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Todsünde

Originaltitel: Leave Her to Heaven
  • 1945
  • 16
  • 1 Std. 50 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,6/10
15.848
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Gene Tierney, Jeanne Crain, and Cornel Wilde in Todsünde (1945)
Trailer for this drama based on the novel
trailer wiedergeben2:13
1 Video
99+ Fotos
Film NoirPsychological ThrillerDramaRomanceThriller

Ein Schriftsteller verliebt sich in einen jungen Sozialisten und ist bald verheiratet, aber ihre obsessive Liebe zu ihm droht, das Verderben von ihnen beiden und allen anderen um sie herum z... Alles lesenEin Schriftsteller verliebt sich in einen jungen Sozialisten und ist bald verheiratet, aber ihre obsessive Liebe zu ihm droht, das Verderben von ihnen beiden und allen anderen um sie herum zu sein.Ein Schriftsteller verliebt sich in einen jungen Sozialisten und ist bald verheiratet, aber ihre obsessive Liebe zu ihm droht, das Verderben von ihnen beiden und allen anderen um sie herum zu sein.

  • Regie
    • John M. Stahl
  • Drehbuch
    • Jo Swerling
    • Ben Ames Williams
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Gene Tierney
    • Cornel Wilde
    • Jeanne Crain
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,6/10
    15.848
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John M. Stahl
    • Drehbuch
      • Jo Swerling
      • Ben Ames Williams
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Gene Tierney
      • Cornel Wilde
      • Jeanne Crain
    • 196Benutzerrezensionen
    • 82Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Oscar gewonnen
      • 6 Gewinne & 5 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Leave Her To Heaven
    Trailer 2:13
    Leave Her To Heaven

    Fotos155

    Poster ansehen
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    + 149
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    Topbesetzung30

    Ändern
    Gene Tierney
    Gene Tierney
    • Ellen Berent Harland
    Cornel Wilde
    Cornel Wilde
    • Richard Harland
    Jeanne Crain
    Jeanne Crain
    • Ruth Berent
    Vincent Price
    Vincent Price
    • Russell Quinton
    Mary Philips
    Mary Philips
    • Mrs. Berent
    Ray Collins
    Ray Collins
    • Glen Robie
    Gene Lockhart
    Gene Lockhart
    • Dr. Saunders
    Reed Hadley
    Reed Hadley
    • Dr. Mason
    Darryl Hickman
    Darryl Hickman
    • Danny Harland
    Chill Wills
    Chill Wills
    • Leick Thome
    Gertrude Astor
    Gertrude Astor
    • Prison Matron
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Guy Beach
    • Sheriff
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Audrey Betz
    • Cook at Robie's Ranch
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Olive Blakeney
    Olive Blakeney
    • Mrs. Louise Robie
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ruth Clifford
    Ruth Clifford
    • Telephone Operator
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Harry Depp
    Harry Depp
    • Catterson - the Chemist
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Paul Everton
    Paul Everton
    • The Judge
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Jim Farley
    Jim Farley
    • Train Conductor
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • John M. Stahl
    • Drehbuch
      • Jo Swerling
      • Ben Ames Williams
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen196

    7,615.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    10ted-129

    Color Time Travel - A film that must be experienced on the Big Screen

    No one can watch this without remembering Gene Tierney's searing blue eyes, Jeanne Crain's face of innocence, or Cornel Wilde (lightyears from The Naked Prey) here looking like a photo of Pierre & Gilles come to life. It's 110 minutes of color-time-travel basking in the surreally saturated Technicolor palette of the mid 40's.

    For those who have been denied the experience of watching the recently restored version with a rapt audience on a big screen as happened April 26, 2008 at San Francisco's Castro Theatre, I can only hope you'll contact a film preservation-minded theater in your area.

    Though I've watched this film on DVD, nothing prepared me for the impact of the big screen. The closeups alone will take your breath away.

    Is it melodrama or is it noir?--leave that to Heaven!
    7blanche-2

    No point leaving her there - she never made it

    Like many post-war films, "Leave Her to Heaven" is a study of a troubled individual. Very troubled. This film was a great setup for Gene Tierney to go on and play the manipulative, selfish Isabel in "The Razor's Edge." She looked like a goddess and projected a certain austerity, both of which made her good for this type of role.

