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La donna del ritratto

Titolo originale: The Woman in the Window
  • 1944
  • T
  • 1h 47min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,6/10
18.916
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
La donna del ritratto (1944)
Guarda Official Trailer
Riproduci trailer1:42
1 video
99+ foto
CrimineDrammaFilm noirMisteroThriller

Quando un professore di mezza età conservatore si cimenta in una piccola alleanza con una femme fatale, viene immerso in una sabbia da incubo di ricatti e omicidi.Quando un professore di mezza età conservatore si cimenta in una piccola alleanza con una femme fatale, viene immerso in una sabbia da incubo di ricatti e omicidi.Quando un professore di mezza età conservatore si cimenta in una piccola alleanza con una femme fatale, viene immerso in una sabbia da incubo di ricatti e omicidi.

  • Regia
    • Fritz Lang
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Nunnally Johnson
    • J.H. Wallis
  • Star
    • Edward G. Robinson
    • Joan Bennett
    • Raymond Massey
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,6/10
    18.916
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Fritz Lang
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Nunnally Johnson
      • J.H. Wallis
    • Star
      • Edward G. Robinson
      • Joan Bennett
      • Raymond Massey
    • 142Recensioni degli utenti
    • 83Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 1 Oscar
      • 3 candidature totali

    Video1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    Official Trailer

    Foto216

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    Interpreti principali67

    Modifica
    Edward G. Robinson
    Edward G. Robinson
    • Professor Richard Wanley
    Joan Bennett
    Joan Bennett
    • Alice Reed
    Raymond Massey
    Raymond Massey
    • Frank Lalor
    Edmund Breon
    Edmund Breon
    • Dr. Michael Barkstane
    • (as Edmond Breon)
    Dan Duryea
    Dan Duryea
    • Heidt…
    Thomas E. Jackson
    Thomas E. Jackson
    • Inspector Jackson
    Dorothy Peterson
    Dorothy Peterson
    • Mrs. Wanley
    Arthur Loft
    Arthur Loft
    • Claude Mazard…
    Frank Dawson
    Frank Dawson
    • Collins
    Iris Adrian
    Iris Adrian
    • Streetwalker
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Austin Badell
    • Club Member
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Brandon Beach
    • Man at Club
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    James Beasley
    • Man in Taxi
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Al Benault
    • Club Member
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Robert Blake
    Robert Blake
    • Dickie Wanley
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Paul Bradley
    Paul Bradley
    • Man at Club
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Don Brodie
    Don Brodie
    • Onlooker at Gallery
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Carol Cameron
    • Elsie Wanley
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Fritz Lang
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Nunnally Johnson
      • J.H. Wallis
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti142

    7,618.9K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    Lechuguilla

    A Longing For Adventure

    The lead character, Richard Wanley (Edward G. Robinson), is a middle-age absent-minded professor who teaches a course in crime. For relaxation he meets with two other middle-age men for drinks and academic conversation. Surrounded by books and dim light, the three men talk about how stodgy their lives are, how averse they are to adventure, and how alluring the woman is whose portrait they see in a nearby shop's window.

    Says Richard to his two friends: "you know, even if the spirit of adventure should rise up before me and beckon, even in the form of that alluring young woman in the window next door, I'm afraid all I'd do is clutch my coat a little tighter, mutter something idiotic, and run like the devil."

    This story setup, with quiet, reflective, sedentary characters, gives the film's surprise ending credibility. With a different setup, with different characters, the film's ending, as is, would be an act of creative malfeasance. But here, it works.

    And Richard's excellent adventure is spellbinding. Tension is maximized because we, as viewers, are put directly in the point of view of Richard and his predicament. What would we do in such a situation? How would we react?

    I wouldn't have cast Edward G. Robinson in the lead role. But he certainly does a nice job. So does Joan Bennett, as the woman in the window. The film's plot is tight, except in the second half, in a couple of sequences involving a blackmailer.

    "The Woman In The Window" is a clever, well-written, character driven story about a man whose infatuation with a beautiful woman's portrait drives him into a dangerous adventure. Once the viewer has seen the ending, the power of the plot vanishes. But even then, that ending is still thought-provoking.
    8davidmvining

    The Birth of a Genre

    I'd say that this is the point where Fritz Lang was firmly planting his feet in the film noir genre. Made in the same year as Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity, it's a formational film to the genre, using shadows extensively, as Lang had been doing since his silent days, while getting its main character in the middle of a murder plot where he can't go to the police. It intelligently straddles a line between philosophical and suspenseful before managing to be both tragic and comic in its final moments. I'm not entire sure that ending works, but I can't deny that it tickles me, nonetheless.

