7/10
Whose life is it, anyway?
3 April 2022
There has been no shortage of films in recent decades dealing with the highly emotive subject of Euthanasia but such was not always the case.

It was Willi Forst's controversial 'The Sinner' from 1951 that is generally credited with breaking the taboo whilst devoted cinephiles will no doubt be aware of Wolfgang Liebeneiner's powerful 'I accuse' from 1941 which has been airbrushed out of film history because of its promotion of the Aktion T4 Euthanasia programme. The most effective episode of a mediocre British film from 1954 called 'Front Page Story' features a trial of a wife accused of 'mercy killing'.

Imagine one's surprise therefore to stumble across this novelty from Hollywood of the late 1940's adapted from Ernst Lothar's novel 'The Mills of God' and directed by Michael Gordon before he fell foul of the confounded HUAC.

Although a courageous, gripping and very well made film with committed performances from its first rate cast, it has been obliged neither to condemn nor condone the actions of a Judge who can longer bear to see his beloved wife suffer from a devastating and terminal disease. The final speech delivered by the brilliant Fredric March in which he declares that although legally innocent of murder he remains morally guilty, very much reflects the ethical and religious sensibilities of the time and the need not to offend them!
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