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Lewis Milestone (1895–1980)

Author of All Quiet on the Western Front [1930 film]

52+ Works 947 Members 30 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Lewis Milestone

Works by Lewis Milestone

All Quiet on the Western Front [1930 film] (1930) — Director — 220 copies, 3 reviews
Ocean's Eleven [1960 film] (1960) — Director — 141 copies, 1 review
4 Film Favorites: Ocean's Collection (2009) — Director — 112 copies
The Strange Love of Martha Ivers [1946 film] (1946) — Director — 71 copies, 4 reviews
Mutiny on the Bounty [1962 film] (1962) — Director — 50 copies, 1 review
Pork Chop Hill [1959 film] (1959) 42 copies, 2 reviews
Halls of Montezuma [1951 film] (1951) — Director — 37 copies
A Walk in the Sun [1945 film] (1943) — Director — 37 copies, 2 reviews
Have Gun - Will Travel: The Complete First Season (2004) — Director — 26 copies
Rain [1932 film] (1932) — Director — 22 copies, 1 review
The Kid Brother [1927 film] (1927) — Director — 21 copies, 1 review
Of Mice and Men [1939 film] (1939) — Director — 18 copies, 2 reviews
The Front Page [1931 film] (1931) — Director — 16 copies
The North Star [1943 film] (1943) — Director — 15 copies, 2 reviews
TCM Spotlight: Errol Flynn Adventures (2010) — Director — 11 copies
Arch of Triumph [1948 film] (1948) 10 copies, 2 reviews
Lucky Partners [1940 film] (1940) — Director — 9 copies, 1 review
Hallelujah, I'm a Bum! [1933 film] (1933) — Director — 8 copies
Les Misérables [1935 film & 1952 film] (2013) — Director 1952 — 8 copies
The Purple Heart [1944 film] (2007) — Director — 7 copies, 1 review
The Red Pony [1949 film] (1949) — Director — 6 copies
Edge of Darkness [1943 film] (2001) 6 copies, 3 reviews
Dangerous Dames Collection (2009) — Director — 6 copies
The General Died at Dawn [1936 film] — Director — 5 copies
They Who Dare [1954 film] (1953) — Director — 4 copies
Les Misérables [1952 film] — Director — 2 copies
The Garden of Eden [1928 film] (1928) — Director — 2 copies
Streets of Fear - 20 Movie Collection — Director — 2 copies
The Racket [1928 film] (1928) 1 copy
Classic Film Noir, Vol. 2 — Director — 1 copy
the Purple heart 🎥 1 copy, 1 review
Okinawa 1 copy, 1 review
The Front Page | His Girl Friday — Director — 1 copy
le Commando de la mort 1 copy, 1 review

Associated Works

Tagged

1930 (6) 1930s (9) action (12) Angie Dickinson (7) black and white (7) Blu-ray (12) comedy (26) crime (12) Dean Martin (6) drama (46) DVD (110) fiction (6) film (36) film noir (11) Frank Sinatra (6) heist (6) Kirk Douglas (8) Las Vegas (7) Lew Ayres (7) Lewis Milestone (18) movie (25) movies (7) movies drama (8) romance (7) Sammy Davis Jr. (6) thriller (6) war (44) War Movies (8) WWI (25) WWII (27)

Common Knowledge

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Reviews

34 reviews
Rain is falling hard as this dark noir melodrama opens, and after the night is over, it will always be raining for Martha Ivers. Lewis Milestone directed this tale of life-long guilt that festers until misplaced suspicion destroys one person and puts another out of their misery. There are good performances from a great cast, none better than noir icon Lizabeth Scott's as a girl down on her luck but hoping against the odds for something good to happen. She proves to be the outside element to show more three lives bound together since childhood by a crime about which only two are aware.

This is a strange noir in many respects, mostly due to Milestone allowing the moviegoer to see the story unfold in chronological order, rather than using flashbacks. It creates sympathy for the twisted Martha Ivers, because the audience understands how one selfish moment in her youth set her on a coarse she can never change. It has been raining inside her soul ever since. At the same time however, we are rooting for the vulnerable Scott to be the victor in a battle she's not sure she can win.

Nearly two decades have passed since the film’s opening when Sam Masterson (Van Heflin) has an accident just outside of Iverstown. It brings back memories of when he was a brash kid, and the girl who now controls both Walter (Kirk Douglas) and the town. He meets the lovely Toni Marachek (Lizabeth Scott) on his first night there and lends her a hand. Fresh from jail and hoping to start over, Toni falls for Sam, but fate may slam the door in her face when his ties to Iverstown come to light.

