Uncle Silas


1h 38m 1947

Brief Synopsis

A young woman's uncle and governess plot to kill her for her inheritance.

Film Details

Also Known As
Inheritance, The
Genre
Drama
Crime
Release Date
1947

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 38m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Synopsis

A young woman's uncle and governess plot to kill her for her inheritance.

Film Details

Also Known As
Inheritance, The
Genre
Drama
Crime
Release Date
1947

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 38m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Articles

Uncle Silas aka The Inheritance


A relic from an earlier era when gothic Victorian melodramas were all the rage, Uncle Silas (1947, released in the U.S. as The Inheritance) is an adaptation of Irish writer J. Sheridan Le Fanu's novel which was actually an elaboration of his 1851 short story, "A Passage in the Secret History of an Irish Countess." As you can surmise from the title, Le Fanu's story was an earlier form of the Harlequin romance genre, steeped in an atmosphere of old dark houses, decadent aristocrats and mysterious locked rooms. Le Fanu is best known for his vampire novella, Camilla, which has enjoyed numerous film adaptations, but Uncle Silas was a popular page-turner for its era.

At the center of the story is Caroline Ruthyn (Jean Simmons), a teenaged heiress (her name was Maud in the original novel) whose father dies suddenly, leaving her guardianship in the hands of his brother, Silas (Derrick De Marney). Although once considered the black sheep of the family and a murder suspect to boot, Silas appears to have mended his ways and is now a contrite and kindly uncle to Caroline on first impressions. It is only after she has moved into his dark, gloomy mansion that his real intentions slowly emerge. He's after her inheritance, of course, and must work quickly before the seventeen-year-old reaches legal age and her independence. In the meantime, Silas entrusts his unscrupulous son Dudley (Manning Whiley) and a malevolent French governess, Madame de la Rougierre (Katina Paxinou), in his schemes to wrest Caroline's fortunes from her, either by trickery or violence if necessary. As Caroline becomes a virtual prisoner in Silas's home, all contact with her sympathetic cousin Lady Monica Waring (Sophie Stewart), faithful family friend, Dr. Bryerly (Esmond Knight), and Lord Ilbury (Derek Bond), an interested suitor, are slowly cut off.

In many ways, Uncle Silas is pure melodramatic claptrap in the manner of other gothic damsel-in-distress movies such as Fanny by Gaslight (1944), The Night Has Eyes (1942) or the more refined Gaslight (1940) and its 1944 American remake with Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer. One of the film's major weaknesses is the depiction of its teenage heroine who is so naïve and trusting of her suspicious uncle, even when she has already detected signs of his deadly nature, that it is difficult to take the proceedings seriously. In fact, Derrick De Marney's performance as Uncle Silas is more comical than frightening as he alternates between catatonic fits, temper tantrums and exaggerated civility, all of which bears some similarities to Ernest Thesiger's mad scientist in Bride of Frankenstein (1935). Yet, De Marney's acting is a model of restraint compared to Katina Paxinou's teeth bared, scene-chewing performance as the demonic French governess with a weakness for claret. Yet, if taken in the right vein, the film's melodramatic excesses can be quite entertaining as long as you suspend disbelief.

Uncle Silas works best as a showcase for Jean Simmons who was on the verge of major stardom in England at the time. She would receive her first Oscar® nomination (for Hamlet, 1948, the following year) and soon dominate the newspaper gossip columns in 1950 with a well-publicized marriage to matinee idol Stewart Granger. Her subsequent move to Hollywood in 1953 brought her much more challenging and rewarding films than Uncle Silas but she is nonetheless effective here as the fetching and victimized heroine. Even better is the beautifully rendered art direction by Ralph Brinton which emphasizes the creepy interiors of Uncle Silas's decaying mansion with its cobweb-covered secret passageways and dusty, dank rooms. The cinematography by Robert Krasker and Nigel Huke further enhances the gothic mood with horror film lighting designs and shadows. In a minor role as a threatening, mute servant, Guy Rolfe turns up briefly; he would later capitalize on his striking but sinister features in such films as Mr. Sardonicus (1961) and Dolls (1987).

In England, Uncle Silas was a commercial success though critics were divided over the film's merits. The New York Times critic considered it "some of the most atrociously archaic melodrama in recent memory" and various British reviewers found the movie's tone wildly uneven, which wasn't helped by a tepid romance between Caroline and Lord Ilbury. Still, Le Fanu's original novel would serve as the inspiration for Arthur Conan Doyle's The Firm of Girdlestone and later be remade in 1987 as The Dark Angel with Peter O'Toole as Silas, Beatie Edney as Maud and Guy Rolfe in the Dr. Bryerly role.

