Remember the Night (1940)

Remember the Night (1940)
8 / 10

Remember the Night is Mitchell Leisen’s 1940 American romantic drama about a Manhattan prosecutor who postpones a shoplifter’s trial until after Christmas and, learning she has nowhere to spend the holidays, takes her home to Indiana for Christmas with his mother. Barbara Stanwyck plays Lee Leander. Fred MacMurray plays John Sargent. Beulah Bondi plays Mrs. Sargent. Elizabeth Patterson plays Aunt Emma. Sterling Holloway plays Willie. Willard Robertson plays Francis X. O’Leary. The screenplay was written by Preston Sturges, his last work as a screenwriter before he moved to directing his own scripts. Paramount released the film in January 1940 to modest commercial reception, though its critical reputation has grown substantially since.

Sturges’s screenplay treats the romance as serious moral territory rather than as comic confection. Lee is genuinely guilty of theft. John genuinely intends to prosecute her after Christmas. The film does not resolve this through plot mechanism. It resolves through Lee’s eventual decision to take responsibility for what she did and John’s eventual recognition that their growing love does not change the legal facts of her case. The film argues that adult people can fall in love while also accepting that the love does not override the moral and legal structure they live inside. The ending is consequently more painful than the genre typically allows.

Preston Sturges’s Screenplay

This was Sturges’s last screenplay before he transitioned to directing. The Great McGinty would follow within months. Remember the Night shows the screenwriter at the height of his commercial-writing craft before he moved into the satirical comedy mode that would define his subsequent career. The screenplay’s tonal range from outright comedy through romance to genuine moral seriousness foreshadows the later Sturges films.

The cow-fence sequence and the comic episode at the Pennsylvania farmhouse with the rural justice of the peace are vintage Sturges comic mode. The Indiana Christmas-eve sequences and the closing courtroom scenes are something different: warmer, more vulnerable, more genuinely sad. Sturges could do both registers and the film moves between them without strain.

For Writers

Writers transitioning between modes leave fingerprints in their later work. Watch how Sturges’s later directorial signatures appear in this last screenwriter-only screenplay.

Stanwyck and MacMurray

Stanwyck and MacMurray would reunite four years later for Double Indemnity, the most famous film noir of the period. Remember the Night is the warm twin of that collaboration. The chemistry that would later carry murder and adultery here carries Christmas and forgiveness. The same two actors play two completely different relationships with equal conviction.

MacMurray’s John Sargent is one of his best dramatic roles. The character must be both a competent prosecutor and a man fundamentally capable of empathy, and MacMurray gives John the easy professional confidence the role requires while letting the gentler currents through in the Indiana sequences. The performance laid groundwork for the more complex MacMurray of the 1940s.

For Writers

Star pairings that work in one register often work in opposite registers because the chemistry is foundational rather than mode-specific. Stanwyck and MacMurray’s compatibility carries both Remember the Night’s Christmas warmth and Double Indemnity’s noir corruption.

The Indiana Christmas Sequences

Beulah Bondi’s Mrs. Sargent is the film’s quietest revelation. The character welcomes Lee into the family home without knowing Lee’s situation, then learns the full story and continues to welcome her with no diminishment of warmth. Bondi plays this without sentimentality. The kindness simply is the character.

The Christmas-eve scenes in the Indiana farmhouse have a settled rhythm that the New York and travel scenes lack. Leisen lets sequences breathe. The piano-singing scenes, the Christmas-morning gift opening, the cow-barn comic interlude: each gets time to register before the film returns to its forward narrative momentum. The temporary pastoral interval is what gives the closing courtroom scene its weight.

For Writers

Pastoral interludes in plots that return to harder material require genuine time to register. The Indiana sequences are the film’s emotional foundation precisely because the screenplay refuses to rush them.

Craft Note

Leisen and Sturges had a famously contentious relationship. Sturges believed Leisen’s direction was too pretty for his material and Leisen believed Sturges’s screenplays would benefit from more visual restraint. Their professional friction directly motivated Sturges’s move to directing his own work. Remember the Night represents the best version of their collaboration before the working relationship ended. The film grossed approximately one and a half million dollars and received no Academy Award nominations.

Verdict

Remember the Night is a hidden classic of both Christmas cinema and the romantic-drama genre. The Sturges screenplay, the Stanwyck-MacMurray chemistry, and Beulah Bondi’s quiet performance combine to produce something more durable than the period’s standard romantic-comedy output. Strongly recommended for households interested in the genre’s deeper canon.


FAQ

Who directed Remember the Night?

Mitchell Leisen directed the film. Leisen was a Paramount contract director who also directed Midnight, Easy Living, and Hold Back the Dawn.

Why was this Sturges’s last screenplay?

Sturges had been pushing Paramount to let him direct his own scripts for years. The studio relented after Remember the Night, and his first directorial effort, The Great McGinty, followed in mid-1940.

Did Stanwyck and MacMurray work together often?

Yes. They made four films together: Remember the Night in 1940, Double Indemnity in 1944, The Moonlighter in 1953, and There’s Always Tomorrow in 1956. Their professional collaboration spanned sixteen years.

Was Remember the Night a hit?

The film was moderately successful in 1940 but never reached the commercial level of other Stanwyck or MacMurray vehicles. Its critical reputation has grown substantially in subsequent decades.

Is Remember the Night available on physical media?

The film has had several home-video releases including Criterion’s Eclipse Series collection of pre-Sturges screenplays. Streaming availability varies seasonally.

Where was the film shot?

Primarily on Paramount soundstages with some second-unit location work for the cross-country drive sequences.

What is the film’s rating?

Remember the Night is unrated. The modern equivalent would be PG for thematic content.

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