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Another Part of the Forest

Another Part of the Forest (1948)

May. 18,1948
|
7.3
|
NR
| Drama Romance

This 'prequel' to The Little Foxes tells how the ruthless members of the old-South Hubbard family got that way.

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Hellen
1948/05/18

I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much

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GazerRise
1948/05/19

Fantastic!

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Mandeep Tyson
1948/05/20

The acting in this movie is really good.

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Geraldine
1948/05/21

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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sinful-2
1948/05/22

The story is about a dominating self made man that rules the family and fortune brutally and the other family members on their own way trying to get their share of the fortune. The Father made his fortune during the civil war selling at high prices and therefore the family is disliked of the whole local community. Besides that there are some love stories that have influence on the story.When I watched this movie I could not complain about the acting which seemed fine from everyone.I just have to say that I did not find any of the people likable or interesting enough for the movie to entertain me. I would say there are far better dramas out there.

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kidboots
1948/05/23

Lillian Hellman's play "The Little Foxes" was the sensation of Broadway's 1939 season and starring Tallulah Bankhead, it ran for 410 performances. It was later made into a magnificent film that picked up 9 Oscar nominations. In 1946 Lillian Helman directed "Another Part of the Forest" - a prequel, showing how Regina, Benjamin and Oscar inherited their evil and immoral ways from their father. Patricia Neal made her Broadway debut as Regina and won a Tony award for Best Performance. When a film was made in 1948, Ann Blyth, who a couple of years before had created a sensation as Veda, Mildred Pierce's venal daughter, was given the role of Regina. Ann had had musical training and started out in a few forgettable low budget musicals. After "Mildred Pierce" she was heralded as a major find and you would have thought she would have been one of the big stars of the 50s - but you would have been wrong. After superb performances in "Another Part of the Forest" and "Our Very Own" she became trapped in a series of leaden musicals ("Rose Marie", "The Student Prince") and she was never again given a role worthy of her talents.Marcus Hubbard (Frederic March) has always been rotten to the core. Although born into poverty, he was self educated but made his fortune as a war profiteer by exploiting his fellow "Southerners" during the Civil War by selling salt to them at an over inflated price of $8 a small bag. That is why his son Oscar (Dan Duryea) is not welcome at the Veteran's Day Parade and why Lavinia (Florence Eldridge) Marcus's long suffering wife will not use salt on that particular day. There is also a secret scandal that is only hinted at, until being revealed at the end of the film it changes the dynamics of the family. Benjamin (Edmond O'Brien) is the only member of the family who treats his mother with any type of kindness but he is also self serving. After a depressing family luncheon when only the servants remember Lavinia's birthday, Benjamin reminds Regina that papa's unhealthy fondness for her will force her to spend the rest of her life looking after him and suggests she should pay more attention to besotted Horace Giddens if she wants to escape. Horace, who was played in the earlier film by Herbert Marshall, is never seen in this film, only talked about.Oscar is infatuated with local can can dancer Laurette (Dona Drake). Her character is worthy of the Hubbards - she will have nothing to do with Oscar unless he gets money from his father. When he finds her flirting with a patron, he and some friends don "night rider" sheets and badly beat him up. The other family of note in the town are the Bagtrys, who have been made penniless, trying to grow cotton on their plantation. Regina is in love with Ben Bagtry (John Dall) but it is clear he doesn't care for her family's ways. Birdie (Betsy Blair) is a faded Southern belle who is desperate to return the plantation to it's former glory. By the end of the film the stage is set for "The Little Foxes" - Marcus is a broken man, Lavinia is going to return to her childhood home and Benjamin, Regina and Oscar are facing their future with steely ruthlessness. The characterisations of the three siblings are spot on - you can see the traits that are in their characters in "The Little Foxes", here in embryo. Betsy Blair who was a standout in "Marty" showed how talented she was in this movie. Her "Birdie" is heartbreaking and a tribute to Patricia Collinge.Highly, Highly Recommended.

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mlraymond
1948/05/24

Vladimir Pozner's skillful adaptation for the screen of Lillian Hellman's original stage play Another Part of the Forest is an almost forgotten classic, that deserves a wider audience. Performances are uniformly excellent, even in the smaller roles. Superb editing helps to create an absorbing and compelling drama of a particularly nasty family in post-Civil War Alabama.Fredric March nearly steals the picture, with his malevolent portrayal of a tyrannical father, who enjoys pitting his offspring against each other. Ambitious older son Benjamin ( Edmond O'Brien) wants to get up in the world and make money, something his controlling father Marcus is determined to prevent. Weakling younger son Oscar ( Dan Duryea) is a joke to everyone else in the family. Spoiled daughter Regina ( Ann Blyth) is the only one of the three children to win any favor from their dictatorial father, but she is also expected to remain under his thumb. Both Regina and Ben have big plans they are keeping secret from Marcus. But a family as full of intrigue and conspiracy as this one is like a bomb with a slowly burning fuse. Eventually, there is going to be an explosion.There are fine supporting performances by John Dall as the restless former soldier John Bagtry, who wishes to find a war somewhere to go fight in, Betsy Blair as his nervous, fragile cousin Birdy, Dona Drake as the floozy girlfriend of the weaselly Oscar, Fritz Leiber as the sadly dignified Colonel Isham, and most of all, Florence Eldridge as the ignored and ill-used wife of Marcus Hubbard, Lavinia.Razor sharp dialogue and performances makes this a true delight to savor. Hard to find, but well worth the effort.You won't like this family, but you won't forget them.

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MartinHafer
1948/05/25

This is one of the most wicked and dysfunctional families ever to make it to the big screen during the 1940s. Of course, by today's standards they would seem a bit tame! This is the same sick, backstabbing, conniving family seen in little foxes. Some of the original actors are here (such as the slimy Dan Duryea) and some new ones are along for the ride (Edmund O'Brien, Ann Blythe and Frederick March). So why did I like the movie? Well, the evilness of the characters and how deliciously they scheme and change sides when it best suits their needs make it a very mesmerizing film. Also, because the schemes change A LOT, it's tough to predict where the movie will end.This movie, though made AFTER Little Foxes, is the prequel. So after seeing this, see Little Foxes and hold on tight!

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