Dark Victory (1939) | |
Plot Synopsis (continued)
At the Long Island Hunt and Horse Club HORSE SHOW, she appears from the riding ring in her horse-riding apparel, accepting applause for winning the first prize cup: "Hurrah for me." Insulted and offended, Carrie observes Judith's cynical attitude, her promiscuous, hedonistic behavior, and her obliviousness to what people say about her: "Drink the town dry. Take all their husbands and sweethearts...You can already fill the Yale Bowl with people who are sore at you. One more doesn't matter." In a bar adjoining the riding ring, after having changed into a white, sleek evening gown, Judith drinks at the bar with Alec, who reacts with amusement: "Here we go again." In the bar, she has a defiant confrontation with Dr. Steele and strikes back with unbridled viciousness:
After she has been called aside to accept a prize silver cup for her riding, both Dr. Steele and Alec defend Judith's reputation that is loudly besmirched by a fast-living barhopping male: "Judy's certainly on this town, all right." Judith enters the stables where Michael and a vet are ministering to Jessica's Girl, a horse lying on the straw that put up "a brave fight" and will survive. In the tack room where there's a stove fire for warmth from the cold, she is openly seductive, while he is concerned about her hard riding and suicidal living: "I think you've been going too hard lately, night and day." He betrays his long-time love and admiration for her from afar, believing that he is an attractive male with a temperament and nature similar to hers:
She slowly lights her own cigarette and throws the match on the floor, causing him to ask an ambivalently-sexual question. She responds with an answer that equates burning (or sexuality) with death:
When she directly asks him about his fear of mortality, he is unabashedly amorous towards her even though they are unequals of different socio-economic classes. After his forceful advance and outburst, she admits that she is dying. With a sudden revelation, she convinces herself that she should seek love, peace, and happiness and dignity, and make the most out of life in her final few months. She recalls Dr. Steele's advice that when it (death) comes, "it must be met beautifully and finely":
When she returns home late that night, Ann has been concerned about her welfare and unselfishly waited up for her. Judith reveals that she has repented and been "saved" from cynicism - she attempts to phone Dr. Steele to apologize. She is weary, depressed, lacks hope and even contemplates suicide - she tells Ann that waiting for death is the hardest thing:
Near dawn that same morning, Dr. Steele is in the living room of Alec's apartment. Judith, who has been searching all over town for them, rings the buzzer and is on her way up in the elevator. Before she arrives - still in her evening gown with a fur wrap, Alec tells the lucky Dr. Steele:
She has returned to Dr. Steele to humbly ask for his forgiveness and find peace and protection:
He accepts her completely and suddenly asks her to marry him. She gratefully accepts his offer, touched with joy in her heart:
The next scene fades into a view of the Steele's Vermont farmhome in the winter - she has moved in with her new husband. Idyllically happy, she can't imagine her past life of materialistic possessions and its accompanying complications: "Why do people complicate their lives so, Martha? All those horses and that house. Here we have nothing and yet we have everything." He conducts his research to find a cure for brain cancer in a laboratory and 'culture room' separated from the main house, and makes fun of her when she bursts in with a tray of lunch:
After not seeing Judith for three months, Ann has written from Long Island - she makes her first visit to Brattleboro, Vermont. With Judith in high spirits and passionately loving life, Dr. Steele speaks to Ann about the transformation and their pact to not speak about death:
By early springtime, the snow has melted, and Ann is opening a parcel containing a package of seeds ("Incomparabilis...Jonquilla Narcissus") for planting in a flower bed: "Be sure you plant them in the sun." Judith is excited about preparations for a trip to Philadelphia for the Grand National races, to see Challenger win. At the beginning of a long, poignant, heart-breaking closing scene, Judith's inevitable demise starts when she senses darkness with failing eyesight on a beautifully sunny day, as she digs in the garden and plants seeds with her best friend:
Suddenly, she pauses as she comprehends the truth - she realizes that she is going blind and death is only a few hours away. She gasps, grabs at her throat, and then throws her arms around Ann - they both cling to each other in terror. Ann sobs in Judith's arms: "The sun has gone. There are clouds. It is getting dark." In a reversal of roles, Judith comforts her: "It's all right...shhh." From the house, Dr. Steele excitedly calls out with news of changed plans: "We're not going to Philadelphia. We're going to New York. They just read a wire over the telephone." With her eyesight dimming fast, Judith tells Ann that they must withhold her condition: "Come on. Not a word." In the hallway of the house, Judith (with blurred vision) deceives her husband into believing her eyesight is not dimming, and has Ann read the transcribed telegram, inviting him to "present material at board meeting in New York...that means driving to Mills Junction to catch the four forty." Judith can neither go to New York nor let him go, but decides to send him off without her anyway, to receive justly-deserved recognition and accolades: "Ann, can't you see? I can't stop that." Even though she knows time is very short, she also sends Ann back to the garden:
Upstairs, she hears her husband proudly speak of his revered work: "Darling, you know what this means, don't you? It means in five or ten years, I'll begin to get someplace...Boy, I might even be acclaimed. Might even get our picture in the paper." Judith makes up excuses to remain in Vermont: "New York would bore me now, really it would. You see, this is my home here." Noticing that she is trembling, she covers up: "Can't a girl be a little sentimental? This is the first time we've been separated." She reassures him that she is not afraid to be alone or face death - she tells her husband that she understands and accepts the inevitable end that "will come as an old friend, gently and quietly." She dissuades him from joining her in death with his own suicide - instead, she asks her beloved husband/doctor to strike a blow for her whenever he achieves something in his work:
She helps him pack his suitcase and encourages him to go off to New York and have his "big moment" - she will dutifully "wait home as a proper wife should." She asks one final question of him: "Darling...tell me something. Have I been a good wife?" Without a word, he swings her around in his arms. She smiles: "That makes me very happy, happier than anything else. I've loved it so, every minute. How can I make you understand? Look out there - somehow, it's been like that, shining and quiet." In what only she knows will be a final goodbye, she delivers parting words:
She offers a few, last-minute practical tips to keep his spirits up: "Remember while you're away to tie your tie properly and brush your hair and for heaven's sakes, buy a new hat...Mind yourself in the big city...Hurry home." She carries off the deception flawlessly, not allowing Ann to protest and stop him. After her husband has left, she helps Ann plant his favorite flower, hyacinths, although she knows she won't ever live long enough to see them bloom:
As Ann cries sorrowfully, she comforts Ann:
Ann runs away in tears toward the driveway and an open field as Judith listens to the sounds of children playing in front of her house and goes indoors. At the foot of the stairs, she tells Martha: "I'm going up to lie down now." Feeling her way along, she starts climbing the stairs - one last time - she stops midway to embrace and say goodbye to her two dogs Daffy and Don. She haltingly climbs further toward her bedroom, kneels and offers a final prayer by her bedside. Martha has followed her and pulled the blind on the window, shutting out the rays of sunlight. Judith asks: "Is that you, Martha?" She eases herself onto her bed and lies down, telling her housekeeper to be dismissed, without hysterics:
Martha covers her with a comforter and then respectfully leaves the room and closes the door. Judith triumphantly and victoriously faces the end alone and dies in a dignified manner. A camera frames a close-up of Judith's sightless, staring face and then slowly blurs out-of-focus, signifying the end of her vision - and death. A heavenly chorus of voices accompanies her entrance into the void. |