The opening shots of Possessed achieve their goal: it is startling to see Joan Crawford wandering around without makeup, her hair drawn plainly back, in the early dawn of a grungily real location. Her unbalanced character, Louise, has been traumatized and must now recount her nightmare, in true film noir fashion, to a questioning psychoanalyst.
Possessed has an abundance of noir atmosphere (everything gets to be as shadowy as the inside of Louise’s brain) and a full ration of Crawford at her most florid. The story is a wild ride: an invalid wife, a lonely widower, a daughter resentful of former nurse Louise’s new status in the household. Plus there’s the true crazy-making love of Louise’s life, an engineer (Van Heflin) whose heart is as dry as his manner is breezy ("When a woman kisses me, Louise, she has to take pot luck"). The film’s overripe writing is balanced by Joseph Valentine’s sharp-angled photography, to say nothing of the vectors of Joan Crawford’s sharp-angled face. As a companion piece to Crawford’s Mildred Pierce performance, this one takes Mildred to her extreme–single-minded obsession and derangement. What Crawford lacked in subtlety she made up for in sheer commitment, which perhaps suits this character very well.
DVD Features:Audio Commentary:Commentary by Film Historian Drew Casper
Featurette:New Featurette The Quintessential Film Noir