The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956)
This 1990s assessment of The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit reveals both an outsatnding ignorance of the culture which shaped this film and the danger of being smugly confident of judgement despite that ignorance. It it a caution against imposing our cultural assumptions on a very different time. More important, it indicates the limits of subjective readings of a film.
"Middle-class middle-America...the inside story? Hardly, but nonetheless a surprisingly engrossing, if shallow and overlong, Hollywood vision of 1950s thirtysomethings, with [Gregory]Peck turning in a dignified title role. Tom Rath has a $10K mortgage, three brats, and psycho-Betsy ([Jenniger] Jones). Fun. He also has bad memories of WWII, where he knifed a German during a freezing winter for his coat, had a fling with wistful peasant Maria ([Marisa] Pavan), and threw a grenade which accidentally killed his best friend. Oops. Acquiring a new, lucrative position writing speeches for avuncular company president Ralph ([Frederick] March), Tom must choose between working overtime on the job or on his relationship with psycho-Betsy. Hmm. And what about his grandmother's estate? And that kid he fathered during the war? My! Don't worry--Lee J. Cobb is on hand to tell us at the finale that "God's in His heaven and all's right with the world." Whew. Totally hollow trash, with a hysteria-prone Jennifer Jones displaying an odd crease down the middle of her face. So slickly dished up, though, you can feel yourself sliding around on the sofa."
Cast
Gregory Peck, Tom Rath
Jennifer Jones, Betsy Rath
Fredric March, Ralph Hopkins
Marisa Pavan, Maria
Ann Harding. Mrs. Hopkins
Lee J. Cobb, Judge Bernstein
Keenan Wynn, Caesar Gardella
Gene Lockhart, Hawthorne
Arthur O'Connell, Walker
Henry Daniell, Bill Ogden
Connie Gilchrist, Mrs. Manter
Production Credits
Producer, Darryl F. Zanuck
Director, Nunnally Johnson
Writer, Nunnally Johnson (based on the novel by Sloan Wilson)
Cinematographer, Charles Clarke
Editor, Dorothy Spencer
Music Composer, Bernard Herrmann
Art Director, Lyle Wheeler