A Patch of Blue

December. 10,1965      NR
Rating:
8
Trailer Synopsis Cast

A blind, uneducated white girl is befriended by a black man, who becomes determined to help her escape her impoverished and abusive home life.

Sidney Poitier as  Gordon Ralfe
Shelley Winters as  Rose-Ann D'Arcey
Elizabeth Hartman as  Selina D'Arcey
Wallace Ford as  Ole Pa
Ivan Dixon as  Mark Ralfe
Elisabeth Fraser as  Sadie
John Qualen as  Mr. Faber
Dorothy Lovett as  Woman (uncredited)
Gregg Martell as  Man (uncredited)
Robert B. Williams as  Neighbor (uncredited)

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Reviews

SunnyHello
1965/12/10

Nice effects though.

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MoPoshy
1965/12/11

Absolutely brilliant

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Invaderbank
1965/12/12

The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.

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Guillelmina
1965/12/13

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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djmes
1965/12/14

This is a very good movie. "A Patch of Blue" with Sidney Poitier,1965. I usually can't get into tearjerkers but this one was really good. Poitier befriends then falls in love with a neglected and abused blind girl. His being black complicates matters. Poitier is great in an (for him) understated role. Black & white photography actually adds to the feeling. Try & catch this.

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sddavis63
1965/12/15

There is so much going on in this movie. It's about the struggles of being blind in a sighted world. It's about the challenge of being black in a white world. It's about abuse and alcoholism. It's a romance of sorts. It's interesting social commentary. Fifty years later it runs the risk of being dated - because society has changed so much - and yet it didn't feel dated. It felt relevant. It got a reaction out of me. It's an absolutely marvellous movie; almost flawless. I came across it basically by accident, noted that it starred Sidney Poitier and thought I'd take a chance on it. It was one of the best decisions I've ever made.Mostly, this movie works because of the spectacular performances from basically all the members of the cast. I watched the movie because of Poitier's name - and he was superb - but the real standout of this movie was Elizabeth Hartman. As Selina D'Arcy she plays a young, friendless, naive and lonely blind woman who's basically trapped in an apartment with her abusive mother and an alcoholic grandfather. Hartman makes Selina wonderfully vulnerable - a sad character; one you can't help but feel protective toward, even just watching her on the screen. One day Selina gets to go to the park - against her mother's wishes. And she meets Gordon, played by Poitier. They become friends - very close friends, in a very innocent way. Gordon bonds with her, also protective toward her and generous to her and kind to her, and with absolutely no ulterior motive at all. It's a relationship between two vulnerable people - a black man and a blind woman. Selina doesn't know Gordon is black, and he doesn't tell her, but that means that even though she can't see, she sees him for what he is - kind, generous, sensitive. "Beautiful" she tells him eventually, even after she's discovered that he's black. She falls in love with him. He loves her in return - whether he was "in love" with her is left as an open question. In some ways his feelings come across as more fraternal, or even paternal, and eventually Gordon sets himself to the task of getting her out of her mother's apartment and into a special school. The movie doesn't have a "happily ever after" ending. We're left not knowing what would become of their relationship - but the relationship between them was fascinating to watch as it developed. They shared a tremendous chemistry, and both put on spectacular performances. This was actually Hartman's acting debut. She was nominated for the Oscar for Best Actress - deservedly so, and it's hard to believe based on this performance that she never really made it big in Hollywood. Perhaps her brilliant performance as the troubled Selina was a by-product of the fact that she was herself a very tormented young woman who suffered from severe depression and eventually committed suicide at the age of 43. Poitier was his usual excellent self as Gordon, and Shelley Winters put on an outstanding performance as Selina's mother Rose-Ann. Rose- Ann was abusive toward Selina, treated her more like a servant than a daughter with a barely disguised contempt. My sense from the dialogue is that she was a prostitute, although I don't think that was stated outright. Toward the end of the movie, before Gordon helps Selina escape before Rose-Ann moved them with a friend to a new apartment, the impression was that Rose-Ann was going to use Selina as part of her business - presumably wanting to turn her into a prostitute as well. Winters was so convincing in the role that she heightened the sense of sympathy and protectiveness you feel for Selina. Forget Gordon. I wanted to reach into the screen and drag this girl out of that apartment and to a place of safety. Winters actually won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for this role. Wallace Ford had a lesser role, but was also very good as Selina's grandfather "Ole Pa" - and the fight scene between Ole Pa and Rose- Ann was caustic. As this was Hartman's first film, it was also the last film of Ford's career, that had stretched back to the late 1920's. Ironically, Poitier won nothing for "A Patch of Blue," and yet it was the biggest box office success of his career.This movie is almost perfect. Why "almost"? Well, my only quibble is that aside from a few stares there really didn't seem to be much reaction from anyone (except Rose Ann) to this very public relationship between a black man and a young white woman. That just didn't strike me as realistic. It's a minor thing, perhaps, but I kept waiting for someone to confront them with a "get away from that white woman" sort of comment - and it never happened. It is a minor quibble, but it was on my mind. But - almost perfect! (9/10)

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kols
1965/12/16

Along with the rest of the cast. All giving Career performances.And a huge surprise for me.Saw it first shortly after it came out and was, frankly, unimpressed. This was the sixties and I was a teen radical and the whole movie just seemed pasty and whiny and slow and superficial and made no sense. A Fifties-ish mentality clashing wildly with our anti-racism militancy.Well OPPS and take my own advice - see the movie on the screen, not the one colored by your expectations.I'm delighted that, when recently broadcast on TCM, I decided to record and archive it as An Important Movie.Turns out this time I saw a movie that is infinitely more complex than the simple story I remembered and, rather than being dated, treats its theme of racism in a style that is as fresh and intimate today as it may have been in 1965.The key is the subtlety of of the movie's cinematography, its use of light and dark to evoke layers of the Light and Darkness of the human soul, telling a parallel, broader story in counterpoint to the simple love story portrayed by Poitier and Hartman, both stories twined as a totally engaging dance.There are other, symbolic devices in addition to light and dark; small things that, like plays on expectations, reinforce that dance. Part of the fun is watching them play out.And, though I remembered a negative ending, based on race, this time I recognized its much more positive ending based on a lightly expressed 'Possibility': the last step of the dance leaving room for a future.1965 was a year of strong contenders so I was delighted that Shelly Winters received an Oscar for her performance but, based on my updated perception, wish that the Academy had granted A Patch of Blue a nomination for Best Picture and Poitier Best Actor.A World Class Movie.P.S. OK, one example device: the Mustang parked on the street as Poitier rushes out of his apartment house at the end. Just a dim, shadowy rear-end glimpse but still an evocation of individualism, freedom and joy that that car, specifically that car, still represents - even to those who weren't teenagers in the '60s.

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Syl
1965/12/17

Shelley Winters deserved an Academy Award as the hideous mother of Selina, the blind girl played beautifully by Elizabeth Hartman. Of course, Sidney Poitier plays the African American man in a time of civil rights and racism where he befriends the lonely blind girl, Selina, in the park. Of course, it can never be more than a friendship but you wish it was more than that because the two of them are like lonely creatures. Poitier's character is a scholar, educated, and well-liked in his position in the college. He assists Selina who lives with her mother in an unhappy living conditions. Her mother has chosen to give up working her blue collar job in a hotel for a job pleasing the men for more money with a friend. Of course, Selina doesn't want to move with her mother's friend. The relationship between Selina and her mother is extraordinarily played by two brilliant actresses, Winters and Hartman. I feel bad that Hartman never got the fame that she deserved.

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