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Double Door

  • 1934
  • 1h 15min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
486
MA NOTE
Evelyn Venable in Double Door (1934)
Drame psychologiqueDrames historiquesDrameHorreurMystère

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWealthy Victoria manipulates family against new sister-in-law Anne. Locks her in vault after false affair accusation. Rip frees Anne, disinherits Victoria who ends up trapped in vault by mis... Tout lireWealthy Victoria manipulates family against new sister-in-law Anne. Locks her in vault after false affair accusation. Rip frees Anne, disinherits Victoria who ends up trapped in vault by mistake.Wealthy Victoria manipulates family against new sister-in-law Anne. Locks her in vault after false affair accusation. Rip frees Anne, disinherits Victoria who ends up trapped in vault by mistake.

  • Réalisation
    • Charles Vidor
  • Scénario
    • Jack Cunningham
    • Gladys Lehman
    • Elizabeth McFadden
  • Casting principal
    • Evelyn Venable
    • Mary Morris
    • Anne Revere
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    486
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Charles Vidor
    • Scénario
      • Jack Cunningham
      • Gladys Lehman
      • Elizabeth McFadden
    • Casting principal
      • Evelyn Venable
      • Mary Morris
      • Anne Revere
    • 21avis d'utilisateurs
    • 12avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 victoires au total

    Photos31

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    Rôles principaux16

    Modifier
    Evelyn Venable
    Evelyn Venable
    • Anne Darrow
    Mary Morris
    Mary Morris
    • Victoria Van Brett
    Anne Revere
    Anne Revere
    • Caroline Van Brett
    Kent Taylor
    Kent Taylor
    • Rip Van Brett
    Guy Standing
    Guy Standing
    • Mortimer Neff
    Colin Tapley
    Colin Tapley
    • Dr. John Lucas
    Virginia Howell
    Virginia Howell
    • Avery
    Halliwell Hobbes
    Halliwell Hobbes
    • Mr. Chase
    Frank Dawson
    Frank Dawson
    • Telson
    Helen Shipman
    • Louise
    Leonard Carey
    Leonard Carey
    • William
    Burr Caruth
    • Rev. Dr. Loring
    Ralph Remley
    • Lambert
    May Foster
    May Foster
    • Gossip
    • (non crédité)
    Rose Plumer
    • Gossip
    • (non crédité)
    Phillips Smalley
    Phillips Smalley
    • Wedding Guest
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Charles Vidor
    • Scénario
      • Jack Cunningham
      • Gladys Lehman
      • Elizabeth McFadden
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs21

    6,8486
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    Avis à la une

    9planktonrules

    The woman is a cancer...a vicious, awful cancer.

    Victoria Van Brett (Mary Morris) is a horrible, bitter old woman. She also happens to be rich and in control of the family fortune....and she uses it to control and torment her family. When her niece and nephew try to marry, she does her best to break up the relationships. Why? Well, because she can...and because she enjoys destroying people. But how far she is willing to go....that might just shock you!

    This is an incredible film. The opening credits are among the most jarring I've ever seen. You hear Bach's "Toccata and Fugue in D minor" and as you hear this creepy music play, scary faces of the folks who star in the film appear abruptly and fly towards the audience in closeups. You really have to see it to appreciate how jarring it is and I actually yelled out when the faces appeared!

    The shame of this film is that Ms. Morris only made one film...this one. Otherwise, her acting was confined to the stage...which is a real shame as she was amazing. One of the creepiest and most evocative performances of the 1930s...that is how good she was.

    Overall, this is a seldom seen but fantastic movie...one that you won't soon forget....especially when it comes to that double door!
    8ulicknormanowen

    Panic in the room.

    Victoria van Brett is akin to other matriarches of the thirties;she recalls Mrs Phelps (Laura Hope Crews in "the silver cord" : a woman still in love with her son and who sees her daughter-in -law as an intruder ) and Regina (Bette Davis in Lilian Hellmann 's "little foxes" transferred to the screen by the great Wyler: the graspy greedy businesswoman who does not care for her family).

    Mary Morris -in her only screen appearance- is so strong a villain she can effortlessly grab today's audience :although hardly 40 ,she looks at least twenty years older ; her hate for the intruder (her nephew's wife) knows no bounds . A flashback shows us as she used to treat her nephew who has lost any will power (it's his wife who rebels,like Irene Dunne did in "the silver cord") ; and the way she tortures her poor sister Caroline ( a whining Anne Revere, a great character actress )!