    Tierney plays an obsessively possessive woman who lets nothing and no one get in the way of the object of her affections. In this case, it's Cornel Wilde, whose appeal has always been lost on me. Her mother and adoptive sister (Jeanne Crain) suspect that Ellen has a few problems but sublimate their feelings until they can't even look at her anymore. Ellen is still mourning the death of her father and apparently so dominated his attention that it destroyed his relationship with his wife. "Ellen loved him too much," her mother says. And how much did daddy love her, one wonders, thinking with a modern sensibility. And how exactly did he die? After captivating Wilde, Tierney sets to work making sure he never has a minute with anyone else...in any way necessary! The scene in the lake with her crippled brother-in-law is truly frightening.

    Though Tierney, in my opinion, was one of the most beautiful women in films, she was never, ever more glorious looking than in this vibrantly photographed production. The most thrilling scene for me is when she scatters her father's ashes - though some may find the music a little strong, I thought it very powerful and atmospheric, particularly in that scene.

    Believe it or not, "Leave Her to Heaven" was remade as a TV movie with Loni Anderson, which always prompts a friend of mine to say, when a film is mentioned, "Are you talking about the original or the Loni Anderson version?" There's only one version worth talking about, and it's this one.
    7ackstasis

    "I'll never let you go. Never, never, never"

    I don't think I agree with those who have designated 'Leave Her to Heaven (1945)' a film noir. This Technicolor picture – and it's surprising how much the presence of colour can distort the tone of a film – feels much closer to the claustrophobic domestic melodramas of the same period, such as Hitchcock's 'Rebecca (1940)' and 'Suspicion (1941),' and Cukor's 'Gaslight (1944).' But there's one important difference. By reversing the gender roles, and placing the power in the hands of the wife, director John M. Stahl here creates a formidable femme fatale, personified by the lovely and luminous Gene Tierney. The vibrant Technicolor photography is certainly pleasing to the eye, and the saturated colours add a perhaps-unintended touch of the surreal, but the dazzling colour palette distracts from and obstructs the film's darker themes. As much as I wouldn't like to deprive myself of Tierney's sparkling green eyes, I think that, in terms of atmosphere, 'Leave Her to Heaven' would have worked better in black-and-white.

    The film starts off in the classic noir style: told in flashback, the story opens with popular author Richard Harland (Cornel Wilde), who meets an alluring woman, Ellen Berent (Tierney), on a train. Ellen quickly charms Richard with her dazzling looks and strong personality; soon, despite her own engagement to a prominent lawyer (Vincent Price), she has proposed their marriage, an offer he finds impossible to refuse. Here, 'Leave Her to Heaven' takes a distinct turn in storytelling approach, abruptly shifting its attention to Ellen's perspective, at which point we begin to recognise that perhaps she isn't as lovely as her new husband has been led to believe. The new couple move to Richard's secluded lakeside lodge, where they must also care for his crippled younger brother, Danny (Darryl Hickman, giving one of those "excited boy scout" child performances that were popular in the 1940s). As the weeks go by, Ellen's near-obsessive love for Richard begins to brood anger, hatred and jealousy, culminating in the cruelest of acts.

    Tierney's character initially elicits an amount of sympathy, especially given Richard's apparent inability to recognise his wife's desperate need for privacy and intimacy in their relationship. However, it doesn't take long before her behaviour, fuelled by suspicion and paranoia, becomes entirely contemptible, and there's no longer any trace of the charming enchantress we saw in 'Laura (1944).' Ellen's psychosis is an intriguing one: she was obviously obsessed with love for her own father – what Freud called "feminine Oedipus attitude," or Electra complex – and, following his death, subsequently fell in love with Richard, who bears a remarkable resemblance to him. Such is her passion for her father, through Richard, that she cannot bear to share him with anybody; thus, her mania stems from the simple notion that "she loves too much." Ellen's murders are shocking in their own low-key simplicity, and Tierney, who received her only Oscar nomination for the role, carries out her evils with an icily-impassive face. But, geez, even this chilling portrayal can't make me stop loving her.
    8Lejink

    Rainbow noir...

