A powerful and poignant film with Olivia De Havilland starring as a frightened irrational woman who must face the secrets of her past before she can be cured. Based on the novel by Mary Jane Ward. Academy Award Nominations: 6, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress--Olivia De Havilland, Best Screenplay. Academy Awards: Best Sound Recording.
S**Y
Olivia de Havilland at her best.
"The Snake Pit", based on a semi-autobiographical novel by, is a compelling human drama filmed in 1948 under the auspices of director Anatole Litvak. It features one of the strongest performances of Oliva de Havilland, one of the best working actresses of the 1940s. There are obvious similarities to 1975's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest", a more famous film and probably the greater work of art (though perhaps not the more balanced portrayal of mental institutions and mental illness). Spoilers follow.One should begin by noting that the description of the film might lead you to assume that the film is completely different from what it actually is. The description is "a woman wakes up in a mental institution and can't remember how she got there", which suggests something akin to the Halle Berry film "Gothika", about a sane woman who finds herself the victim of a conspiracy. That is not the case: indeed, this is something considerably rarer than that, a story told from the perspective of someone with a mental illness. Films generally don't do this this, because they have issues with translating that sort of perspective to the screen (in a way that novels don't).Litvak, however, keeps the focus squarely on de Havilland's Virginia, whose confusion and paranoia guides her actions throughout the whole production. It is extraordinarily effective at putting us inside her thought process, and the viewer can even understand many of her interpretations of her surroundings. The film also strongly critiques many aspects of the mental health system as it was practiced in the 1940s, though there is no equal to Nurse Ratched here.Indeed, I would say that the main flaw of the film is the general blandness of the supporting cast, who stand fairly far in the background in comparison to de Havilland. This film did not win her her second Oscar (that would come the following year for William Wyler's "The Heiress"), but it arguably should have (and it's a far better performance than the film that won her her first Oscar).
H**S
Just a rental
I rented this on a recommendation from a friend. Actually, not worth the rental money. It wasn't as intriguing as I thought it would be.
N**2
Wonderful!
I can remember seeing this movie when I was a teenager. All the emotions good and bad. I especially remember the song “Going Home” that was sung towards the end of the movie. We have come a long way in the treatment of the mentally ill. Thank God!
M**D
The conditions in 'lunatic asylums' in the USA in the 1930s and 40s
This film was important in a historical context. It contrasted conditions in public and private institutions showing that the public ones didn't have enough money to manage their patients adequately. The film was criticised at the time, but down the years has been shown to have been correct.
E**A
A groundbreaking movie that changed the way we think about mental health
This is one of my favorite classic movies ever made! I'm a gigantic Olivia de Havilland fan and this movie only cements my love for her and her movies! The plot follows a woman named Virginia Cunningham, who finds herself in an insane asylum after having a nervous breakdown. Over the course of her treatment, we learn things about her life through the help of her physician, Dr. Kik. The title, interestingly enough, stems from an ancient practice of dealing with the mentally ill where they were thrown into a pit of snakes. The theory was that something like that would make a normal person insane, therefore it must work in reverse. Much of the film was filmed in the Camarillo State Mental Hospital in California. The film has come under certain fire from some women's rights authors for a seeming misportrayal of Virginia's difficulties and the implication that accepting a subservient role as a wife and mother is part of her "cure." If you're willing to look past this, then I'm sure you'll love it!
K**W
A story of a woman's mental illness through the treatment process
Great older movie. Olivia de Havilland was a phenomenal actress and is great in this story about a woman who experiences a nervous breakdown and winds up in the old mental institution. I believe these type movies were made to solicit change in the practices of older mental institutions and to also focus a better understanding on the treatment of mental illness.In the institution, she encounters all sorts of semi-lost souls. Olivia endures some of the old therapies (shock and the water treatment, but with the help of a very kind doctor, who goes above and beyond the norm with her, she manages to begin to uncover and face what lurks in her subconscious mind.Another outstanding performance from the great Olivia, whom you will likely recognize from many older movies, including Gone With the Wind. She played Melanie, wife of Ashley and friend of Scarlett.
K**L
works very well
the movie was in great condition and played great throughout, very pleased
P**E
Classic
A must see classic for anyone interested in Mental Health. Very well portrayed on how Psych units were at one time. We've come a long way in Mental Health but have a long way to go. Though the procedure for ECT has evolved over the years the effects have not. There are those that still believe this is a barbaric form of treatment, but it is one of the safest and effective treatments available in the treatment for certain mental illnesses. It's ashame that there still is a stigma regarding mental illness, when it is no different than someone who suffers from diabetes. Both are treatable diseases
S**N
I'll tell you where it's gonna end, Miss Somerville...
