The Seventh Veil Page #2

Synopsis: One dark summer night, Francesca Cunningham, a once world famed pianist, escapes from her hospital room and tries to commit suicide by jumping off a local bridge. She is rescued and taken back to the hospital and undergoes psychological treatment by Dr. Larsen. Larsen, desperately wants to know the events and persons who drove her to this state and help her. He makes Francesca talk about her past - a past with a controlling guardian, Nicholas, no friends, kept apart from the man she loved and forced to practice the piano 5-6 hours a day.
Genre: Drama, Music
Director(s): Compton Bennett
  Won 1 Oscar. Another 1 nomination.
 
IMDB:
7.0
APPROVED
Year:
1945
94 min
121 Views


- I'm to do my best not to intrude on your privacy more than I possibly do.

- Ring the bell. huh, please.

- Yes, uncle.. yes, Nicholas.

- Would you like to struck him?

- No.

- Why not?

- I hate cats. They frighten me.

Oh, well, you soon will get used to them in this house.

- Parker, this is Miss Cunningham

- How do you do, miss.

- Take her away, you know where to put her.

- Yes, sir, this way...

Parker, who is that?

Mr Nicholas' mother, miss.

- Is she dead?

- I don't think so.

- What happened to her then?

- I can't tell you that, miss.

- I should have ask that to Nicholas.

- I don't think I should do that if I were you, miss.

Mr Nicholas doesn't like this subject to be discussed.

Her name is never mentioned in this house.

- Do you really want to know what happened toer? to her?

- No... yes!

She left #.Run away with a singer

- How do you know.

- Everybody knows cause it's on the papers.

There was a divorce, Mr Nicholas had to give an evidence. He is only twleve then.

How beastly of her!

He might do it to himself sometime.

Can we takes?

How dare you!

- Sorry, miss.

- I'll jump to tell Parker what you said. Alright, I won't.

You may go now.

Thank you, miss.

- James

- Yes, miss?

- How long have you been here?

- Twelve years.

- Has he always been like this?

- Yes, miss, just like this.

Oh, dear!

Those first weeks with Nicholas

was the loninest I ever spend.

Sometimes I wouldn't speak #

for days # except to say "good morning".

Sometimes not even that.

Good morning, Nicholas.

- Good morning, James.

- Good morning, sir.

All of the servants were men.

They were very polite.

But I was felt they resent my being there.

Nicholas made me feel like that too, but he had a different way of showing it.

He would leap about the house,

leaning on his cane and look right through me as though I wasn't there.

On the rare occasions he did send for me. I was so nervous I could hardly speak.

- Mr Nicholas has been asking for you, miss.

- Where is he?

In the drawing room, miss.

You wanted me, Nicholas?

Do you recognize this?

Did you know this address is for me?

Yes.

- Then why didn't you give it to me?

- I... forgot.

- Did you really forget?

- No.

I see. Did you know what's in it?

- It was a letter from Miss Dunken.

- What about?

- About me.

- Did you know what she says?

- No.

Let me tell you.

She says:
you're intelligence, rather above

the average, do you agree?

I don't know.

- She also says you can sew. Is that correct?

- I suppose so.

Francesca is extremely well-behaved,

she has a charming friendly disposition..

when she can overcome the initial shyness

, which sometime prevent her making friends easily. Are you shy?

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Muriel Box

Muriel Box (22 September 1905 – 18 May 1991) was an English screenwriter and director.She was born Violette Muriel Baker in Tolworth, Surrey, England in 1905. When her attempts at acting and dancing proved to be unsuccessful, she accepted work as a continuity girl for British International Pictures. In 1935, she met and married journalist Sydney Box, with whom she collaborated on nearly forty plays with mainly female roles for amateur theatre groups. Their production company, Verity Films, first released short wartime propaganda films, including The English Inn (1941), her first directing effort, after which it branched into fiction. The couple achieved their greatest joint success with The Seventh Veil (1945) for which they gained the Academy Award for Best Writing, Original Screenplay in the following year.After the war, the Rank Organisation hired her husband to head Gainsborough Pictures, where she was in charge of the scenario department, writing scripts for a number of light comedies, including two for child star Petula Clark, Easy Money and Here Come the Huggetts (both 1948). She occasionally assisted as a dialogue director, or re-shot scenes during post-production. Her extensive work on The Lost People (1949) gained her a credit as co-director, her first for a full-length feature.In 1951, her husband created London Independent Producers, allowing Box more opportunities to direct. Many of her early films were adaptations of plays, and as such felt stage-bound. They were noteworthy more for their strong performances than they were for a distinctive directorial style. She favoured scripts with topical and frequently controversial themes, including Irish politics, teenage sex, abortion, illegitimacy, and syphilis, and several of her films were banned by local authorities.She pursued her favourite subject – the female experience – in a number of films, including Street Corner (1953) about women police officers, Somerset Maugham's The Beachcomber (1954), with Donald Sinden and Glynis Johns as a resourceful missionary, again working with Donald Sinden on Eyewitness (1956) and a series of comedies about the battle of the sexes, including The Passionate Stranger (1957), The Truth About Women (1958) and her final film, Rattle of a Simple Man (1964).Box often experienced prejudice in a male-dominated industry, especially hurtful when perpetrated by another woman. Star Jean Simmons had her replaced on So Long at the Fair (1950), and Kay Kendall unsuccessfully attempted to do the same with Simon and Laura (1955). Many producers questioned her competence to direct large-scale feature films, and while the press was quick to note her position as one of very few women directors in the British film industry, their tone tended to be condescending rather than filled with praise.She left film-making to write novels and created a successful publishing house, Femina, which proved to be a rewarding outlet for her feminism. She divorced Sydney Box in 1969. The following year, she married Gerald Gardiner, who had been Lord Chancellor. She died in Hendon, London in 1991. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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