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Waterloo Bridge (1940)

 
 
 

Synopsis of Waterloo Bridge

Given the omnipresence of the Motion Picture Production Code in 1940, the second film version of Robert E. Sherwood's Waterloo Bridge would have to be laundered and softened to pass muster. In the original, made in 1931, the heroine is nothing more or less than a streetwalker, patrolling London's Waterloo Bridge during World War I in hopes of picking up the occasional soldier. She falls in love with one of her clients, a young officer from an aristocratic family. Gently informed by the young man's mother that any marriage would be absolutely impossible, the streetwalker tearfully agrees, letting her beau down gently before ending her own life by walking directly into the path of an enemy bomb. In the remake, told in flashback as a means of "distancing" the audience from what few unsavory story elements were left, the heroine, Vivien Leigh, starts out as a virginal ballerina. Robert Taylor, a British officer from a wealthy family, falls in love with Vivien and brings her home to his folks. This time around, Taylor's uncle (C. Aubrey Smith), impressed by Vivien's sincerity, reluctantly agrees to the upcoming marriage. When Taylor marches off to war, Vivien abandons an important dance recital to bid her fiance goodbye, losing her job as a result. Later, she is led to believe that Taylor has been killed in battle. Thus impoverished and aggrieved, she is given a motivation for turning to prostitution, a plot element deemed unecessary in the original-which indeed it was. Now the stage is set for her final sacrifice, though the suicidal elements are carefully weeded out. Waterloo Bridge was remade for a second time in 1956 as Gaby, with Leslie Caron and John Kerr. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
109 mins

Complete Cast of Waterloo Bridge


Director(s):
Mervyn LeRoy
Writer(s):
George FroeschelS.N. BehrmannHans Rameau
Producer(s):
Sidney FranklinSidney Franklin
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR(Questionable for Children)
Categories:
Romance
Waterloo Bridge Awards:
  • 1940 - National Board of Review - Best Acting
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    Linda D.

    This remake of the 1931 version stars Vivien Lee as the ballerina turned street walker when her soldier-fiancee is presumably killed in the war...expect the unexpected naturally and have a box of kleenex close by. Miss Lee looks ever so lovely in this old classic.

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    Megan E.

    While Robert Taylor's non-Scottish accent is a bit annoying, the rest of the film is wonderful! It will soon be released on DVD and all film buffs should try to watch it. Vivien Leigh is wonderful as a young girl in love with a soldier who believes he is lost and uses her only asset to survive. Definitely worth watching!

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    Richard Y.

    A worthwhile movie.

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