Magnificent Obsession
This was the moment unashamed... when this man and this woman felt the first ecstasy of their Magnificent Obsession
Reckless playboy Bob Merrick crashes his speedboat, requiring emergency attention from the town’s only resuscitator while a local hero, Dr. Phillips, dies waiting for the life-saving device. Merrick then tries to right his wrongs with the doctor’s widow, Helen, falling in love with her in the process.
Trailers & Videos
![Thumbnail for video: Magnificent Obsession (1954) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p] Thumbnail for video: Magnificent Obsession (1954) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]](https://img.youtube.com/vi/mk10gqsonlg/hqdefault.jpg)
Magnificent Obsession (1954) ORIGINAL TRAILER [HD 1080p]
Cast

Jane Wyman
Helen Phillips

Rock Hudson
Bob Merrick

Barbara Rush
Joyce Phillips

Agnes Moorehead
Nancy Ashford

Otto Kruger
Edward Randolph

Gregg Palmer
Tom Masterson

Paul Cavanagh
Dr. Henry Giraud

Sara Shane
Valerie Daniels

Richard H. Cutting
Dr. Derwin Dodge

Judy Nugent
Judy

Helen Kleeb
Mrs. Eden

Rudolph Anders
Dr. Albert Fuss

Fred Nurney
Dr. Laradetti

John Mylong
Dr. Hofer

Mae Clarke
Mrs. Miller

Harvey Grant
Chris

Joseph Mell
Dan

William Leslie
Bar Patron (uncredited)
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Reviews
John Chard
Doc Rock and the playboy redemption.
Magnificent Obsession is adapted from a novel by Lloyd C Douglas, and it had been previously filmed back in 1935 with Irene Dunne and Robert Taylor in the leads. Here the piece is directed by melodrama maestro Douglas Sirk and features Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson as the emotionally charged leads. The story revolves around Bob Merrick (Hudson), a playboy who is inadvertently responsible for the death of Helen Phillips' (Wyman) husband. As he starts to find a soul in amongst his playboy image, he desperately wants to make peace with Helen, but during his efforts to apologise she is tragically blinded in an accident. As Helen recuperates, Bob worms his way into Helen's life by posing as someone else, they amazingly start to fall in love, but the truth will out and tragedy seems to permanently hover over this newly formed alliance.
As with the best of Douglas Sirk, Magnificent Obsession is loaded with drama and unashamed assaults on the viewers emotional fortitude. It is quite simply a weeper, a stress relief server for those so inclined. No bad thing that, though, just as long as the viewer is fully aware of the type of film they are getting. To only market it as a romance piece is something of a disservice because at the core it's one of redemption, where even religion is neatly threaded into the deftly assembled script. Technically it has a lot going for it, Frank Skinner's score is smoothly gorgeous, with Chopin's Études perfectly accompanying the blossoming romance, while the colour photography from Russell Metty is sensibly unobtrusive. Rock Hudson would jump on to the map with his performance here (proving he could act if given the meat to chew on), and Wyman would get Oscar nomination for her emotionally driven turn. All in all it's a film that's well worth watching, on proviso if you choose to be in that weeper frame of mind! 7.5/10
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