A haunting melody.Reviewed by Deborah Francescutti, 2007-10-31
Glamorous Lana Turner in this stirring 1950 melodrama along with a
haunting melody.
George Cukor direction gave us the faces of Ms Turner as she
contemplated at the movie' closeure.
Will remember this one for a long while.
Looking forward to the DVD asap.
Must see if you like Ann DvorakReviewed by Christopher S. Smallwood, 2006-07-29
Didn't expect much from this movie as Lana Turner isn't really my
cup of tea. More of a Joan Crawford/Bette Davis fan. But really
enjoyed the movie and thought Turner quite good and believable when
she'd show her hard edge. And yes, a girl like this would be
attracted to Milland's goodness/unavailability.
Liked ALOT her moral dilemna and really found myself on the edge of
my seat whether she's succomb to the evil guy....who really was
also good. And Ann Dvorak! She is a tragic hoot. A great
performance by her.
Yeah, the story is pretty dumb...but the performances are really
good.
Clothes, my particular passion....ok....Lana was a bit thick in the
waste to carry them off.
Turner and Milland in a Fine George Cukor soaperReviewed by "Tee", 2006-06-05
This 1950 soap opera is not one of Lana Turner's best-known films
but it is one of her best movies. This glossy king-sized film
literally opened a new era and new career for Lana, no longer the
sweater girl of the forties but now a mature but still glamorous
woman specializing in lush morality plays, reaching her apex in the
genre at the end of the decade with PEYTON PLACE and IMITATION OF
LIFE. A LIFE OF HER OWN is very much in the tradition of those
films but had the added bonus of having the legendary director
George Cukor at the helm who gives this story more taste and
discretion than the somewhat overrated Douglas Sirk in similiar,
more celebrated films. Lana stars as a small-town girl who comes to
New York with a letter of introduction to a major modeling agency,
there she befriends fading model Ann Dvorak who briefly (VERY
briefly) takes Lana under her wing. Lana rises quickly to the top
of the modeling game and finds herself in a fling with married
businessman Ray Milland that isn't so easy to shake off.
This movie is a very engrossing soap with fine performances by
Turner and Milland and a showy if brief supporting turn by 1930's
starlet Ann Dvorak as a boozing glamour girl on the way out (note
the remarkably discreet scene where she bangs on the door of a
neighborhood pharmacy after closing hours for "cigarettes" and
emerges with not only a carton of smokes but a mysterious second
package suggesting liquour was not her only vice.) Also featured in
smallish but well played parts are Tom Ewell (in a rare non-comic
role), Jean Hagen, and Barry Sullivan, suprisingly successful
playing a sleazy playboy. While no classic, "A Life of Her Own" is
a remarkable production with a talented cast and director making a
truly human story that might have been lurid and false in less
capable hands.
Melodramatic Moral DecisionsReviewed by Kert Conrad, 2003-08-19
Contrary to what some other reviewers have written, I happen to find this movie quite enjoyable and a prime example of the "Happiness At What Cost?" theme that was explored in many outstanding films of the 30's, 40's and 50's. A few that come to mind are DODSWORTH (Walter Huston), ALL THIS AND HEAVEN TOO (Bette Davis) and THE SHINING HOUR (Joan Crawford), all of which dealt with people having to ask the question: Do I grab my one and only chance for true love, even though others may suffer for it, or do I follow the noble course of action and sacrifice my own happiness so that the feelings of others will be spared? This film certainly doesn't measure up to any of those classics, but it's still a very entertaining drama. The moral/ethical decision, in this case, involves lonely Lana Turner trying to choose whether to force her lover Ray Milland to leave his wife (an invalid confined to a wheelchair) or to let him go and leave his marriage intact. Soap opera? Maybe, but it's great stuff to watch on a cold winter afternoon.
A Waste of Your TimeReviewed by Anonymous, 2001-01-02
A completely forgettable vehicle for Lana Turner, filmed in black and white so not even the clothing can be enjoyed. Turner plays an eager young model who falls in love with a married man. Unfortunately, Ms. Turner looks older than her thirty or so years in this picture, making her unbelievable as the fresh faced girl from Kansas. Her meteoric rise to the top takes about ten minutes and why she can't get a date with anyone but Ray Milland, a married man from out of town, is not too clear. It's the kind of over blown sap-fest contract players were forced to submit to back then. I'm a big fan of Lana's, and this was just too boring to finish watching.