Genre: Drama
Director: Daniel Mann
Starring: Burt Lancaster, Shirley Booth, Terry Moore, Richard Jaeckel
Running Time: 99 minutes
Synopsis: Middle-aged childless couple Doc and Lola Delaney (Burt Lancaster and Shirley Booth) are stuck in a loveless marriage. He is a chiropractor and recovering alcoholic, while she is frumpy, lonely, and still grieving the disappearance of her dog Sheba. They rent a room in their house to vivacious college art student Marie (Terry Moore), who has a serious boyfriend back home but nevertheless starts flirting with classmate Turk (Richard Jaeckel). Marie's presence stirs up Doc's passion and upsets the household dynamics.
What Works Well: This adaptation of the William Inge stage play is an in-depth, soaked-to-the-soul exploration of loss. Doc and Lola have endured the loss of innocence, a lost child, the loss of her parents' support, the truncation of his career, and his descent into alcoholism. Now her dog's disappearance is a sad postscript residing on top of a cold marriage with a wrecked past and no present. Marie waltzes into this context full of vibrancy and hope, rocking Doc and Lola out of complacency and into emotional and unstable reactions. Director Daniel Mann creates dynamism through searing but understated character interactions, and Shirley Booth excels in translating her stage role to the screen, portraying Lola as a pathetically grating wife clinging to selected memories as a survival mechanism.
What Does Not Work As Well: Burt Lancaster's performance cannot be faulted, but his robust and confident screen persona is misaligned with Doc's fragile psychology.
Key Quote:
Doc: Alcoholics are mostly disappointed men.
Lola: Sure, I know...you was never disappointed, were you, Doc?

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