All That Heaven Allows

A switched-off television screen is the mirror for a vast yet terribly personal emptiness in this Douglas Sirk melodrama. Jane Wyman is a widow "too beautiful to be lonely" but too smart not to be, in her small-town nouveau-riche milieu. Rock Hudson comes to prune her garden and uproots her life. Rock wants to be her redeemer: "come see my silver-tipped spruce," he urges, and she does. But from the start, family and friends try to seduce the lady back. Her grown children-at once idiotic and all-powerful, as Sirkian offspring are wont to be-present her with the final coup de Tube one snowy Christmas, then leave her to contemplate her new electronic friend. Sirk's elegiac mood piece is also a furious battle of ideas that, à la Thoreau, locates the American sadness in a violent split from nature.

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