Mildred Pierce is a 1945 American
drama film starring
Joan Crawford,
Ann Blyth,
Jack Carson,
Zachary Scott, and
Eve Arden in a
film noir tale about a long-suffering mother and her ungrateful daughter. The screenplay by
Ranald MacDougall,
William Faulkner, and Catherine Turney was based upon the
1941 novel
Mildred Pierce by
James M. Cain. The film was directed by
Michael Curtiz and produced by
Jerry Wald with
Jack L. Warner as
executive producer.
Mildred Pierce was Crawford's first starring film for
Warner Bros. after leaving
MGM, and won her the
Academy Award for Best Actress.
Plot
While the novel is told by a
third-person narrator in strict
chronological order, the film uses
voice-over narration (the voice of Mildred). The story is framed by the questioning of Mildred by police after they discover the body of her second husband, Monte Beragon. The film, in
noir fashion, opens with Beragon (
Zachary Scott) being shot. He murmurs the name "Mildred" as he collapses and dies. The police are led to believe that the murderer is restaurant owner Mildred Pierce's (
Joan Crawford) first husband, Bert Pierce (
Bruce Bennett), who under interrogation confesses to the crime. She then relates her life story in
flashback.
We see housewife Mildred married to a newly unemployed Pierce. Bert at the time was a real estate partner of Wally Fay (
Jack Carson) who propositioned Mildred after learning that she and Bert were about to
divorce. In the divorce, Mildred obtained custody of her...
Read More