Song of Surrender (1949) Poster

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7/10
Good film with a GREAT performance by Claude Rains
robluvthebeach25 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
SPOILERS.....

Viewed this film online and Claude Rains makes the most out of a 'typical' older man/younger woman/stranger in town plot device and breathes fresh life into it with his characterization. Because of his performance, his colleagues also rise to the occasion which raises the bar for this film.......the story goes: In 1906, in a small New England town, Abby, the young wife of a middle-aged, Puritanical Civil War historian and museum curator, Elisha Hunt, meets New York lawyer Bruce Eldridge. Bruce is engaged to a beautiful, wealthy widow named Phyllis Cantwell, who has recently bought a house up the hill from the Hunts. Although he used to be an ambitious political statesmen, Bruce has abandoned his aspirations and become a playboy among Phyllis' upper-class social set. While Elisha is away giving a lecture, Abby attends a local auction at the Abernathys' and makes a modest bid on a chair for Elisha, but is outbid by Phyllis. When the townspeople are too afraid to bid on a gramophone because they think it is an instrument of the Devil, Abby buys it in defiance of Phyllis' snobbish friends. With the gramophone are recordings of arias sung by world-class tenor Enrico Caruso, which Abby listens to over and over again, falling in love with the music. When Elisha comes home and finds Abby dreamy-eyed over the music, having burned her bread, he tells her that Abernathy hanged himself after the auction, and forbids her to keep the gramophone. She gives it to a friendly grocer named Mr. Willis, and while Elisha is away, she plays it night after night on a nearby hilltop. One night, Bruce, hearing the music, visits her, and they fall in love. Bruce dresses Abby up and takes her out for an evening of music and dancing, after which they enjoy an innocent kiss. After Elisha returns home, village deacon Parry tells him that a shameless heathen has been singing in the valley day and night, provoking Elisha to accuse Abby of disobeying him. He is about to destroy the gramophone with an axe when Abby breaks into tears, begging him to let her have her music, but not telling him that it represents her only link to Bruce. In the following weeks, Abby becomes increasingly distant from Elisha. When she receives a Caruso record album from Bruce in the mail, Elisha confronts her, and she admits she spent an innocent evening with Bruce, and that the music has changed her. Elisha angrily smashes the album and, at Sunday morning church service, publicly denounces Abby as an adulterer. She defends herself and runs from the church, then takes a train to New York to see Bruce. Upon Abby's arrival, there is a surprising plot twist which brings her back to her husband.......

The ending is really well done and the performances match up to the drama that is created.
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8/10
Claude Rains yet again as a tyrant involved with music
clanciai24 February 2018
An odd film about the power of music: Claude Rains as an elderly curate bullies his much youngar wife, an uneducated girl he treats like serving maid, but she doesn't mind, until another, younger man enters her life. With him follows a grammophone (1906) with records of Caruso, and that changes her life and that of Claude Rains as well. He becomes jealous of the grammophone, but the more resists and battles against the intrusion of music in his life, the more deeply he will eventually succumb to it.

Claude Rains makes an awesome performance as usual, and the others are good enough but pale in his presence, while the greatest asset of the film is the music. It's not only Caruso, but the score is by Victor Young, and you will never forget that melody. It's a very unusual film for actually making music play the lead of both the story and the character of it, and you will eventually forget the story and the characters but not the music.
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6/10
Good...but for me it just seemed to be lacking something.
planktonrules21 July 2023
Elisha and Abigail Hunt (Claude Rains and Wanda Hendrix) are a most unusual couple in this story circa 1906. He is an older educated man...a bit of a bore, really. She is young but also extremely sheltered...knowing very little of the world outside her extremely conservative Connecticut town. When a newcomer arrives in town (Macdonald Carey), the marriage is thrown for a few bumps, to say the least.

The story is okay. It has some interesting aspects but left me feeling a tad disappointed by the ending which is strongly influenced by the production code. Things just worked out too nicely at the end for it to see very realistic. Not a bad story...but one that seemed in need of a slight re-write.
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5/10
This is what hypocrisy looks like.
mark.waltz22 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The performance of Claude Rains here is both riveting and disturbing as he plays he much older husband of the very young and troubled Wanda Hendrix. He's a small-town minister who married the much-younger Hendrix out of our seeming act of charity, but his controlling ways of her and inability to understand her needs is what makes him a hypocrite. When she purchases an ancient record player (grammaphone), he is very jealous of her finding something to search for some peace with, and after their confrontation humiliates her in public with accusations of her alleged infidelity. Certainly, she has been spending time with suave newcomer MacDonald Carey who has declared his love for her and desire to take her away from the miserable life she has, but whether or not it has moved into other areas is between Hendrix and her conscience.

This film is strictly memorable for Rains' performance, a volcanic mix of solemn smoke rising to the surface and the inevitable explosion. Only Rains could make an unsympathetic character so understandable even if he is not likeable. There are moments of tenderness that come from him and then sudden bursts of anger that reveal the darkness from inside his soul. Trying to react to him, Hendricks comes off as weak and out of her element, and even Carey, handsome and sincere, pales in comparison.

Only Elizabeth Patterson as Hendrix's aunt (particularly in a climactic scene) and Andrea King as Carey's snooty fiance offer any spark. It's a dark period film simply directed by Mitchell Leissen, probably not for all tastes and rather depressing in spots. Thanks to Rains' presence, the spark is there and even if it is one surrounding an angry character, it is what makes this film somewhat memorable.
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