Crawford Crazed and Killing in Possessed (1947)
Joan Crawford did enough melodramas by 1947 to make it certain she'd finally go nuts. Possessed was among ones that treated mental illness in terms of stark horror. When JC falls off deep ends here, look out. Bad enough dealing with her characters when sane, but add crazy for a chaser and Joan's more lethal than Mildred Pierce on worst days. The WarnerCrawfords that had begun with such momentum were tailing off. Extravagance was to blame, costs on each since Mildred Pierce headed up and up. That trendsetter had brought $5.6 million in worldwide rentals on $1.4 million spent, but follow-up Humoresque realized less ($3.4) for much more sunk ($2.1 million). The hemorrhage went to $2.5 million in negative cost to finish Possessed, and this time WB would lose money. Future Crawfords would have to be made for less, or fold up.
By her early forties, JC could still look attractive in a pinch, but she'd hardened to image a public would remember best of a career's whole, and no one took much interest now unless dragon Joan wielded a rod, which she does in Possessed, but only for a finish. Crawford had in ways become a distaff Cagney; when she wasn't violent, the audience was bored. Jerry Wald produced, and had grasp of what her vehicles needed, 1947 still a boom enough year for WB to figure on getting spent dollars back. Being wrong on that account must have come as shock to company bookkeepers. Directing Curtis Bernhardt had shown aptitude for hot house emotion with My Reputationand A Stolen Life, donning Vincent Sherman's hat for wrangling divas (Barbara Stanwyck and Bette Davis, respectively). He guides well and recalled later that Crawford was easier to work with than
Possessed was the kind of yarn a fan audience could lose themselves utterly in,
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