    Richard Wanley (Edward G. Robinson) is a philosophy professor who discusses the nature of murder with his class the day his wife and children go off into the country for a vacation, leaving him alone in the city for a few weeks. He jokes with his friends at his club, the district attorney Frank Lalor (Raymond Massey) and Dr. Michael Barkstane (Edmund Breon), about how his newfound freedom saying that looking for adventure is the work of young men, not a man in his middle age. They talk about the unknown woman in a portrait in the window next to their club as the centerpiece of this discussion, and Wanley laughs it off. He's going to have another drink and go home to bed.

    And yet, leaving the club, he meets the model of the portrait while admiring it. This is Alice Reed (Joan Bennett, sans awful cockney accent from Man Hunt), and Wanley is so tickled by meeting her that he agrees to an innocent drink with her. That drink in a public place becomes a trip up to her apartment to see the original sketches for the portrait, something that we believe Wanley is only there for. He's no lecher. He's being polite and interested in a young woman, is all. As he sits on her couch, waiting for her to bring in the sketches from the other room, a man bursts into the apartment and immediately attacks Wanley. Wanley defends himself while the man has his hands on Wanley's throat, and stabs him in the back with scissors that Alice hands him. He's killed someone. The academic talk about murder and the idle conversation of adventure have caught up with him.

    No matter how innocent Wanley's intentions may have been, it all looks awful. The night his wife leaves town, he's in the apartment of an attractive young woman alone where he kills her lover. This is not something to take to the police, especially if he thinks he's smart enough to outwit them. It's interesting to watch what essentially amounts to a police procedural decades before CSI became a television mainstay. The little things that Wanley does wrong end up feeling like glaring mistakes, but forensics hadn't been popularized in any way, shape, or form by 1944, so Wanley not thinking of a tear of a fiber from his coat is understandable. What's a couple of fibers? It's not that important.

    Except, of course, it is, and the middle bulk of the film is Wanley negotiating his status as the killer with his friendship of Lalor, the DA, and getting an inside scoop into the investigation, knowing how tightly the noose is getting around his neck with every passing moment. It's more sedate and methodically paced that something made today would be, but it's still effective in portraying the feeling of the walls closing in that never quite stops, especially when the added wrinkle of Heidt (Dan Duryea) appears.

    The man Wanley killed was a powerful tycoon who kept his relationship with Alice secret, but his company was keeping tabs on Wanley through the bodyguard and tracker Heidt, an amoral hood who waits for the right moment after the crime to approach Alice and blackmail her. Wanley has to help, of course, and the two agree to murder Heidt to protect themselves. This movie is at its best here in the scenes between Alice and Heidt. The threat around Wanley is less immediate while the threat that Heidt represents Alice is more immediate, and Joan Bennett plays these scenes really well. She's terrified but hiding it under a cool, feminine exterior that's trying to exude confidence and calm while she knows that Heidt has everything on her and isn't the kind of guy to mess with.

    The finale is a kind of mixture of coincidence that feels arbitrary and easy at first combined with tragic timing that makes up for it. And then, the film plays switcheroo on the whole movie, moving from a tragic ending to a comic one, and I lean towards it working. The dark of the proto-noir ending as bleakly as possible gives way to an amusing ending that pokes fun at itself, treating the film like a lesson to learn from for its main character instead of a firm final moment. It's like the ending of Fury, except it ends with a laugh instead of catharsis. In addition, like Fury, I don't think it undermines the overall point of the film, it just stands in such stark contrast to the rest of the film that it's somewhat shocking, especially on a first viewing (this is my second, the first was the horribly colorized version on Prime and I want to burn it with fire).

    The methodical nature it deals with the police investigation may date the film, but it has the more immediate effect of proving to Wanley that he is running out of time and space to breathe, which is important. It's Joan Bennett that has the greatest emotional effect, though, her scenes with Dan Duryea being quietly intense as a lot goes on beneath the surface.

    Lang manages it all well, especially in Alice's apartment. There's a lot of use of mirrors that allows for really interesting compositions, including two people looking directly at each other while allowing the camera to see both faces at the same time in the same shot. He was also working with a writer/producer individual (Nunnally Johnson) for the second time in a row, so it'd be interesting to see what the film would have become had Lang been given more freedom. It doesn't quite fit the rest of his work thematically, a similar distance created in Ministry of Fear, but he entertains well because he was a professional who understood the medium really well.
    8bmacv

    Fritz Lang's sure-footed thriller almost compromised by its not-ready-for-noir studio

    The catastrophe just around the corner is the premise for Fritz Lang's first unabashed film noir. Settling stuffily into middle age, Edward G. Robinson lectures on criminal psychology at Gotham University (est. 1828). One morning he packs his wife and kids onto the train for a summer in Maine, then repairs to his club for dinner, a brandy or two, and a comfortable snooze in a wing-chair.

