[Film Review] The Bishop's Wife (1947) 7.3/10

Malvina 2022-10-14 21:29:26

Silver-screen glamor oozes from this vestigially cloying but devilishly feel-good Hollywood fable about an angel, descending from heaven in the physical form of Cary Grant, is assigned by the Almighty to answer the prayer of an Episcopal bishop Henry Brougham (Niven), who is preoccupied with his imminent fund-raising of a cathedral which puts a strain on his family life.

The angel with the name Dudley, a choir-conducting, ice-skating, harp-thrumming omnipotent being, comes clean with a dubious Henry of his mission and poses as his new assistant, squires Henry's neglected wife Julia (Young) to recollect her fondest memory, charms the entire household including the high-pitched housekeeper Matilda (Lanchester), Henry's prim secretary Mildred (Haden), and the Brougham's small daughter Debby (Grimes), also, convinces an atheist professor Wutheridge (Woolley) to finally knuckle down to write the history book he has been stalling ever since. Eventually, Dudley's mission is not to build a cathedral, the fund can be wisely disbursed to a more exigent need of its time, but to set Henry's derailed life back on track, right before the advert of Christmas.

But there is a hitch, predictably, Dudley develops a feeling for Julia, which raises the tension between him and Henry, who runs away with jealousy (no sagacious scribe to inject him with any scintilla of trust in his devoted wife), and it is all up to a virtuous Julia to pull the plug with a lachrymose face to adumbrate that Dudley's feeling is not unrequited, but bound by a wife's duty, however tempted, it is too sacrosanct for her to shuck that off, a moral lesson inculcated with a beguiling pretense of cinematic illusion.

While the three leads are deftly treading their designated paths with admirable expertise: Grant is particularly jaunty in Dudley's backhanded magickal tricks with an understated poker-face, Young radiates incredible bonhomie and saintliness and Niven, taking everything with a pinch of salt, perfectly offsets Grant's exuding charisma in his own sizzling pique, it is the witty special effects that mostly, gives the movie an endearing quality that weathers with the age and shifting ethos, a self-typing typewriter, a self-replenishing bottle of sherry and a fully-bedecked Christmas tree, it is indeed, small wonders that save the day in Henry Koster's vintage heart-warmer ensconced as a go-to holiday classic with wholesome contentment.

referential entries: Henry Koster's HARVEY (1950, 8.1/10); Alexander Hall's HERE COMES MR. JORDAN (1941, 7.4/10); Frank Capra's IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE (1946, 8.3/10).

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Extended Reading

The Bishop's Wife quotes

  • Prof. Wutheridge: How about dropping into my humble diggings for a bit of Yuletide cheer?

    [Dudley and Julia agree, and the trio head off to the professor's place]

    Prof. Wutheridge: There's a little sherry left. It's rather inferior grade, but potable.

    Dudley: [noticing the Christmas tree] Professor, I see you're quite a religious man.

    Prof. Wutheridge: What makes you think that?

    Dudley: You have an angel on your tree.

    Prof. Wutheridge: Well, Julia gave me that years ago.

    Julia Brougham: Why, your tree is beautiful, Professor.

    Prof. Wutheridge: It's disgraceful! However, it gives me the illusion of peace on earth, good will toward men.

  • Henry Brougham: [the meeting with Mrs. Hamilton has just concluded] What a ghastly afternoon. What a ghastly woman. And I trust she understood that I have no intention of being strangled by her purse strings.

    Julia Brougham: Oh, she did, and I was proud of you.

    Henry Brougham: I had a most un-Christian impulse to take those blueprints and give her a good whack over the... mink coat.

    Julia Brougham: I thought you stood up to her magnificently.

    Henry Brougham: I appreciate your appreciation, but what about my cathedral?

    Julia Brougham: May I make a suggestion, Henry? Why not postpone the cathedral? At least forget about it until after Christmas.

    Henry Brougham: Impossible. The house of God cannot just be put off. This cathedral must rise. Plenty of other rich people in this town, and if I had to enlist their financial enthusiasm, then I shall have to take advantage of their Yuletide spirit.

    Julia Brougham: Oh, I can see it all now, the McWhithers, the Hornes, the Van Deusens. The luncheons, the committee meetings. And you, you there, flattering them, kowtowing to them, *begging* them.

    Henry Brougham: It's got to be done.

    Julia Brougham: Oh, Henry, if you could see your poor, harassed face.

    Henry Brougham: Well, you haven't done very much to help it!