When there are more sick ones than well ones, the sick ones will lock the well ones up.The Snake Pit is directed by Anatole Litvak and adapted to screenplay by Frank Partos, Millen Brand and Arthur Laurents from the novel written by Mary Jane Ward. It stars Olivia de Havilland, Mark Stevens, Leo Genn, Celeste Holm, Glenn Langan, Helen Craig, Leif Erickson and Beulah Bondi. Music is by Alfred Newman and cinematography by Leo Tover.Olivia de Havilland plays Virginia Stuart Cunningham, and film chronicles Virgina's time and treatment in the Juniper Hill Mental Institution."It was strange, here I was among all those people, and at the same time I felt as if I were looking at them from some place far away, the whole place seemed to me like a deep hole and the people down in it like strange animals, like... like snakes, and I've been thrown into it... yes... as though... as though I were in a snake pit..."It's still today one of the most potent and important screen explorations of mental illness and its treatment. Backed by an astonishing performance by de Havilland, Litvak and an initially sceptical Darryl F. Zanuck (20th Century Fox supremo), led the way in bringing to the masses the subject and to treat it with stark realism. Quite often it's harrowing as entertainment, with Virgina's fractured mind laid bare under duress of treatments now seen as antiquated.It's true enough to say that some of the story features simplistic motives and means, these come as a product of the time the picture was made. But with Litvak (Sorry, Wrong Number) and his principal crew members researching the subject thoroughly, the end result is an incredible blend of dramatic heartfelt suspense and rays of humanistic hope. As Virginia weaves her way through this maze of psychological discord, with flashbacks constantly adding layers to the character's make up, Litvak presents a fascinating portrait of asylum life and the people who resided there, both as patients and staff.Some scenes are brilliantly crafted, either as visual expansions of the story or as shards of light in a dark world. One sequence sees Litvak track "dancing" silhouettes on a wall, and to then do a pull away shot upwards to reveal Virginia in the snake pit, the impact is stark in its magnificence. Another sequence takes place at a dance for the patients, where a rendition of Antonín Dvorák's "Goin' Home" turns into something quite beautiful, a unison of profound optimism that strikes the heart like the calm after a storm.Leo Tover's (The Day The Earth Stood Still) crisp black and white photography is perfectly in sync with the material, and Newman's (Wuthering Heights) magnificent score bounces around the institution like a spectral observer. With de Havilland doing her tour de force, it could be easy to forget the great work of Genn and Stevens, the former is a bastion of assured calmness as Dr. Mark Kik, the latter as Virgina's husband Robert underplays it to perfection and he gives us a character to root for wholesale.It has to be viewed in the context of the era it was made, but its influence on future movies and awareness of mental health treatments in the real world should not be understated. A brilliant production that demands to be seen. 9/10
A**S
Sad, but without sentimentality.
I see from the reviews so far that there is only one award of five stars. How can one make a thorough assessment of this film without a background knowledge in mental health? I could refer to my own career when, as a student, I worked my vacations in various hospitals as orderly, porter, and theatre technician. A very close friend did likewise, spending six weeks as a cleaner in a mental hospital (now closed) that was well known to me from the outside, its gaunt towers breaking the horizon as seen from the playingfield where we children attempted a normal childhood in the suburbs of Greater London during WW2. What I am really trying to say is that one's experience in any environment will depend upon the perspective from which one makes their observations. I worked in eleven different hospital establishments in the 1950/60s, no two were remotely alike.In this film (from 1948) which is not for the weak of heart, de Havilland plays the part of a mentally deranged young lady (Virginia Cunningham) who, having reached a crisis point in her life, is consigned to an institution for the mentally sick. Her treatment there is mainly in the hands of Dr. Mark Kik, played with measured calm by Leo Genn. As in "Green for Danger", Genn is portrayed (though lower key here) as an obvious target for female infatuation. Only at the very end of the film does de Havvialnd indicate she had been in love with the man. But now, of course, it doesn't matter for she is on the point of release from the institution and to be reunited with her devoted husband (Robert Cunningham, played by Mark Stevens) waiting for her outside the building.Inevitably there are frequent flashbacks in the life of Virginia, some harrowing especially from her childhood, where she loses her father and for which she appears to blame herself. Gradually a picture unfolds that seeks to explain her predicament. Simplistic? Not entirely; then this is not the whole story anyway since it is obvious the film seeks to give some insight into the manifest problems inherent in the treatment of the mentally ill. (One obvious question would be how on earth can one hope for a solution when so many disparate souls are locked up together inside a building for long periods?) One has to say the film makes a brave attempt at the impossible with the result that at the end we should not be entirely dissatisfied.Interesting incidents, in passing, date the film all to the good, incidentally. Thus, the reference to a concert in which Brahms's First Symphony is to be performed, and the rating of the months of May (May 7th, Brahms's birthday) and October as significant to Virginia's decline. Towards the end of the film a large gathering within the institution is treated to a dance with a small ensemble playing on stage. This concludes with an affecting adaptation of the principle theme from the slow movement of Mendelssohn's well known Violin Concerto in E minor set to words sung by a soloist and followed by the audience. Sad, but without sentimentality.Those who admire de Havilland's performance in this film might care to see her in another tragic role, along with Montgomery Clift, in "The Heiress" (1949). The Heiress [DVD ] The Heiress [DVD
R**E
flawed goody
interesting little movie and apart from some somewhat dubious depictions of mentally disturbed patients (to modern eyes)for its period a good film.interesting to see olivia acting this sort of part ,tho she does ham it up in the odd scene.the highlite for me is the concert near the end given by the inmates and one sings "going home".breaks your heart.
C**X
Informative though scary
I bought this for a gift, but shall be reading it. 5 stars because the film is great.
C**E
Very good
At first I thought, I am not sure I can watch this regularly, but as the film went on and then it ended, I have decided it is a good film and worth keeping to watch again. The acting was really good and the film was entertaining.
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