+

poster of September Affair
Rating: 6/10 by 20 users

September Affair (1950)

An industrialist and a pianist meet on a trip and fall in love. Through a quirk of fate, they are reported dead in a crash though they weren't on the plane. This gives them the opportunity to live together free from their previous lives. Unfortunately, this artificial arrangement leads to greater and greater stress. Eventually the situation collapses when they come to pursue their original, individual interests without choosing a common path.

Directing:
  • William Dieterle
  • Richard McWhorter
Writing:
  • Robert Thoeren
  • Fritz Rotter
  • Ben Hecht
Stars:
Release Date: Wed, Oct 18, 1950

Rating: 6/10 by 20 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 44 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: capri, florence, italy, pianist

Joan Fontaine
Manina Stuart
Joseph Cotten
David Lawrence
Françoise Rosay
Maria Salvatini
Jessica Tandy
Catherine Lawrence
Robert Arthur
David Lawrence Jr.
Jimmy Lydon
Johnny Wilson
Lou Steele
Vittorio Portini

CinemaSerf

Joseph Cotton is "David", a wealthy engineer travelling post war Italy when he encounters concert pianist "Manina" (Joan Fontaine). They have some time to kill before their flight back to the US, so go exploring and manage to miss their plane. Serendipity takes a hand - the plane crashes - affording them the perfect opportunity to play dead and allow their burgeoning romance to develop... All seems to be going to plan until his wife "Catherine" (Jessica Tandy) and young son "David Jr." (Robert Arthur) decide to visit Italy and call upon her friend "Maria" (Françoise Rosay) and... Fontaine is good in this film, she always had an understated class that this role suits well. She has a chemistry with Cotton - never the most natural of actors in a romantic setting - and with some lovely Capri scenery (perhaps monochrome photography doesn't quite do justice to the "Blue Grotto") this makes for quite an engaging drama with a fine score from Victor Young and a charming refrain of Kurt Weill's "September Song" to add a maturity to this, admittedly rather thoughtless and selfish, love story.


My Favorite

Welcome back!

Support Us

Like Movienade?

Please buy us a coffee

scan qr code