Saturday, July 15, 2023

Sirk’s Switcheroo in ‘There’s Always Tomorrow’ 1956

Barbara Stanwyck & Fred MacMurray, as a designer & toy maker, who are
also old flames in 1956's "There's Always Tomorrow."



Director Douglas Sirk literally flipped the script with 1956's There's Always Tomorrow. Typically, Sirk's cinema forte was slick but subversive soap operas that starred 40-sh femme film divas that faced life's adversity and society's disapproval.

"There's Always Tomorrow" may look like another Ross Hunter produced soap with
 veteran stars, but Douglas Sirk's critical take on post-war life cuts through the suds.

There's Always Tomorrow is like a male version of All That Heaven Allows, which Sirk directed the year before. Instead of a likeable but increasingly miserable female character like Jane Wyman's small town widow, this time it's Fred MacMurray as a faithful husband and father who feels trapped by his middle-class existence. Whereas Wyman's widow unwittingly creates strife with an affair with a younger man, Fred's toy creator causes suspicion among his older children when an old flame comes to town on business. In both cases, their children react with self-centeredness and self-righteousness. And in both films, the privileged, overbearing son is played by William Reynolds! In Heaven, he’s Ned; in Tomorrow, he’s Vinnie. In both roles, he’s perfect, because Reynolds’ characters behave so badly you'll want to throw something at your screen.

Like Jane Wyman in "All That Heaven Allows," director Douglas Sirk casts
another likable star, Fred MacMurray, as a character not content with their lot in life. 

While there is an attraction between both MacMurray's unhappy Cliff Groves and Norma Vale, she is more realistic, as an affair would wreck his happy family. Norma is played by Fred's frequent co-star, Barbara Stanwyck.

Cliff seems to enjoy his career, though he jumps through a lot of hoops to please his boss and clients; at home he's feeling restless. While he loves his wife and family, Cliff feels second best. There’s Always Tomorrow seems to mock the '50s sitcom-style family, where they seem insufferable at times, while Fred is suffering from a lack of attention. Wife Marion is played by lovely Joan Bennett. While I'm sure she was directed to behave this way, Joan’s Marion comes off like a posh parody of the glamorous and saintly sitcom wife of '50s TV. She’s the most chic of Stepford Wives, with pat answers for her husband’s complaints, treating him like a child, insisting he take a hot bath after a rough day, or that he not stay out in the cool night air, lest he catch cold!

Joan Bennett, cast as the perfect wife, Marion Groves, in "There's Always Tomorrow."

Vinnie is a clean cut, crew cut bully, who lords it over his sisters, snaps at his girlfriend, and takes verbal jabs at his father. Ellen, the middle sister, is played by Gigi Perreau as a typical precocious ‘50s teen, girlish with adult pretensions. The youngest daughter, Frances, seems to need all her mother's attention and is truly annoying. These actors as the Groves offspring certainly perform as Sirk directed. In the showdown scene, when the two older children confront Stanwyck's visiting ex-flame, Perreau has an outburst begging Stanwyck that's quite striking.

Gigi Perreau has an emotional moment as the daughter,
in 1956's "There's Always Tomorrow."

Of course, this is Sirk's sly criticism of post-war perfect families, as seen on television and film. In fact, the movie doesn't judge the father for considering an affair at all. By the film's finale, the family finally seems to realize the father needs a little TLC, yet Cliff still seems melancholy as he sees Norma’s plane depart in the evening sky. She is shown brushing away tears in her plane seat.

Fred MacMurray's Cliff feels re-ignited after reuniting with old flame Norma,
played by Barbara Stanwyck, in 1956's "There's Always Tomorrow."

Fred MacMurray, typically bland to me, is well-cast as the ideal film father. In less than five years, Fred would be star in the TV fave, My Three Sons, where he always looked half asleep. Here, he's not afraid to be unlikable. While Cliff is a good man, it's never definitively declared whether he has every right to be irritable at his home life, or is this a faulty perception? I took it that he sees his family situation clearly. Did he miss an opportunity to change his life for more happiness? Or was he about to make a big mistake, over a dull patch in his life? Fred has an in-depth character to play and he does so with authority. 

