USA, 1942. Director Julien Duvivier. 127min.

Directed by French filmmaker Julien Duvivier during his WWII exile in Hollywood, Tales of Manhattan presents a series of individual stories with different characters and situations. In this neglected film, the link is a dress suit that seems to carry bad luck. Unlike many anthology films in which the linking device is little more than a convention, here the exchange of the suit carries an extra charge with its owners cutting across different class and social strata. An amazingly diverse cast fits into the suit as it migrates not only from wearer to wearer but also from genre to genre and through various fashionable situations (theatrical performances, weddings, concerts). Exchanges of the tailcoat allow switches in romantic partners, social status, even as it comes apart at the seams and inspires a shirtsleeve solidarity. If the finale now seems condescending in its portrayal of black stereotypes, Paul Robeson’s passionate articulation of the Popular Front vision of social equality nonetheless has poignant resonance.

With Charles Boyer, Rita Hayworth and Ginger Rogers.
Costumes by Irene, Bernard Newman, Dolly Tree, Gwen Wakeling and Oleg Cassini.

Past screenings

Wearing Time: Past, Present, Future, Dream – London
Friday 24 March 2017, 20:30 | Genesis Cinema
With introduction by Timothy Long. Screened alongside In Which We Live: Being the Story of a Suit Told by Itself (1944).

Wearing Time: Past, Present, Future, Dream – New York
Saturday 21 April 2018, 16:00 | Museum of the Moving Image

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