Edward «Teddy» Bare es un psicótico con ansias de riqueza, mujeres mayores y asesinatos. Después de cometer lo que él cree que es el asesinato perfecto de su anciana esposa, Teddy pone sus o... Leer todoEdward «Teddy» Bare es un psicótico con ansias de riqueza, mujeres mayores y asesinatos. Después de cometer lo que él cree que es el asesinato perfecto de su anciana esposa, Teddy pone sus ojos en nuevos objetivos.Edward «Teddy» Bare es un psicótico con ansias de riqueza, mujeres mayores y asesinatos. Después de cometer lo que él cree que es el asesinato perfecto de su anciana esposa, Teddy pone sus ojos en nuevos objetivos.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Nominada a1 premio BAFTA
- 1 nominación en total
- Guest at Wedding Reception
- (sin créditos)
- Brighton Tea Shop Customer
- (sin créditos)
- Man on Club Dance Floor
- (sin créditos)
- Brighton Tea Shop Customer on Dance Floor
- (sin créditos)
- Man on Club Dance Floor
- (sin créditos)
- Brighton Tea Shop Customer
- (sin créditos)
- Man Leaving Inquest
- (sin créditos)
- Man at Inquest
- (sin créditos)
- Waitress
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Besides the beleaguered Bogarde, Margaret Lockwood and Kay Walsh turn in great performances, as well as Robert Flemyng as the suspicious family barrister who is on to Bogarde. The movie plays like a filmed stage play,and in fact was adapted from the stage, with only a few token exterior shots.
The website bills "Cast A Dark Shadow" as a thriller but it is neither a thriller or a mystery, just a competent and engrossing drama which is worth your time, and it is time well spent. It was on ol' reliable TCM the other morning.
In my book, the movie's an excellent little thriller up to the point where the screenplay has Bogarde go bonkers. To that point, he's been all cold calculation and self-possession, an impressive study in ruthless boyish charm. However, by suddenly collapsing that cold confidence into a blubbering psychotic, the screenplay undercuts both the character menace and the dramatic tension. I'm just wondering whether some watchdog group insisted that the character be exposed as a weakling in order to undercut Bogarde's appeal as a villain. However that may be, the movie remains an atmospheric, well-mounted little thriller, unusually well acted.
Edward Bare (Bogarde) marries an older woman for money, murders her and finds that inheritance is not forthcoming. Setting his sights on another lady target, he gets more than he bargained for when he homes in on Freda Jeffries (Lockwood)...
You! Whatever you do, leave me alone!
Splendid slice of Brit noir that takes the Bluebeard route and lets the actors indulge themselves with glee. There's a bubbling broth of class distinction and simmering sexual tensions on the stove here, with Gilbert (The Good Die Young) and Asher (The Curse of Frankenstein) dressing it up nicely in moody visuals. From a Ghost Train opening, where the eyes have it, to the consistent symbolic use of a rocking chair, there's a sinister edge to the piece that tickles the spine and tantalises the conscious. We are pretty sure what is about to unfold in the plotting, but the getting there through the shadows and low lights is where the rewards are.
The cast are uniformly impressive. Bogarde by this time in his career was revelling in playing sleazy or emotionally corrupt characters, and he turns in another memorable performance here. Walsh and Flemyng are playing peripheral characters but strike the right narrative notes, and Harrison is heart achingly doltish as bewildered housekeeper Emmie. But it's Lockwood who shines brightest, here at the end of her film career, she delivers a spitfire turn. Freda is tough, has a waspish tongue (the script affords her some great moments) and uses humour as a mechanism for staving off potential peril. She also has a sexy glint in her eye that matches her ferocious laugh!
It sometimes veers towards the over theatrical, and director Gilbert at times misses a chance to really tighten the suspense, but this without doubt is deserving of a bigger fan-base. 7.5/10
Alas he gets it all wrong and so is left 'financially embarrassed'. Well as he has gotten away with murder once he decides he needs another Mrs Money bags with a short potential life span and so he puts another dastardly plan into action.
This is lovely for all the right reasons. Bogarde as the deranged yet charming killer is just excellent – his facial expressions alone make this film. The supporting cast including Margaret Lockwood and Kathleen Harrison as the maid are all superb and totally believable in their respective roles. This was an adaptation of a play and that come across at times but it does not matter as this is a 'sit back and enjoy film' of how the other half once lived and more importantly died – recommended to all fans of old black and white British crime flicks.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaWhen Edward tells Freda that she should have checked up on him with "Somerset House", he is referring to the fact that it then housed the Public Records Office where one could see any deceased person's will.
- ErroresTeddy confesses the murder to Freda, then says he is safe because a wife can't testify against her husband. This is a common misunderstanding. A wife cannot "be made" to testify against her husband, but there is nothing to stop a woman testifying of her own free will.
- Citas
Freda Jeffries: We buried my poor Albert six months ago.
Edward Bare: What was the matter with him?
Freda Jeffries: He was dead!
- ConexionesReferences La princesa que quería vivir (1953)
- Bandas sonorasLeave Me Alone
(Le Grisbi) (uncredited)
Music by Jean Wiener
French lyrics by Marc Lanjean
English lyrics by Geoffrey Parsons
Sung by Lita Roza
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 22 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.66 : 1