By: JPRetana
Contempt
Of the three remakes on W. Somerset Maughan’s novel, this one is the best one, and not particularly because what John Cromwell brought to the film. The film is worth a look because of the break through performance by Bette Davis, who as Mildred Rogers, showed the film industry she was a star. Finally, her struggles with Jack Warner and his studio paid off royally.

The film is dominated by Mildred from the start. We realize from the beginning that Mildred doesn’t care for Philip and never will. She doesn’t hide her contempt for this kind soul that has fallen in love with the wrong woman. He will be humiliated by Mildred again, and again, as she makes no bones about what she really is.

Poor Philip Carey, besides of being handicap, is a man who is weak. When he tries to cling onto Mildred, she rejects him. It is when Mildred returns to him, when she is frail and defeated, that he rises to the occasion, overcoming his own dependency on this terrible woman who has stolen his will and his manhood.

Bette Davis gives a fantastic portrayal of Mildred. This was one of her best roles and she ran away with it. Her disgust toward the kind Philip is clear from the onset of their relationship. When she tells him she washes her mouth after he kisses her is one of the most powerful moment in the movie. Leslie Howard underplayed Philip and makes him appear even weaker than he is. Frances Dee, Reginald Denny, Alan Hale and Reginald Owen, are seen in minor roles.

This is Bette Davis show, and don’t you forget it!

Review By: jotix100

Other Information:

Original Title Of Human Bondage
Release Date 1934-07-20
Release Year 1934

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 23 min (83 min), 1 hr 18 min (78 min) (Italy)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Passed
Genre Drama, Romance
Director John Cromwell
Writer Lester Cohen, W. Somerset Maugham, Ann Coleman
Actors Bette Davis, Leslie Howard, Frances Dee
Country United States
Awards Nominated for 1 Oscar. 1 win & 1 nomination total
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Mono (R C A Victor System)
Aspect Ratio 1.37 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length 2,116 m (Italy), 2,136.35 m (UK), 2,273.5 m (9 reels)
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm

Of Human Bondage 1934 123movies
Of Human Bondage 1934 123movies
Original title Of Human Bondage
TMDb Rating 6.556 90 votes

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