    A portrait in a gallery next door had caught his attention, however, so before heading home he gives it a second glance. Suddenly its beautiful subject (Joan Bennett) looms up behind him, reflected in the glass. They flirt rather formally, stop for a drink, then head back to her apartment under the pretext of viewing more of the artist's work she'd posed for. Suddenly a man Bennett has seeing on the sly with barges in and, enraged, tries to throttle Robinson, who stabs him with scissors. And suddenly Robinson's complacent life lies in shards.

    He decides, for the sake of his and Bennett's reputations, to dump the body along a stretch of rural road upstate, then part ways forever with this woman from the window. But, far from a nobody, the murdered man turns out to be a wealthy developer, whose death claims headlines. And his bodyguard (Dan Duryea) pays a visit to Bennett, to blackmail her.

    A shrewd and cultivated man caught in the vise of circumstance, Robinson proves his own worst enemy. When fellow club member Raymond Massey, a police inspector, chats casually about the crime, Robinson blurts out details that only the killer could have known. And as the jaws of the vise squeeze ever more tightly, Robinson devises ever more desperate stratagems to hide his guilt and protect Bennett...

    While Robinson proves reliably expert, Bennett invests her part with a reserved, almost remote, air that lends to the uncertainty. Her cool contralto beckons, but she plays hard to get. Her arrangements with her dead paramour suggest something sordid but she's not quite the tramp she would be the following year in Scarlet Street (again opposite Robinson and under Lang).

    The sure-footed Lang simply uses a public clock down the street from Bennett's brownstone to log in a precise chronology of the fateful night. That befits a plot which leans toward the clockwork, but plausibly so. Or rather, does until just its last few minutes. For all intents and purposes, the movie ends, convincingly and satisfyingly, with Robinson slumped in a chair, clutching a drained glass. But MGM wasn't yet ready for the uncompromising vision of the emergent noir cycle, and must have recoiled in horror. So a whimsical wrap-up was hastily grafted on. Some would argue that, in consequence, the movie falls into the valid subcategory of `oneiric' noir. Others would argue that it's just a craven cop-out, at cross purposes with all that's gone before. Luckily, The Woman in the Window displays enough artistry and integrity that it really doesn't matter all that much either way.
    9Sleepin_Dragon

    A late night classic.

    This is a wonderful film noire, a real late night treat, the story may seem a little run of the mill, but there are many twists, turns and red herrings to throw you off, and keep your interest.

    The acting is great, Joan Bennett as always is terrific, Edward G Robinson was prolific, and never disappointed.

    It moves along quickly, and is never boring at any point. The obvious love or hate moment comes at the end, personally I don't love it, but you must realise it was 1944, the world was at war, people wanted to leave the cinema with a smile on their face, it did make me smile, of course it would never be a tool used nowadays, but things were so different in 1944.

    Thoroughly enjoyed it. 9/10.
    apocalypse later

    Be Careful What You Wish For...

    This wonderfully entertaining "film noir" by master director Fritz Lang is a curiosity, defying all of our expectations as a viewer and basically subverting the "noir" genre barely before it had gotten started. The dark shadows, the femme fatale, the harboiled detectives, the murder... all the elements are in place for a typical outing, but when all is said and done, look back at the motivations, the events, even the "femme", and what we have is not a world of evil (the typical "noir" stance) but a world of innocence darkened by a few petty thugs. Like the more obviously subversive (and equally wonderful) "Kiss Me Deadly" fifteen years later, "The Woman in the Window" seems to say that evil only lives when people look hard enough for it - practically a "film noir" rebuttal. As in "M" and "Fury," Lang (a refugee from the Nazi regime) once again examines issues of social evil in ways more complex than any of his contemporaries. Enjoy "The Woman in the Window." The cast is impeccable, the writing a delight, the direction peerless, the music score years ahead of its time. A small feast.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The painting of Alice Reed was done by Paul Clemens. He painted portraits of many Hollywood stars, often with their children. He was married to Eleanor Parker from 1954 to 1965.
    • Blooper
      When Alice Reed runs to house after the death of Heidt she simply pushes the door that would be closed and needs a key to open.
    • Citazioni

      Alice Reed: Well, there are two general reactions. One is a kind of solemn stare for the painting.

      Richard Wanley: And the other?

      Alice Reed: The other is a long, low whistle.

      Richard Wanley: What was mine?

      Alice Reed: I'm not sure. But I suspect that in another moment or two you might have given a long, low, solemn whistle.

    • Versioni alternative
      Also shown in a color-computerized version.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Ally McBeal: The Inmates (1998)

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    • How long is The Woman in the Window?Powered by Alexa
    • How is this film connected to "Scarlet Street" (1945)?
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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 20 gennaio 1947 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Woman in the Window
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • New York, New York, Stati Uniti(background footage)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Christie Corporation
      • International Pictures (I)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 47min(107 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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