Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
Emily Brontë
Rev. Arthur Nicholls
Charlotte Brontë
William Makepeace Thackeray
Anne Brontë
Branwell Brontë
Lady Thornton
Constantin Heger
Rev. Brontë
Aunt Elizabeth Branwell
Man (uncredited)
Mr. Ames (uncredited)
Sir John Thornton (uncredited)
French Student (uncredited)
Mademoiselle Blanche (uncredited)
Mr. George Smith (uncredited)
Land Agent (uncredited)
Coachman with Frightened Horses (uncredited)
Englishman (uncredited)
Club Member (uncredited)
Tabby (uncredited)
Elderly Reader of "Jane Eyre" (uncredited)
Hoggs (uncredited)
Shepherd (uncredited)
Club Member (uncredited)
Marie (uncredited)
French Student (uncredited)
Mrs. Ingraham (uncredited)
Giselle (uncredited)
Mrs. Thornton's Friend at the Ball (uncredited)
Ted (uncredited)
Mademoiselle Heger (uncredited)
Club Member (uncredited)
French Student (uncredited)
Elderly Woman (uncredited)
Guest at Thornton's Ball (uncredited)
French Student (uncredited)
Mrs. Crump (uncredited)
Charles Dickens (uncredited)
Man (uncredited)
Man (uncredited)
Mr. Tripp (uncredited)
Farmer (uncredited)
Waiter (uncredited)
Englishwoman (uncredited)
Written by Geronimo1967 on 2022-07-07
Based (very) loosely on real events, this is quite an entertaining tale of two strong willed Brontë women - Charlotte (Olivia de Havilland) and Emily (Ida Lupino) and of their enthusiasm for local curate "Nicholls" (the rather decent but insipid Paul Henreid) and for getting their wonderfully imaginative stories published. In that aspiration, they are joined by their sister Anne (Nancy Coleman) and all of this takes place as they must try and save their artist brother Bramwell (Arthur Kennedy) from a future at the bottom of a bottle. The cast and the writing deliver an engaging and authentic tale of family, a strong and close family that found itself struggling to satisfy the needs of its constituents - and as with many films set around this period, it demonstrates just how difficult it was for a woman to be given the opportunity to do just about anything that did not fit with her marital duties. There are a couple of scenes stolen by the avuncular Sydney Greenstreet's portrayal of William Makepeace Thackerey - whose "Vanity Fair" was contemporary with this timeframe - and by the end I felt I understood a little more of the complexities of this family and of the times. Well worth a watch.