Barbara Stanwyck as Norma Vale in 1956's "There's Always Tomorrow."
This is one of Barbara's best middle-aged roles, as the warmly sympathetic ex-flame.

As for Barbara Stanwyck, this role in this film was a change of pace for her. Like her friend and contemporary, Joan Crawford, Stanwyck played a lot of tough cookies from mid-career onward. Unlike Joan, Barbara didn't become a caricature. The same year that Joan had one of her best roles and films with Autumn Leaves, Stanwyck had the same as Norma Vale in There's Always Tomorrow. Barbara's character is genuinely warm and charming, realistic and makes no apologies for being a career woman. She's genuinely interested in Cliff's life and is finally realistic about their attraction going any further. Like Crawford, Stanwyck was nearly 50 here. Barbara presents herself as a stylish woman, but not afraid to look her age.

And like Crawford in Autumn Leaves, Stanwyck gets a big scene in There’s Always Tomorrow to tear into! When Cliff’s children come to confront her, Stanwyck’s Norma doesn't grovel for their forgiveness, which would have been typical of the era. Instead, the would-be “other woman” rails at the ingrates for taking their father for granted. Barbara is quite convincing in her fury!

Barbara Stanwyck's "other woman" schools her ex-flame's kiddies on respecting
their neglected dad, in 1956's "There's Always Tomorrow."

There are a number of scenes where Douglas Sirk creates mood and emotion with camera set ups, symbolism, and more. The one that stunned me was when Norma visits Cliff at work, breaking off the possibility of an affair. When she leaves, his latest creation, Rex the Robot is bumped and starts mechanically walking, right off the screen!

"There's Always Tomorrow" benefits greatly from having two of the golden era's
 most naturalistic stars, Fred MacMurray & Barbara Stanwyck, as the mature leads.

Maybe the reason this film is lesser known is because it was not one of Sirk's splashy Technicolor ‘50s extravaganzas. Why wasn't it filmed in color—because it wasn't about wealthy folks, wearing a parade of Jean Louis costumes? Was it because there wasn't a photogenic young co-star, like Rock Hudson? Whatever the case, There’s Always Tomorrow is a beautifully drawn black and white film, instead of a vivid movie oil painting, directed by Douglas Sirk. Like Sirk's other work, there are some forward thinking observations about mid-century American life.

William Reynolds, who so ably played the surly son in both
"There's Always Tomorrow" AND "All That Heaven Allows."

Here’s my look at one of Sirk’s best, All That Heaven Allows, with Jane Wyman & Rock Hudson:

https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2020/10/all-that-heaven-allows-1955.html

7 comments:

  1. I think Sirk’s decision to film in black and white lent gravitas to this movie and lifted it from the realm of soap opera. MacMurray and Stanwyck were perfect as the two leads.

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    1. Don't know the reason for it being filmed in B/W, but it does turn the focus more on the drama and less on the glamour. And these stars made a great team.

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    1. I don't know if that was a mental or computer glitch! Thanks, Rick

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  3. Of course there are people with careers like Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray in this. Joan Bennett plays someone who is less commonplace today: corporate wife and club woman. I sometimes wonder if people who are like the Sirk characters would recognize themselves on screen. Of course Joan Bennett turns the housewife trope upside down in "The Reckless Moment" with James Mason.

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  4. I just LOVE this lesser-known Sirk film. Fun to have the stars of "Double Indemnity" reunited this way. I feel the same about Fred. This was one of his better moments and Barbara is nearly always wonderful. (Fred even has a brief scene in swim trunks and was in decent shape, I think?) Joan did her part well, too. William Reynolds was so convincing as a severely shallow and selfish youth in those movies, yet so physically handsome. He later had a long, successful run on "The FBI," presumably as a much more accessible character (I've barely seen any of it!) He and Gigi Perreau had been siblings in a prior movie as well, so they were well-acquainted. I have a little tribute to him if you or anyone is interested: https://neptsdepths.blogspot.com/2011/06/sheet-of-reynolds-rap.html

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    1. Fred and Barbara were quite fit and attractive middle-aged people in "Tomorrow." Funny that William Reynolds played such punks in these two films, love that girlfriend Pat Crowley tells him off! Thanks for writing, as always!

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