    Can a film noir be effective in glorious colour or is that a contradiction in terms? Anyway I found this lesser-known thriller to be as exciting and involving as any other black-and-white-mean-streets scenario that the 40's threw up. Tightly plotted, well acted and above all, beautifully photographed, I was gripped from first to last. My only caveats might have been the "framing" device of Cornel Wilde's lawyer's top-and-tail introduction and epilogue, which just takes away a little of the dramatic tension, an over-intrusive musical score, particularly at Wilde and Tierney's first "strangers on a train" meeting and also the fact that more wasn't made of the conclusion of the otherwise tautly drawn crucial trial scene. The acting is top-rate, with no discernible weak links. Wilde, as the duped author, shows hidden depths to his handsome exterior, Crain, in a sub De-Havilland part modulates her performance winningly as her character's importance to the plot develops and Vincent Price is absolutely excellent as Tierney's abandoned fiancé, a lawyer on the make who convincingly destroys Wilde and Crain in his vengeful piece-de-resistance as the prosecuting counsel. What a shame he was later reduced to his stereotype cackling mad-man persona of seemingly dozens of horror films. He's a revelation here, almost stealing the movie in said trial scene where he's made to recite long pieces of staccato dialogue which he delivers pitch-perfect. Gene Tierney, of course, is enthralling in the pivotal role of the possessed / possessive Ellen, who uses her obvious beauty and sophistication to ensnare Wilde, before taking off into psychopath territory, which sees her effectively kill Wilde's disabled but adored younger brother and devise an almost perfect beyond-the-grave trap for Wilde and Crain to fall into. Great as all these pluses are, I keep coming back to the cinematography which captures like no other film I've ever seen tones of radiant beauty in almost every shot, both interior and exterior. In fact all I can say to finish is that I could find very little to fault this glorious but unheralded example of the golden age of Hollywood.
    dbdumonteil

    Incest through a third party.

    The melodrama of which Stahl was one of the masters throughout the thirties had muted,probably because the importance of the film noir in the following decade."Leave her to heaven' is as much a film noir as a melodrama.What's particularly puzzling is the color. Like some Lang ,HItchcock or Tourneur works ("secret beyond the door" "spellbound" or "cat people",for instance) ,this is par excellence a Freudian movie.The heroine has never solved her Oedipus complex :she has always been in love with her father -dig the scene when Gene Tierney rides her horse as she throws her father's ashes away. The love she could not make with her father ,she will make it through a third party: a husband who resembles her dad. This could be fine.She loves her husband to the exclusion of all others .But there are others ,and they are all living threats.So these intruders will be enemies.The scene when Tierney sees her family coming through binoculars can be compared to an attack of Indians or bandits when the hero is alone in a remote fort in an adventure film ,as Bertrand Tavernier pointed out in "50 ans de cinéma américain". Had the heroine preserved her intimacy -and how stupid her husband was not to have understood that!-,maybe nothing would have happened.THe color,which might seem irrelevant in a film noir ,is actually necessary because "back of the moon" ,the island in the middle of the lake is a paradise ,soon to become a lost paradise,then a living hell. A probably never better Gene Tierney outshines every other member of the cast ,which is first-rate though.Little by little,we see her become a monster ,and the actress's performance is so convincing (along with a superb script from which a lot of today's writers could draw inspiration) that it gives her horrible crimes an implacable logic.Like in a Greek tragedy. "Leave her to heaven " is by no means "romantic trash" .It's the crowning of Stahl 's career in which he transcends both melodrama and film noir.

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    • Wissenswertes
      It was cited by director Martin Scorsese as one of his favorite films of all time, and he assessed Gene Tierney as one of the most underrated actresses of the Golden Era.
    • Patzer
      Ellen's method of scattering her father's ashes (flinging the urn from side to side during a horseback ride through the desert) would leave both her and the horse covered in her father's remains.
    • Zitate

      Richard Harland: When I looked at you, exotic words drifted across the mirror of my mind like clouds across the summer sky.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in M*A*S*H: House Arrest (1975)
    • Soundtracks
      Nocturne, Op. 27, No. 2
      (uncredited)

      Music by Frédéric Chopin

      Played on the piano by Ruth

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 24. November 1950 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Streaming on "AMT2.0 - Remember?" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "andyyelbid" YouTube Channel
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Que el cielo la juzgue
    • Drehorte
      • Sedona, Arizona, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Twentieth Century Fox
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    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 928 $
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      1 Stunde 50 Minuten
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    Gene Tierney, Jeanne Crain, and Cornel Wilde in Todsünde (1945)
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    By what name was Todsünde (1945) officially released in India in English?
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