Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Many critics rate "The Razor's Edge" as one of Fox's best ever films - that is very debatable, but it certainly is very good, and much of the credit must go to the excellent cast, headed by a somewhat war-weary Tyrone Power, and this weariness suits his character of Larry.

  2. Breaking out and finding freedom despite the shackles that bind, the Razor's Edge is a surprisingly dark drama from Somerset Maugham’s novel.

    • Edmund Goulding
    • PG
    • Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney, John Payne
  3. Mar 20, 2021 · SPOILER ALERT! The Razor’s Edge is a novel by W. Somerset Maugham, written in 1944. It is about a man that is shocked by his experience during the Great War, which changes him forever and sets ...

  4. The Razor's Edge: Directed by Edmund Goulding. With Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney, John Payne, Anne Baxter. An adventuresome young man goes off to find himself and loses his socialite fiancée in the process.

    • (6.9K)
    • Drama, Romance
    • Edmund Goulding
    • 1946-12-25
    • Introduction
    • A Very Unusual Young Man
    • Mixed Reviews
    • The Best Years of Our Lives
    • Zanuck's Baby
    • Compared to Maugham's Novel
    • Larry Darrell
    • Gene Tierney as Isabel
    • A Success Story
    • Sources

    The Razor's Edgeis a personal favorite. When I say favorite, it just might be, if you catch me on the right day, my favorite movie of all time. It's not without its faults but it's an impeccably cast 145-minute drama that moves at a swift pace carried by some big ideas. I love this movie, even if I do think that final execution of the biggest idea ...

    Character Maugham first meets Larry Darrell in Chicago shortly after the first World War. Intrigued by this first meeting he comes to know Larry better through brief yet intimate sporadic intervals over a period of years that takes us through the Stock Market Crash and beyond into the early 1930's. On the surface what makes Larry so unusual is that...

    The film was a great success with audiences even if it received mixed reviews from the critics. Matthew Kennedy, in his biography of the film's director, Edmund Goulding, wrote that "Even today, The Razor's Edge elicits vacillating critical opinions. Some see a moving, well-mounted examination of the search for the meaning in life. Others see a pre...

    Despite some critics poking fun The Razor's Edge did receive an Academy Award nomination for Best Picture in 1947, but lost to what was undeniably the film of the moment, the Samuel Goldwyn Company's post-war triumph The Best Years of Our Lives (1946). The Razor's Edgenever stood a chance. The two stories actually emerge from the same relevant spar...

    The Razor's Edge would become 20th Century-Fox producer Darryl F. Zanuck's post-war pet project. The heavy-handed Zanuck told George Cukor, his original choice to direct the film, that "if I cannot make The Razor's Edgemy way, I would rather not make it at all" (Behlmer 96). Despite the great success of the novel The Razor's Edgehadn't drawn a lot ...

    Despite objections from such respected sources as Cukor and Maugham himself, the script as filmed masterfully trims and tones the novel into an even more gripping story than Maugham had originally written. The movie shuffles Maugham's storytelling, all first person from the author/character's perspective on the page, and places each incident in its...

    Returning to the basic story of our hero Larry, after the party at the open he embarks upon his quest to find himself. He returns to Paris where he refuses Elliott's hospitality in favor of roughing it in the coal mines. It's here he meets Kosti (Fritz Kortner), who's a man on the run from a greater power himself. Kosti offers us the most apt descr...

    This is perfect casting. Beyond being one of the most beautiful women of the screen, absolutely necessary for the part of Isabel, Gene Tierney can play icy better than most. She has to be extremely cold as Isabel, yet beautiful and cultured enough to nearly trap Larry and keep him from his self-fulfillment. There's a scene in the novel which didn't...

    Ultimately The Razor's Edgeis showing us something that is specifically spoken in Maugham's book. In a scene which doesn't appear in the movie Sophie meets up with Maugham after her rejection of Larry. Maugham is, of course, curious to know what set Sophie back, why she's run away from Larry. Sophie tells him, "Darling, when it came to the point I ...

    Behlmer, Rudy, ed. Memo from Darryl F. Zanuck: The Golden Years at Twentieth Century Fox. New York: Grove Press, 1993.
    Guiles, Fred Lawrence. Tyrone Power: The Last Idol. Berkley Edition. New York: Berkley Books, 1980.
    Kael, Pauline. 5001 Nights at the Movies. First Holt Paperbacks Edition. New York: Henry Holt and Company, LLC., 1991.
    Kennedy, Matthew. Edmund Goulding's Dark Victory: Hollywood's Genius Bad Boy. Madison: The University of Wisconsin Press, 2004.
  5. Sep 5, 2019 · The Razor’s Edge is based on the popular novel by Sommerset Maughan, and in 1946 it was the prestige picture of the year. It’s funny going back to these sorts of films to see if such esteemed still maintain their status.

  6. People also ask

  7. Jul 6, 2022 · The Razor’s Edge is a sprawling and lavish film that takes place in what one could almost term a few different segments but come together perfectly under the guiding hand of Edmund Goulding (Nightmare Alley. With the cast’s brilliant performances to boot, including an Oscar-winning turn by Gene Tierney, the film is an audacious post-World ...

  1. People also search for