Barbara Stanwyck is the adult Martha, married to the weaker of the boys from her youth, Walter. She flaunts her feelings for Sam in front of Walter, thinking she has it over on him because he loves her. He may have more courage than she does, however, as their twisted relationship becomes strained further by Sam's return.

Heflin is solid as always and this is one of the great neglected noir films of the 1940s; mostly because it fell into public domain, and for many years good prints were nearly impossible to find. Douglas is very good in his very first screen role, and Stanwyck's portrayal of the sick and twisted Martha Ivers can stand proudly alongside any character she played in the 1940's. Though her screen time is less by comparison, it is Scott, however, who manages to steal this film. Her Toni is easily the most memorable character in the film despite all the star-power around her. Even when she isn't around, we are thinking about Toni’s plight, wondering what will become of her.

A terrific and memorable noir melodrama.
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Some very stilted acting by most of the cast is overcome by Crawford's great performance as Sadie Thompson, a character for the ages--or at least 1932 in this rather amoral production! Guy Kibbee is also good. Lots to think about in the way this one plays out. And "Rain" it does.
About as twisted and bizarre as noir gets, with an incredible cast. Kirk Douglas, in his screen debut, is incredible. Barbara Stanwyck shows again why she was one of the great actresses. Van Heflin is perfect as a man who finds himself mixed up in something that he only comes to understand near the film's conclusion. And Lizabeth Scott, who might seem like some sort of old-fashioned blonde doll--who would never fit into a modern film--is completely affecting as a girl who misses a lot of show more buses. They don't make them like this any more! show less
½
WWII vets rob Las Vegas.

I was hooked from the ultra-hip opening credit sequence. The movie didn't actually turn out to be all that great, but it's fun and well-written enough to be entertaining throughout. It doesn't take itself seriously enough to be a suspense film, and it doesn't have enough humor to be a comedy. What it does have is cool. Everything and everyone on screen - not to mention Riddle's score - is oozing cool.

Concept: A
Story: A
Characters: D
Dialog: A
Pacing: A
Cinematography: show more C
Special effects/design: B
Acting: B
Music: A

Enjoyment: B

GPA: 3.2/4
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½

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Associated Authors

Charles Lederer Screenwriter
Harry Brown Screenwriter, Original novel
C. Gardner Sullivan Screenwriter
George Abbott Screenwriter
Maxwell Anderson Screenwriter
Del Andrews Screenwriter
Robert Rossen Screenwriter
Harold Lloyd Director, Producer, Actor
Carol Reed Director
James R. Webb Screenwriter
Aaron Copland Composer
Ben Hecht Original play, Writer
John Steinbeck Screenwriter
Sam Rolfe Creator
Herb Meadow Creator
J. A. Howe Director
Howard J. Green Screenwriter
Victor Hugo Author, Original book
Peter Godfrey Director
Lillian Hellman Screenwriter
Robert Pirosh Director
Jack Bernhard Director
Anthony Mann Director
Henry Koster Director
Tay Garnett Director
Lewis Seiler Director
John Rawlins Director
Lewis Allen Director
Louis King Director
Byron Haskin Director
William Nigh Director
Arthur Ripley Director
Rudolph Maté Director
Maxwell Shane Director
Norman Foster Director
Fritz Lang Director
Jack Lee Director
Sam Peckinpah Director
Ian Dalrymple Director
Howard Hawks Director
Garson Kanin Director
Terence Young Director
Ray Enright Director
Leslie Howard Director
John Wray Actor
Arthur Edeson Cinematographer
Lew Ayres Actor
William Daniels Director of photography
Brad Pitt Actor
Walter Huston Actor, Actor.
Victor Milner Cinematographer
Ann Doran Actor
Hal Wallis Producer
Tarita, Actor
Harry Jackson Cinematographer
Jack Webb Actor
Don Hicks Actor
Winton C. Hoch Cinematographer
Kam Tong Actor
Helmut Dantine Actor., Actor
Walter Lundin Cinematographer
Charles MacArthur Original play
Paul Lukas Actor.
Henry Hull Actor.
Hal B. Wallis Producer.
Al Jolson Actor
Karoly Grosz Cover artist
Reynold Brown Cover artist
F. Ron Miller Cover designer

Statistics

Works
52
Also by
4
Members
947
Popularity
#27,151
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
30
ISBNs
57
Languages
2
Favorited
1

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