PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,9/10
1,7 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Añade un argumento en tu idiomaAfter her father is killed in an accident, mill heiress Deborah Chandler marries the plant manager, Selden Clark, but his motives are suspicious.After her father is killed in an accident, mill heiress Deborah Chandler marries the plant manager, Selden Clark, but his motives are suspicious.After her father is killed in an accident, mill heiress Deborah Chandler marries the plant manager, Selden Clark, but his motives are suspicious.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
William Gould
- Train Conductor
- (escenas eliminadas)
Fred Aldrich
- Bus Passenger
- (sin acreditar)
Gertrude Astor
- Woman in Drugstore
- (sin acreditar)
Ralph Brooks
- Counterman at Bus Depot
- (sin acreditar)
Morgan Brown
- Train Conductor
- (sin acreditar)
Peggie Castle
- Diner Waitress
- (sin acreditar)
Angela Clarke
- Clara May's Mother
- (sin acreditar)
David Clarke
- Moyer
- (sin acreditar)
Tom Coleman
- Plant Worker
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
#265moviwreview
Terrific blend of melodrama and noir, this film doesn't have any surprises but the sturdy direction by Michael Gordon and terrific performances by the always great Ida Lupino good Stephen McNally, good Howard Duff and the terrific Peggy Dow make this worth a watch.
The ending is a bit lazy and during a climactic fight scene, it's kind of a mistake in showing the stunt men's faces in closeup.
But, seeing Joe Besser 7 years before Stoogedom saying "stop crowding me" is worth a watch.
Fun fact: Lupino and Duff got off to a rocky start. She thought he was obnoxious. Obviously their time on screen made their relationship blossom since they got married in 1951.
WATCH IT
3.5/5.
Terrific blend of melodrama and noir, this film doesn't have any surprises but the sturdy direction by Michael Gordon and terrific performances by the always great Ida Lupino good Stephen McNally, good Howard Duff and the terrific Peggy Dow make this worth a watch.
The ending is a bit lazy and during a climactic fight scene, it's kind of a mistake in showing the stunt men's faces in closeup.
But, seeing Joe Besser 7 years before Stoogedom saying "stop crowding me" is worth a watch.
Fun fact: Lupino and Duff got off to a rocky start. She thought he was obnoxious. Obviously their time on screen made their relationship blossom since they got married in 1951.
WATCH IT
3.5/5.
As the opening credits roll, newly wedded Ida Lupino (as Deborah Chandler) desperately tries to stop herself from crashing her car. In an attempted murder, the brakes have been disabled. We see the car drive off a North Carolina bridge and listen to Ms. Lupino's ghostly narration. But don't assume she's dead, or that the accident ends the story
After the prologue fails to uncover a dead body, we begin earlier. Inheriting a profitable mill upon the subsequently suspicious death of her father, Lupino marries the plant's general manager Stephen McNally (as Selden Clark). Apparently, they were a long-term couple; the wedding is the first of several implausible story developments. Lupino asks, "Why didn't I see it?" Don't know...
When they arrive at Mr. McNally's mountain cabin for a honeymoon, sexy Peggy Dow (as Patricia Monahan) is waiting. She reveals herself as McNally's "little business trips" lover and is understandably furious with Lupino's presence. After husband and lover smack each other around, Lupino decides she wants the marriage annulled, but McNally refuses. Lupino runs off, changes her name to "Ann Carter" and tries to hide from her homicidal husband. She meets handsome and helpful Howard Duff (as Keith Ramsey), but he isn't sure who is telling the truth. Beautiful black-and-white photography by William Daniels, effective direction from Michael Gordon and engaging performances make "Woman in Hiding" well worth following.
******* Woman in Hiding (12/27/49) Michael Gordon ~ Ida Lupino, Howard Duff, Stephen McNally, Peggy Dow
When they arrive at Mr. McNally's mountain cabin for a honeymoon, sexy Peggy Dow (as Patricia Monahan) is waiting. She reveals herself as McNally's "little business trips" lover and is understandably furious with Lupino's presence. After husband and lover smack each other around, Lupino decides she wants the marriage annulled, but McNally refuses. Lupino runs off, changes her name to "Ann Carter" and tries to hide from her homicidal husband. She meets handsome and helpful Howard Duff (as Keith Ramsey), but he isn't sure who is telling the truth. Beautiful black-and-white photography by William Daniels, effective direction from Michael Gordon and engaging performances make "Woman in Hiding" well worth following.
