Dans la Nouvelle Angleterre des années 1820, Jenny Hager, une femme aussi belle que démunie et manipulatrice, épouse le richissime Isaiah Poster, mais séduit aussi son fils et son contremaît... Tout lireDans la Nouvelle Angleterre des années 1820, Jenny Hager, une femme aussi belle que démunie et manipulatrice, épouse le richissime Isaiah Poster, mais séduit aussi son fils et son contremaître.Dans la Nouvelle Angleterre des années 1820, Jenny Hager, une femme aussi belle que démunie et manipulatrice, épouse le richissime Isaiah Poster, mais séduit aussi son fils et son contremaître.
- Congregation Member
- (uncredited)
- Congregation Member
- (uncredited)
- Sailor in Saloon
- (uncredited)
- Mrs. Thatcher
- (uncredited)
- Congregation Member
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Partridge
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
This may be Hedy Lamarr's most challenging role, and she acquits herself quite well. George Sanders appears infrequently as a sympathetic character, but even he is victimized by the Scarlett O'Hara-like wiles of Hedy. That both of these performers have accents that are not suggestive of born-and-bred Maine residents should not constitute more than a minor annoyance. The picture has more than enough offsetting merits.
If you can put aside the fact that the lead character has a Viennese accent and her father an Irish one when they are both lifelong natives of Bangor, Maine then there is much to enjoy. Hedy, stunningly beautiful as always, plays a deeply conflicted woman well and though the film veers wildly from morality tale to lurid melodrama it is certainly more fun than a lot of more highly thought of films.
She is very convincing as the daughter of a drunk who wants to dominate men and the society that squashed her when she was a child. It seems to me that her father speaks with a Scottish burr and that she does very briefly. The story might better have been changed so that he was an immigrant whose accent would be more consistent with th4e luscious Ms. Lamarr's own.
Nevertheless, it is atmospheric and very troubling. She marries an older man and immediately starts out in pursuit of his son. She gets the son and throws him over (a bit improbably) for Gweorge Sanders, wearing mutton chop sideburns here.
It's not Ulmer'best -- that might be his "Hamlet"pdate "Strange Illusion." But it is very good and it is one of the best performances ever given by Ms. Lamarr.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesExecutive producer Hunt Stromberg declared his dissatisfaction with the original opening sequence of Edgar G. Ulmer's own daughter Arianne Ulmer who played the young Jenny - she was purportedly not nasty enough - and so he and Hedy Lamarr enlisted Douglas Sirk to re-shoot the scenes using Jo Ann Marlowe who had appeared in Sirk's own A Scandal in Paris (1946) earlier that year, and who had also featured as Joan Crawford's daughter Kay in Michael Curtiz' Le roman de Mildred Pierce (1945).
- GaffesEphraim paints "Nöel" rather than the correct "Noël."
- Citations
Lena Tempest: Honey, listen, with your looks you don't have to worry. You can get the youngest and best-looking man on the pier.
Jenny Hager: I don't want the youngest. I want the richest.
- Autres versionsThe Strange Woman (1946). Restoration Produced by Jeff Joseph/SabuCat. Digital scan by Film & Video Transfer, Chatsworth, CA. Cineaste Restoration - Thad Komorowski.. Final Conforming & Cleanup by The Finishing Touch. The Strange Woman (Restored Version) copyright 2020 Jeff Joseph/SabuCat.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Edgar G. Ulmer: The Man Off-Screen (2004)
- Bandes originalesWhat Can You Do with a Drunken Sailor?
Traditional
Early 19th Century sea chanty
[Heard in tavern]
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Strange Woman?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Flor de insidia
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1