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Henry O'Neill in Dark Shadows (1944)

Benutzerrezensionen

Dark Shadows

6 Bewertungen
6/10

Early study of psychology and murder

Short containing a psychology lesson with a whodunit crime story. Interesting because of the time in which it was made, 1944, when psychology wasn't given much credibility. Not a great film, but competent and historically interesting.
  • john4films
  • 24. Okt. 2002
  • Permalink
5/10

Silly psychological mumbo-jumbo, though quite enjoyable.

"Dark Shadows" is yet another Crime Does Not Pay short from MGM. However, like several other of the wartime films in this series, the format has changed--with no MGM Crime Reporter or fake government official to introduce the film. The only big similarity with the other films is that the film is rather violent.

Henry O'Neill stars in this film as an investigating psychiatrist. When another psychiatrist is murdered, he helps the police investigate the dead man's patients to see if any of them is responsible. Ultimately, he uncovers the culprit--leading to a sensationally violent ending.

This film was heavily influenced by Analytic psychology--the work of Freud and his contemporaries. Because of this, the film suffers from a few common assumptions of the day--assumptions which would today be seen as inaccurate or even silly. First, the whole murder plot boils down to a patient who hates his mother. Mothers were a common source of mental illnesses according to analysts--and moms took a HUGE beating for decades because of this. Second, symbolism was very important--with repetitive patterns--such as trains and graves in this short. While people do sometimes repeat patterns (such as marrying a spouse similar to their father or mother), the need to find patterns and shapes was very much in vogue in 1944.

The bottom line is that this film is enjoyable. Also, parts of it made me laugh, since I used to be a practicing psychotherapist and see how antiquated therapy was back in the day--with an almost instant cure at the film's end and an over-reliance on unproven (and often inaccurate) theories. Still, it is interesting to see a film based on psychiatry and mental illness--a real rarity at the time.
  • planktonrules
  • 23. Nov. 2013
  • Permalink
5/10

How Are We To Know That Crime Does Not Pay Unless The MGM Crime Reporter Says So?

Psychiatrist Henry O'Neill tracks down a serial killer by asking irrelevant questions and wandering to a grave site in this episode in MGM's long-running series.

It's one of the many short and long-form movies of the period which thought that psychiatry would uncover all our dark impulses and solve crime. The best known example is Hitchcock's SPELLBOUND, but there were many others, including a pipe-smoking Lee J. Cobb.

It's not one of the better entries in the series. And since there's no MGM Crime Reporter to tell you, I will: CRIME DOES NOT PAY!
  • boblipton
  • 29. Mai 2020
  • Permalink
5/10

Dark Feelings

  • kapelusznik18
  • 24. Mai 2017
  • Permalink
5/10

babbling scene

It's the "A Crime Does Not Pay Subject" series. Someone killed Dr. Elton Parkson. The files of his psychological patients are strangely laid out on the floor. Dr. Everett Colner carefully examines them. He is assisted by Parkson's nurse Jean Smith and then she is killed. Colner interviews the staff and the patients connected to Parkson's files.

This starts like any other mystery TV procedural. It's a little weird that a doctor is looking at patients' files for murder motives. The questioning scene gets a bit hokey. I can't take the babbling nonsense. It's all due to a little childhood incident. It's not one of the best in the series.
  • SnoopyStyle
  • 11. Nov. 2022
  • Permalink
5/10

Painful to watch Psyco-babble

If your knowledge of Psychology hasn't advanced beyond Freud, or you're a superstitious type, you may like this. Otherwise, you'll likely be appalled at the insights the Psychiatrist pulls out of - very - thin air. Everyone seems to be driven by Oedipal impulses so blatant it's embarrassing.
  • billsoccer
  • 3. Sept. 2020
  • Permalink

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