    With its baroque settings , its Gothic atmosphere , "double door" is almost a horror movie :the scene in which Victoria lures the poor wife into the soundproof room seems out of a fairytale in which the witch (Maleficent in "sleeping beauty" )mesmerizes her victim ; the father's ashes , always here to keep a close watch on the unfortunate Rip .

    A black pearl.
    9view_and_review

    "The play that made Broadway gasp"

    With so many movies in the early-30's about high society I didn't think I'd be in the mood for yet another one. Boy was I wrong. "Double Door" was an astounding movie.

    The movie took place in New York City in 1910. The focus was the Van Bretts, one of the oldest families in New York and one of the oldest and wealthiest families on Park Avenue. A woman named Victoria 'Vicky' Van Brett (Mary Morris) was the torch bearer and matriarch of the Van Brett family. She was a mean, dictatorial, spiteful old woman. If you look up "old hag" in the dictionary her face will be there. She was akin to May Robson's character in the movie "You Can't Buy Everything" (1934).

    Vicky ruled the Van Brett family with an iron fist, and at the moment she was cross with her younger half-brother Rip (Kent Taylor) for marrying a nurse. How could he marry an "upper servant"!?

    In that respect, "Double Door" was just like several other movies of that era in which a romantic rich boy desires to marry a girl from a lower class. It's always a fight for love. And in every case the woman has to prove that she's not marrying the man for his money, only out of love. More specifically, "Double Door" is similar to "Shopworn" (1932), "Another Language" (1933), and "Silver Cord" (1933) in which the mother is the most vociferous against her son's sweetheart.

    In "Double Door," Vicky made no attempts to hide her contempt for Rip's bride, Anne Darrow (Evelyn Venable). Even though Vicky wasn't Rip's mother she fit the part due to the large difference in age and the fact she had to fill the role as his mother when both his parents died. Vicky was set on driving Anne away if it was the last thing she did.

    Vicky had so much control over Rip, Anne, and her younger sister Caroline Van Brett (Anne Revere) because she controlled the purse strings. She was the executor of the Van Brett estate so all Van Bretts and all the servants had to bend to her will; and what an unyielding will she had.

    Mary Morris was excellent as Victoria Van Brett. Although she was not even forty when this movie was made, she had the mannerisms, voice, and movements of a woman at least sixty-years-old. Even when she stared (or glared) she conveyed so much. I'm sorry she didn't do more. When I looked up her filmography she only had "Double Door" to her credit. It could be that she was a stage performer and only did this movie because she'd done it in theater before. In any case, I thought her performance was Oscar-worthy.

    Anne Revere was also exceptional as Caroline Van Brett, Vicky's sister. She was a forty-two-year-old woman with the mentality of a two-year-old. She was so utterly handicapped by Vicky's dominance that she never developed. She was a sad sight. She spoke and behaved like a child--always in search of Vicky's love and approval.

    Kent Taylor and Evelyn Venable were passable as Rip and Anne, the newlyweds. Anne's manner of speaking didn't seem to fit to me considering she was a nurse before marrying Rip. She spoke proper and posh as though she was from society herself. The only thing I can think to attribute that to is her training or taking lessons in order to fit in with her husband's family and friends.

    A lot of credit has to be given to the writer, Elizabeth McFadden, and the director, Charles Vidor, who was able to make the play work on screen. I'm giving out flowers everywhere on this one. "Double Door" was a true treat.

    Free on YouTube."
    9drownsoda90

    The Old Dark House (on Fifth Avenue)

    "Double Door" focuses on Anne, a young bride in turn-of-the-century Manhattan who finds herself at the mercy of her husband's embittered, older half-sister, Victoria, who controls the family estate with an iron fist. Anne at first attempts to win her new sister-in-law over, but finds that Victoria's manipulation and scare tactics could be lethal.

    This dour adaptation of the stage play of the same name (and featuring two stage originals: Mary Morris and Anne Revere) works for two reasons: One, the night-and-day performances from Evelyn Venable, playing the innocent Anne, and Mary Morris, the wretched and vindictive sister-in-law; and two, the sprawling mansion setting, which provides an ominous, classically spooky backdrop for the psychological games to unfold (think "The Old Dark House", but on Fifth Avenue).

    Morris, a stage actor who only ever appeared on film here, is the main attraction for most, and while her theatrical style at times pokes through, she is still fiercely effective in this role--the character of Victoria belongs in the ranks of the most wicked female villains in film history, up there with Annie Wilkes, Alex Forrest, and Mrs. Danvers. She is vile, greedy, and controlling, and Morris wrings every last drop of these character elements. Venable plays counterpoint as the likable newcomer who at first hopes to see some good in Victoria, only to find her relentless abuses too much to bear, while Anne Revere is memorable as Victoria's downtrodden sister who has been terrorized by Victoria her entire life (even being locked in a soundproof vault as "punishment").

