The old family doctor ( Hal Holbrook) is called upon for specialized information that is so transparently dangerous that the audience snickers. She spreads rumors that could be corrected in an instant if anyone bothered. Martha deviously tells Helen one thing and Jackson another, and we can hear the screenplay creaking in her dialogue. The plot lumbers on its way to setting up the finale. He consistently does the wrong thing just because the film needs him to. What's frustrating is that little of the evil-doing would be possible if Jackson behaved at any moment like a normal, intelligent person. The general outlines of this scheme are visible early in the film, and the details grow more graphic, right up until a "push! push!'' childbirth scene that is given a whole new spin. Once she has one, of course, Helen may become unnecessary. Martha devises a way to inspire the young couple to leave New York and move to Kilronan, and we gather she hopes to breed a male heir to Kilronan by Jackson, out of Helen. "Started as a stable girl,'' Alice tells Helen, supplying a graphic explanation of the ways in which a woman such as Martha not only breeds horses in the figurative sense, but is right there in the middle of the fray when a mare needs calming or a stallion needs guidance. Is Martha jealous of Helen's sexual relationship with her son? Not at all. The youngsters are deep into lust, which seizes them at inopportune moments, so that they make love on the floor of the entry hall one night, while Martha observes from a shadowed landing. As of June 2020, the Internet Movie Database lists Shakespeare as having writing credit on 1,500 films, including those under production but not yet released. "She can't keep 'em,'' sniffs feisty old Alice ( Nina Foch), Jackson's paternal grandmother, who lives in a nursing home and is prepared to talk to anyone, anytime, about Martha's devious ways. The Guinness Book of Records lists 410 feature-length film and TV versions of William Shakespeare s plays, making Shakespeare the most filmed author ever in any language. "It's a Catholic thing,'' Jackson explains, but when Martha accidentally finds the naked Helen in her son's bed, she doesn't seem very perturbed, and I suspect the Catholic theme is there only because Hollywood traditionally depends on the church for props and atmosphere whenever true evil needs to be evoked. Martha is a controlling woman, possessive about her beloved son.
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