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Critic’s Choice: Criterion brings ‘Mildred Pierce’ out of the noir shadows

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It may not be as faithful or definitive an adaptation of the James M. Cain novel as Todd Haynes’ 2011 HBO miniseries, but Michael Curtiz’s “Mildred Pierce” (1945) remains a rip-roaring entertainment. Joan Crawford won an Academy Award for her performance as a single mother-turned-restaurateur, seeking a better life for her children in the shadows of a starkly monochrome Los Angeles — only to learn, in classic noir tradition, that the road to hell is forever paved with good intentions.

The supplemental materials on the new Criterion Collection edition (available on Blu-ray and DVD) include a conversation with critics Molly Haskell and Robert Polito, and the 2002 feature-length documentary “Joan Crawford: The Ultimate Movie Star.” There’s also a 2006 Q&A with Ann Blyth, whose Oscar-nominated performance as Veda, the monstrously rotten fruit of Mildred’s loins, remains one of the movie’s signature pleasures.

justin.chang@latimes.com

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