Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuConvicted murderess Valerie Carns (Ann Blyth) is being transported to Norwich to be executed when a flood strands her and her guards at a convent hospital. Nurse Sister Mary (Claudette Colbe... Alles lesenConvicted murderess Valerie Carns (Ann Blyth) is being transported to Norwich to be executed when a flood strands her and her guards at a convent hospital. Nurse Sister Mary (Claudette Colbert) becomes convinced of her innocence and sets out to find the real killer.Convicted murderess Valerie Carns (Ann Blyth) is being transported to Norwich to be executed when a flood strands her and her guards at a convent hospital. Nurse Sister Mary (Claudette Colbert) becomes convinced of her innocence and sets out to find the real killer.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Village Woman
- (Nicht genannt)
- Villager
- (Nicht genannt)
- Mr. Moore
- (Nicht genannt)
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Although best remembered these days for his cynical depictions of middle-class America, director Douglas Sirk is adept at portraying the humble arrogance of nuns. Certainly the performances are all excellent; I was particularly impressed by Connie Gilchrist as a shrewd and sympathetic nun. DP William H. Daniels matches the lighting levels to the dark of the storms and the hopelessness of Miss Blyth's plight. Still, in the end, it's another murder mystery and you know the actual murderer will turn up among the people stranded at the convent.
As Nurse Sister Mary (Claudette Colbert) grows to know Valerie, she becomes convinced of her innocence and sets out to find the real killer... and gets much disapproval from doing so ...
King of melodrama Douglas Sirk sharply directs this whodunnit in which several people harbour a secret that could stop an innocent woman from being hanged. There's wonderful gothic atmosphere, drama especially around the convent; corridors, shadows, arched windows and winding stone staircases, complete with a bell tower, of course. The cute face of Claudette Colbert is luminously-lit as she puts on her detective hat on in the race of ensnaring a killer - a killer amongst a small group in a convent. Sounds very much like Agatha Christie. Unlike in a Christie novel, it's not hard to guess who the killer is, but it's a highly enjoyable film nevertheless, with fine acting (Claudette Colbert, Ann Blithe and Michael Pate are standouts) and a very strong plot teemed with enough suspense. Maybe some flashbacks would've been good to flesh out the "murder". Ends with a nail biter sequence on top of a bell tower.
Claudette Colbert is as always, winning in her role as the nun with a feisty spirit she finds difficult to hold in check and Gladys Cooper lends her renowned haughtiness. While there are some well played smaller parts there's much wooden acting too which bogs the film down measurably.
One can't help wondering if Hitchcock ever saw this, as the climax in the bell tower is a forerunner of the famous scene from "Vertigo", but there the similarity ends.
Since Sirk went on to become an important director, this film is of certain interest, but not one to make any particular effort to hunt down.
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- WissenswertesCast members Michael Pate and Felippa Rock met while filming and married within the year, remaining so until Pate's death in 2008.
- PatzerMrs. Smithson is shown to have given birth to a full-sized baby, yet is shown lying flat on her back with a flat stomach in a hospital bed the day before. This was likely somewhat intentional, since filmmakers were loathe to show visibly pregnant women in the 1950s.
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
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- Thunder on the Hill
- Drehorte
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 24 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1