******* Woman in Hiding (12/27/49) Michael Gordon ~ Ida Lupino, Howard Duff, Stephen McNally, Peggy Dow
Where has this movie been all of my life? It's a great noir. Deborah Chandler (Ida Lupino) is planning a long term trip to New York. Her dad (John Litel) owns the mill in Clarksville - A huge source of employment for the town. Seldon Clark IV (Steve McNally) is the general manager of the mill and has matrimonial aspirations towards Deborah, but Deborah's dad holds him in low esteem. He sees him as the same as the previous Seldon Clarks - headstrong dreamers with a flair for the melodramatic.
Just before Deborah can leave for New York, her father dies in an accident at the mill. This causes her to get closer to Seldon and they marry a few months later. On their honeymoon an angry past paramour of Seldon's shows up at their honeymoon cabin - she's obviously been there before with Seldon - and pretty much sows tons of doubt into Deborah's mind about Seldon's motives. A car accident with Deborah as the driver and lone passenger follows, and she believes it was a murder attempt by Seldon, so she decides to stay "dead".
Seldon has choreographed this entire thing out carefully, but the authorities not being able to find the body makes him wonder if Deborah isn't still alive. He puts out an ad in papers across the nation offering a five-thousand-dollar reward if she is found. His clever plan has been to claim Deborah was not in her right mind when she dashed off on their wedding night in their car, that her death was a suicide, and that if she is alive, she is still mentally unstable - Just so nobody would believe her and so that he can commit her and get control of her estate and thus the mill.
Enter stage left Howard Duff as a semi employed drifter who sees Deborah, sees the reward offer, and from her strange behavior genuinely believes she is a danger to herself and that Seldon has only her interest at heart - at first.
This was a great noir with a good use of score and cinematography to build tension. It casts against type in that Peggy Dow is not playing a good girl here and Howard Duff plays a well meaning character for once. I have to credit the film for taking place in the south without having the entire cast sound and act like they are something out of a Tennessee Williams play. Highly recommended and hard to find.
Just before Deborah can leave for New York, her father dies in an accident at the mill. This causes her to get closer to Seldon and they marry a few months later. On their honeymoon an angry past paramour of Seldon's shows up at their honeymoon cabin - she's obviously been there before with Seldon - and pretty much sows tons of doubt into Deborah's mind about Seldon's motives. A car accident with Deborah as the driver and lone passenger follows, and she believes it was a murder attempt by Seldon, so she decides to stay "dead".
Seldon has choreographed this entire thing out carefully, but the authorities not being able to find the body makes him wonder if Deborah isn't still alive. He puts out an ad in papers across the nation offering a five-thousand-dollar reward if she is found. His clever plan has been to claim Deborah was not in her right mind when she dashed off on their wedding night in their car, that her death was a suicide, and that if she is alive, she is still mentally unstable - Just so nobody would believe her and so that he can commit her and get control of her estate and thus the mill.
Enter stage left Howard Duff as a semi employed drifter who sees Deborah, sees the reward offer, and from her strange behavior genuinely believes she is a danger to herself and that Seldon has only her interest at heart - at first.
This was a great noir with a good use of score and cinematography to build tension. It casts against type in that Peggy Dow is not playing a good girl here and Howard Duff plays a well meaning character for once. I have to credit the film for taking place in the south without having the entire cast sound and act like they are something out of a Tennessee Williams play. Highly recommended and hard to find.
