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Now, Voyager
Overlook Pick

Now, Voyager

It happens in the best of families. But you'd never think it could happen to her!
74
User Score232 ratings
TMDB 7.416+19421h 57mEnglish
RomanceDrama

Synopsis

A woman suffers a nervous breakdown and from an oppressive mother before being freed by the love of a man she meets on a cruise.

Director
Irving RapperFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Warner Bros. Pictures1 production companies
Release
October 22, 1942Released
Box Office
$4MBudget $877,000

Top Cast

8 of 27
Bette Davis
Bette Davis
Charlotte Vale
Paul Henreid
Paul Henreid
Jeremiah 'Jerry' Duvaux Durrance
Claude Rains
Claude Rains
Dr. Jaquith
Gladys Cooper
Gladys Cooper
Mrs. Henry Vale
Bonita Granville
Bonita Granville
June Vale
John Loder
John Loder
Elliot Livingston
Ilka Chase
Ilka Chase
Lisa Vale
Lee Patrick
Lee Patrick
Deb McIntyre

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jun 26, 2022

Bette Davis at her best took some beating, and here is one such an example. Together with expertly delivered performances from Claude Rains and Gladys Cooper we are presented with an emotional roller-coaster of a film. Davis starts as the hen-pecked daughter of Cooper, until she encounters Rains' "Dr. Jaquith" who decides that he may be able to help this erstwhile shy spinster find herself a little purpose in life. She is despatched on a cruise liner where she meets the married "Jerry" (Paul Henried) and though there is a semblance of a romance, it can come to nothing and it is only after a long, occasionally torrid but always riveting series of scenarios, that we begin to arrive at anything that might resemble a conclusion. Irving Rapper does really well to allow Max Steiner's score and an excellent Casey Robinson screenplay to empower his stars to create and develop characters in whom - especially Davis - we can readily invest. I have never been Henreid's biggest fan, I always found him just a little bit insipid, but he works well here as does a really on form Cooper in the role of her mother. Seen very recently on a big screen again after almost 80 years, and it has lost none of it's style, panache and wonderfully paced sense of the dramatic. Great stuff!

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