Everything about Peyton Place Film totally explained
Peyton Place is a
1957 American drama film based on the
bestselling novel of the same name by
Grace Metalious. Despite the fact that the script had been extensively reworked to accommodate contemporary mores,
Peyton Place nevertheless was viewed as a shocking repudiation of
stereotypical American small-town morality at the time of its release.
Peyton Place is a story about the lives and loves of the residents of a small
New England town in the years immediately preceding and following
World War II. Behind the town's tranquil façade hides scandal, homicide, suicide, sexual deviance, and moral hypocrisy. At the core of its plot are three women: Constance Mackenzie, a moralistic woman who has shielded her tarnished past from daughter Allison (an aspiring author and alter ego of Metalious), and Selena Cross, a "good" girl living on the wrong side of the tracks who hides a terrible secret.
Peyton Place was filmed in
Camden, Maine, and the surrounding
New England countryside.
A major
box office hit,
Peyton Place was the second highest grossing film of 1958.
Synopsis
In this
coming-of-age story, Allison Mackenzie is a beautiful high school student and aspiring writer who struggles to grow up under the thumb of her emotionally crippled single mother. Constance MacKenzie, a woman with a hidden past, is now aroused by the temptations of the new high school principal. On the other side of town, Allison's best friend Selena lives in a shack with an abusive stepfather. As the seasons change, so do Allison and her friends, as they struggle to mature in the stifling small town. Finally, Allison leaves Peyton Place, but she returns to help Selena, who is accused of murdering her stepfather. The trial exposes the bankrupt moral standards of many of the town's residents and finally brings them together.
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Primary cast
Award nominations:
Academy Award for Best Picture
Academy Award for Directing – (Mark Robson)
Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures – (Mark Robson)
Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay – (John Michael Hayes)
WGA for Best Written American Drama – (John Michael Hayes)
Academy Award for Best Actress – (Lana Turner)
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress – (Diane Varsi)
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress – (Hope Lange)
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - (Hope Lange)
Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - (Mildred Dunnock)
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor – (Arthur Kennedy)
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor – (Russ Tamblyn)
Academy Award for Best Cinematography – (William C. Mellor)
Quotes
Constance MacKenzie: All men are alike. The approach is different; the result is always the same.
Michael Rossi: I kissed you. You kissed me. That's affection, not carnality. That's affection, not lust. You ought to know the difference.
Michael Rossi: Guaranteed poverty isn't security.
Mrs. Thornton: A person doesn't always get what she deserves. Remember it. If there's anything in life you want, go and get it. Don't wait for anybody to give it to you.
Trivia
This film was almost a box office flop. It performed poorly in its first few weeks in release. Then news broke out about star Lana Turner's infamous scandal: her affair with mobster Johnny Stompanato, and his death at the hands of Turner's daughter. The ongoing national coverage of the subsequent murder trial turned the film into a box office smash. Ironically, Turner had initially feared the press swirling around the trial would end her career.(External Link
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Goofs
Selena's lawyer informs her that the prosecutor in her murder trial is being sent from Portland. The prosecutor would in fact have been sent from Augusta, the State capital. (Although the book was set in New Hampshire, the film is set in Maine.)
"You'll Never Know" wasn't introduced until 1943 (by Alice Faye in Hello Frisco Hello), but is played here at a 1941 Graduation ceremony.
Mike Rossi and Dr. Swain are driving in a car and they come to a stop sign. The sign is red. All stop signs were yellow (with little round glass reflectors in the letters) in the 1940s (the time of this picture) and stop signs were not changed to red until the mid 1950s.
Allison plays classical music on an LP (33 1/3) record changer. The LP wasn't developed until 1949.(External Link
)Further Information
Get more info on 'Peyton Place Film'.
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