    The majority of the film consists of a back-and-forth dynamic between the Victoria and Anne before it ratchets up in the last act to a quasi-murder mystery, with Victoria's confounding propensity for evil reaching its apparent peak. There is a notable mix of melodrama here with psychological thriller elements and, at times, horror, though for most modern audiences, "Double Door" will play more like a straightforward psychological drama soaked in gloom. As a character showcase of exemplary wickedness, "Double Door" is among the best pre-Code examples. 8/10.
    7AlsExGal

    When your fortune owns you rather than vice versa

    The main character here is Mary Moore as Victoria Van Brent, the oldest sister and dominatrix in a family whose only remains are herself, younger sister Caroline, and baby brother Rip. They live together in an old creepy mansion full of reminders of the past but devoid of the present.

    Victoria - age unspecified but clearly middle aged- always dresses in black, emotionally batters younger sister Caroline to the point where she is just a shadow of a human being, and has got baby brother Rip convinced that his late father is always looking down on him, and that his wishes are Victoria's wishes.

    Let me straighten out one little matter. The synopsis says that the film is about Victoria threatening people with a secret torture chamber in the house. There isn't one, so if you are expecting Vic to go mad and don the red robe of the inquisitors and put somebody on the rack, then you will be sorely disappointed.

    The film opens on Rip's wedding day to a "commoner" - a nurse named Ann. Her union to Rip will issue in new blood and life to the family. Victoria has her own idea as to who Rip should marry, and it isn't Ann, whom she assumes is after the family money.

    Now this had me wondering, why did Victoria wait until AFTER the wedding to take any action to get rid of Ann? Wouldn't it have been easier if Rip was just beginning to see Ann to nip things in the bud? I guess Victoria figures she can get rid of Ann just as easily after she marries Rip as she could before. Now for a woman to never marry in 1910, the time this film was set, was a big deal and a departure from social norms. But Victoria doesn't seem to hate men, she just loves control. The family money just affords her that control. Marriage at the turn of the 20th century for a woman would mean ceding control, and she was not about to do that.

    Victoria starts out with passive aggressive stuff to put a rift between Ann and Rip, but when that doesn't work, she turns to a more severe and permanent solution.

    This film has great atmosphere, even if it is a bit claustrophobic. If it didn't say Paramount I'd swear it was a Universal horror with its secret panels and dark corridors. One funny thing about the film - you get a big dose of the thoughts and feelings of everybody in the cast except Victoria, who is the central character. Maybe this is to dehumanize her so the audience can look upon her as pure villain - I know I did.

    One bit of trivia - This film was based on a play that was very loosely based on the wealthy Wendel family of 19th and early 20th century New York. The last generation -only the third in fact - consisted of one brother and seven sisters who never married. The brother ruled over the sisters with an iron fist, would not let them socialize or marry because he thought heirs would decentralize their fortune, and did not allow electricity or even a phone into the house. So they all lived together in gloom, prisoners of their wealth until the last sibling died in 1931 leaving a fortune worth 100 million in that day's money - two or three billion today. Ironically, with no direct heirs 2303 people came out of the wood work from all over the world claiming to be heirs including an entire village in Germany named Wendel and some actual distant cousins in Czechoslovakia. Eventually, just about every claim was disproven. However, brother John forgot one thing - if nobody knows what you HAVE been doing, then nobody knows what you HAVEN'T been doing either, thus there were many people among the fortune hunters claiming to be illegitimate children of the recluse siblings.

    I'd recommend this old spooky film if it ever comes your way.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Drame psychologique
    Emma Watson, Saoirse Ronan, Florence Pugh, and Eliza Scanlen in Les Filles du docteur March (2019)
    Drames historiques
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drame
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horreur
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystère

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The Van Brett sisters are based on Rebecca and Ella Wendel, famously wealthy and eccentric spinsters in New York City. Ella died in 1931 and the family's notorious 5th Avenue mansion was razed three years later, the same year this film was released.
    • Citations

      Rip Van Brett: John was pretty much in love with you, wasn't he?

      Anne Darrow: Oh, I don't know.

      Rip Van Brett: Yes, you do--he was, but you chose me.

      Anne Darrow: Idiot!

    • Bandes originales
      Air on the G String
      Composed by Johann Sebastian Bach.

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Double Door?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 4 mai 1934 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Det hemliga rummet
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 15min(75 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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