Two years after the war, and what does this movie do? Attack war widows! Or, at least, one of them, in the person of Rosalind Russell, who is angry and bitter that her husband sacrificed himself to save his five comrades. She has now worked herself up to visit the five men, wanting to see, she says resentfully, if they were worth her husband's life (all the men, unbelievably but conveniently, live in the same town and still know one another). But Russell's quest turns out very differently than she, or the audience, could have thought: Instead of feeding her sense of having been cheated of life, the visits show her that she cheated her husband, and herself, of a good marriage. Her intense, extended mourning has been a way of hiding the truth from herself.
Such a harsh and penetrating analysis of character would have been unusual at any time in the movies' history. Coming out in the wake of World War II, it must have been seen as literally attacking American motherhood, if not apple pie. One would love to know how Lenore Coffee came up with the idea--might she have been exasperated by a whining, hypocritical widow or gold-star mother in her family? It is astonishing that a film so destructive of American pieties was made, so all honour to those responsible.
The movie also has an oddly theatrical slant--Janet's visits are conducted in a mildly expressionist manner. There is a bar and a nightclub in which nobody moves or speaks but the main characters; an outdoor scene that takes place before a painted backdrop. But the oddness is never so great as to become quaint, and it embodies and intensifies the emotional dislocation that the widow is experiencing. A further strangeness is that nearly everyone in the movie is cynical. True, Melvyn Douglas is a newspaperman, so it's not unexpected in that milieu--but a cynical child? a cynical hospital? This is a movie that is bleakly realistic (another word for cynical) every way you look.
The two leads, especially the underrated Douglas, act with great conviction and style. It is a shame that this movie is not better known--honesty like this is rare anywhere; in the movies it has to be seen to be believed.