To begin with I never liked noir genre and thankfully this movie has only got a small portion of it - all the rest consists of a gorgeous drama, chilling thriller and a romance that happened unintentionally and all the three genres perfectly blend together making it one of the best movies in its genre which is unfairly forgotten now. Ida Lupino is an absolute master and her stunning performance has been playing the first fiddle throughout the whole movie, not allowing us to leave it in peace. "Woman in hiding" keeps you guessing until the very end, it hints, gives clues to what might happen but you can never really be sure what exactly and this is the best thing about movies in general as an art. For me, unfortunately, this is a one-time movie as I don't really like paperthin storylines and no subtext but it was a brilliant ride anyway.
Woman in Hiding is directed by Michael Gordon and adapted to screenplay by Oscar Saul and Roy Huggins from a story by James Webb. It stars Ida Lupino, Stephen McNally, Howard Duff and Peggy Dow. Music is by Milton Schwarzwald and cinematography by William H. Daniels.
After the mysterious death of her father, a quickfire marriage to a hugely suspicious man, and an attempt on her life, Deborah Chandler Clark (Lupino) is forced to assume a new identity and go into hiding...
No great shakes as regards the plot line, it's a standard woman in peril piece, where we the viewers know what's going on and only really await for what we hope is a punchy resolution to it all. However, overcoming the simplicity of formula, it's a film nicely constructed and performed, with plenty of suspense, tightly wound anticipation and some very pleasing visual accompaniments.
Opening with a guarded voice over from Lupino''s character, mood is nicely set at noir influenced. From here we quickly get to know the principle players and are quickly on Deborah's side. Peril and emotional pain is never far away with Gordon (The Web) and ace photographer Daniels (The Naked City) complicit in mood enhancements. Cue a cabin at nighttime bathed in oppressive moonlight, shadowed window bars striking facial menace - and as Deborah's peril grows greater - an imposing staircase ripe for a dastardly deed, Then we hit the last quarter of film and the quality really shines through. A steam train at night is grand, a splendid setting, but that is just a precursor to the exciting denouement at the deserted mill of Deborah's birthright. Daniels excels, his photography straight out of a noir fever dream, all while the industrial churning of the mill machinery adds impetus to the thrilling conclusion.
It needed more of a black heart as per outcome to be a definitive noir pic, but it comes safely recommended to noir enthusiasts regardless. 7/10
After the mysterious death of her father, a quickfire marriage to a hugely suspicious man, and an attempt on her life, Deborah Chandler Clark (Lupino) is forced to assume a new identity and go into hiding...
No great shakes as regards the plot line, it's a standard woman in peril piece, where we the viewers know what's going on and only really await for what we hope is a punchy resolution to it all. However, overcoming the simplicity of formula, it's a film nicely constructed and performed, with plenty of suspense, tightly wound anticipation and some very pleasing visual accompaniments.
Opening with a guarded voice over from Lupino''s character, mood is nicely set at noir influenced. From here we quickly get to know the principle players and are quickly on Deborah's side. Peril and emotional pain is never far away with Gordon (The Web) and ace photographer Daniels (The Naked City) complicit in mood enhancements. Cue a cabin at nighttime bathed in oppressive moonlight, shadowed window bars striking facial menace - and as Deborah's peril grows greater - an imposing staircase ripe for a dastardly deed, Then we hit the last quarter of film and the quality really shines through. A steam train at night is grand, a splendid setting, but that is just a precursor to the exciting denouement at the deserted mill of Deborah's birthright. Daniels excels, his photography straight out of a noir fever dream, all while the industrial churning of the mill machinery adds impetus to the thrilling conclusion.
It needed more of a black heart as per outcome to be a definitive noir pic, but it comes safely recommended to noir enthusiasts regardless. 7/10
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesIda Lupino did not want to make this movie let alone with Howard Duff, who she considered arrogant and obnoxious. Lupino and Duff would marry the year after the release of this film, on the day after her divorce from her second husband and film-making business partner Collier Young.
- PifiasThe pattern of the wet spots on Selden Clark's suit changes.
- Citas
Deborah Chandler Clark: [voice over as searchers are looking for her corpse in the river] That's my body they're looking for.
- ConexionesReferenced in Colombo: Murder, Smoke and Shadows (1989)
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- How long is Woman in Hiding?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración1 hora 32 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.33 : 1
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