Producers: Laurence Irving, Josef Somlo
Director: Charles Frank
Screenplay: Ben Travers; Sheridan Le Fanu
Cinematography: Robert Krasker
Art Direction: Ralph Brinton
Music: Alan Rawsthorne
Film Editing: Ralph Kemplen
Cast: Jean Simmons (Caroline Ruthyn), Katina Paxinou (Madame de la Rougierre), Derrick De Marney (Uncle Silas), Derek Bond (Lord Richard Ilbury), Sophie Stewart (Lady Monica Waring), Esmond Knight (Dr. Bryerly), Reginald Tate (Austin Ruthyn), Manning Whiley (Dudley Ruthyn), Marjorie Rhodes (Mrs. Rusk), John Laurie (Giles), Frederick Burtwell (Branston).
BW-98m.

by Jeff Stafford
Uncle Silas Aka The Inheritance

Uncle Silas aka The Inheritance

A relic from an earlier era when gothic Victorian melodramas were all the rage, Uncle Silas (1947, released in the U.S. as The Inheritance) is an adaptation of Irish writer J. Sheridan Le Fanu's novel which was actually an elaboration of his 1851 short story, "A Passage in the Secret History of an Irish Countess." As you can surmise from the title, Le Fanu's story was an earlier form of the Harlequin romance genre, steeped in an atmosphere of old dark houses, decadent aristocrats and mysterious locked rooms. Le Fanu is best known for his vampire novella, Camilla, which has enjoyed numerous film adaptations, but Uncle Silas was a popular page-turner for its era. At the center of the story is Caroline Ruthyn (Jean Simmons), a teenaged heiress (her name was Maud in the original novel) whose father dies suddenly, leaving her guardianship in the hands of his brother, Silas (Derrick De Marney). Although once considered the black sheep of the family and a murder suspect to boot, Silas appears to have mended his ways and is now a contrite and kindly uncle to Caroline on first impressions. It is only after she has moved into his dark, gloomy mansion that his real intentions slowly emerge. He's after her inheritance, of course, and must work quickly before the seventeen-year-old reaches legal age and her independence. In the meantime, Silas entrusts his unscrupulous son Dudley (Manning Whiley) and a malevolent French governess, Madame de la Rougierre (Katina Paxinou), in his schemes to wrest Caroline's fortunes from her, either by trickery or violence if necessary. As Caroline becomes a virtual prisoner in Silas's home, all contact with her sympathetic cousin Lady Monica Waring (Sophie Stewart), faithful family friend, Dr. Bryerly (Esmond Knight), and Lord Ilbury (Derek Bond), an interested suitor, are slowly cut off. In many ways, Uncle Silas is pure melodramatic claptrap in the manner of other gothic damsel-in-distress movies such as Fanny by Gaslight (1944), The Night Has Eyes (1942) or the more refined Gaslight (1940) and its 1944 American remake with Ingrid Bergman and Charles Boyer. One of the film's major weaknesses is the depiction of its teenage heroine who is so naïve and trusting of her suspicious uncle, even when she has already detected signs of his deadly nature, that it is difficult to take the proceedings seriously. In fact, Derrick De Marney's performance as Uncle Silas is more comical than frightening as he alternates between catatonic fits, temper tantrums and exaggerated civility, all of which bears some similarities to Ernest Thesiger's mad scientist in Bride of Frankenstein (1935). Yet, De Marney's acting is a model of restraint compared to Katina Paxinou's teeth bared, scene-chewing performance as the demonic French governess with a weakness for claret. Yet, if taken in the right vein, the film's melodramatic excesses can be quite entertaining as long as you suspend disbelief. Uncle Silas works best as a showcase for Jean Simmons who was on the verge of major stardom in England at the time. She would receive her first Oscar® nomination (for Hamlet, 1948, the following year) and soon dominate the newspaper gossip columns in 1950 with a well-publicized marriage to matinee idol Stewart Granger. Her subsequent move to Hollywood in 1953 brought her much more challenging and rewarding films than Uncle Silas but she is nonetheless effective here as the fetching and victimized heroine. Even better is the beautifully rendered art direction by Ralph Brinton which emphasizes the creepy interiors of Uncle Silas's decaying mansion with its cobweb-covered secret passageways and dusty, dank rooms. The cinematography by Robert Krasker and Nigel Huke further enhances the gothic mood with horror film lighting designs and shadows. In a minor role as a threatening, mute servant, Guy Rolfe turns up briefly; he would later capitalize on his striking but sinister features in such films as Mr. Sardonicus (1961) and Dolls (1987). In England, Uncle Silas was a commercial success though critics were divided over the film's merits. The New York Times critic considered it "some of the most atrociously archaic melodrama in recent memory" and various British reviewers found the movie's tone wildly uneven, which wasn't helped by a tepid romance between Caroline and Lord Ilbury. Still, Le Fanu's original novel would serve as the inspiration for Arthur Conan Doyle's The Firm of Girdlestone and later be remade in 1987 as The Dark Angel with Peter O'Toole as Silas, Beatie Edney as Maud and Guy Rolfe in the Dr. Bryerly role. Producers: Laurence Irving, Josef Somlo Director: Charles Frank Screenplay: Ben Travers; Sheridan Le Fanu Cinematography: Robert Krasker Art Direction: Ralph Brinton Music: Alan Rawsthorne Film Editing: Ralph Kemplen Cast: Jean Simmons (Caroline Ruthyn), Katina Paxinou (Madame de la Rougierre), Derrick De Marney (Uncle Silas), Derek Bond (Lord Richard Ilbury), Sophie Stewart (Lady Monica Waring), Esmond Knight (Dr. Bryerly), Reginald Tate (Austin Ruthyn), Manning Whiley (Dudley Ruthyn), Marjorie Rhodes (Mrs. Rusk), John Laurie (Giles), Frederick Burtwell (Branston). BW-98m. by Jeff Stafford

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