The Snake Pit (1948)
7/10
Olivia's finest performance
19 April 2024
Before The Snake Pit, I didn't really like Olivia de Havilland. I thought she was just the dizzy love interest in Errol Flynn flicks, and I couldn't understand why she won two Academy Awards. But then I saw The Snake Pit. It's such a contrast from her usual, smiling, contained performances. There's one scene where she locks herself in a bathroom, afraid of the asylum workers capturing her and forcing terrible treatment on her. They lure her out by telling her her husband is there for a visit, and her trust is betrayed as they hold her down and tie her in a strait jacket. She screams and fights, finally breaking free and running through the halls of the hospital, calling for help. I didn't know she had the acting chops for such heavy dramatics! At the Hot Toasty Rag Awards, I proudly cast my vote for her. What a tour-de-force!

Not only was her performance powerful and emotional, but it stands the test of time. It would have been easy to play the film as a melodrama, but her intricacies added quietness and realism to a very dramatic character. Watching it almost eighty years later, it's not one of those old movies that make you cringe at the dated acting style. Instead, you watch it and ask, "Why didn't she win the Oscar?" Then, you learn she won the Rag, and you feel a lot better.

There's a very famous moment from The Snake Pit, one that has since been mimicked ad nauseum, but Anatole Litvak's 1948 film contains the original. When Olivia accepts her fate in the insane asylum, her narration compares it to being tossed into a snake pit. Litvak zooms out from above, and we see the dancing, twitching, patients turn into writhing snakes at a distance. It's an incredible effect, and even though many, many more movies have been made about asylums, this image will live forever as the most visceral comparison.
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