Escape Me Never (1947 film)
6.2 /10 1 Votes
Country United States | 6/10 IMDb Genre Drama Duration Language English | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Director Peter GodfreyLeRoy Prinz Release date November 7, 1947 Based on play by Margaret Kennedybased on her novel The Fool of the Family Screenplay Lenore Coffee, Thames Williamson Cast (Sebastian Dubrok), (Gemma Smith), (Fenella MacLean), (Caryl Dubrok), (Mr. MacLean), (Mrs. MacLean) Similar movies Youth , Helicopter String Quartet , House of Ricordi , Famous Composers: Joseph Haydn , Eventyret om den vidunderlige musik , Otto Klemperer's Long Journey Through His Times |
primavera ballet scene from escape me never 1947
Escape Me Never is a 1947 American melodrama film directed by Peter Godfrey and starring Errol Flynn, Ida Lupino, Eleanor Parker, and Gig Young. It is an adaptation of the play Escape Me Never by Margaret Kennedy which had previously been made into a film of the same name in 1935.
Contents
- primavera ballet scene from escape me never 1947
- Escape me never preview clip
- Plot
- Cast
- Production
- Box Office
- Critical
- References

It was the final Warner Brothers film with a musical score by Erich Wolfgang Korngold to be released, but Korngold later adapted the music of Richard Wagner for Republic Pictures' 1954 production Magic Fire and wrote some original music for the film as well.

Escape me never preview clip
Plot

The story takes place in Venice at the turn of the 20th century. A young composer by the name of Caryl Dubrok (Gig Young) has a love affair with wealthy English heiress, Fenella MacLean (Eleanor Parker), until her parents by mistake start believing that Caryl is living with young widow Gemma Smith (Ida Lupino) and her infant baby.
The MacLean family leaves Venice in a hurry and takes refuge at a safe distance up in the Dolomite mountains. It turns out that Gemma is really living with Caryls big brother Sebastian (Errol Flynn), who showed pity of the young lonely mother and let her stay with him. Sebastian is set on helping his brother explain the misunderstanding to the MacLeans.

Caryl and Sebastian bring Gemma and her baby along on the trip into the mountains. They survive by singing in the streets for money, since both Caryl and Sebastian are aspiring composers and musicians.

When Caryl hurts his foot one day, Gemma and Sebastian sing alone in the street, and encounter a very beautiful woman whom Sebastian instantly falls for. He is unaware that it is Fenella he has met in the street, and starts pursuing her while Gemma goes back to Caryl.
With the inspiration Sebastian gets from Fenella's alluring beauty, he composes a music piece as the beginning of a ballet that same night. In the morning Gemma finds out that it was Fenella they met the night before. To avoid further misunderstandings, Gemma and Sebastian leave, marry and move to London. Sebastian continues working on the ballet he started in the mountains.
A while later the MacLean family move back to London and Caryl follows them, taking a job as music agent. Caryl and Fenella are soon engaged to be married, but as soon as Sebastian is finished composing his ballet, Fenella arranges for him to perform his piece in London.
When the ballet is a success, Sebastian and Fenella are again acquainted. Sebastian is so busy with rehearsing and perfecting his ballet that he neglects to take Gemma to the hospital when her baby is sick. Fenella gets caught up in her relationship with the young Sebastian and breaks off her engagement to Caryl.
Fenella and Sebastian spend a weekend at the MacLean's country estate and become smitten by each other. While they are away, Gemma's baby dies from its illness and the devastated Gemma vanishes. After the weekend, when Sebastian comes back to London and finds his wife has disappeared, he is ridden by guilt, realizing how much she meant to him.
Sebastian starts reworking the ballet, inspired by his love for Gemma, and when it is finished and has its first performance, Gemma comes back to watch it and reunite with Sebastian.
Cast
Production
Elisabeth Bergner appeared on stage in a revival of the play in 1942.
Warner Bros.announced they would make a film version in August 1943, as a follow up to the popular The Constant Nymph. Leonore Coffee was reported as working on the script with Henry Blanke to produce and Joan Leslie mentioned as a possible star.
Lupino and Flynn were announced for the film in September 1945, with Peter Godfrey attached to direct. Shooting started later that year. It was completed in February 1946.
Lupino sang two songs in the film. She was meant to be billed after Flynn and Parker but protested and succeeded in being billed after Flynn.
Box Office
The film took a while to be released and earned an estimated $2.3 million in rentals in the US and Canada according to Variety. However it failed to recover its costs.
Critical
Bosley Crowther, writing for The New York Times, called the film "something harsh and unbelievable, like a terrible faux-pas in a grade-school play." He describes Lupino's performance as "downright embarrassing" and compares Flynn's to a "singing-waiter in a Hoboken café." Crowther gives Eleanor Parker his "deepest sympathy".
References
Escape Me Never (1947 film) WikipediaEscape Me Never (1947 film) IMDb Escape Me Never (1947 film) themoviedb.org