Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaDolores Del Rio plays a dual role as identical twins - one good and one bad.Dolores Del Rio plays a dual role as identical twins - one good and one bad.Dolores Del Rio plays a dual role as identical twins - one good and one bad.
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- 1 vittoria e 6 candidature totali
Dolores Del Río
- Magdalena Montes de Oca
- (as Dolores del Rio)
- …
José Arratia
- Médico forense
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Daniel Arroyo
- Hombre en funeral
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Ricardo Avendaño
- Cocinero
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Luis Badillo
- Agente policía
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Carmen Cabrera
- Invitada a fiesta
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Elisa Christy
- Empleada tienda
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Carmen Cipriani
- Invitada fiesta
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Julio Daneri
- Señor Domínguez
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Genaro de Alba
- Hombre en funeral
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Felipe de Flores
- Empleado tienda
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
This movie is rarely seen in the United States. This is a shame. This film is filled with suspense, atmosphere and poetry, from its visuals to its score.
There is a hint of German Expressionism here, as in all Noir movies of the forties and fifties. (This was made in 1946 by a studio in Mexico City.) Del Rio is statuesque and, at the same time, vulnerable. Her work in the silent era informs this performance. I have a feeling Billy Wilder had a glance at this. It preceded SUNSET BOULEVARD by a few years, and Del Rio could very easily have played Norma Desmond.
The other actors here are solid, and they each have doppelgängers. (Del Rio plays twins.) There is a good guy who courts the protagonist and there's a bad guy doing the same.
There is a mood of regret bordering on a fear of damnation and Del Rio conveys this mood with her face. Mexico City looks holy, haunted and hard, what with the monumental stonework in every shot.
1946 may have been the best time to film this, and Mexico the best place. Nothing is overt, but it is a daring, dramatic look at a life lived under the surface.
There is a hint of German Expressionism here, as in all Noir movies of the forties and fifties. (This was made in 1946 by a studio in Mexico City.) Del Rio is statuesque and, at the same time, vulnerable. Her work in the silent era informs this performance. I have a feeling Billy Wilder had a glance at this. It preceded SUNSET BOULEVARD by a few years, and Del Rio could very easily have played Norma Desmond.
The other actors here are solid, and they each have doppelgängers. (Del Rio plays twins.) There is a good guy who courts the protagonist and there's a bad guy doing the same.
There is a mood of regret bordering on a fear of damnation and Del Rio conveys this mood with her face. Mexico City looks holy, haunted and hard, what with the monumental stonework in every shot.
1946 may have been the best time to film this, and Mexico the best place. Nothing is overt, but it is a daring, dramatic look at a life lived under the surface.
Dolores del Rio back in Mexico following her wartime sojourn in Hollywood made her own equivalent of Bette Davis' 'A Stolen Life' the same year, from a story by Rian James actually remade with Davis nearly twenty years later as 'Dead Ringer' (1964) under the direction of Paul Henried (with Karl Malden as the heroine's true love).
Del Rio looks more ravishing than Davis ever could, and Gunther Gerszo's dramatic sets are garnished with appropriate photography by Alex Phillips and a 'psychological' theremin score by Raul Lavista.
The final scene is a classic, although it does take a long time getting there.
Del Rio looks more ravishing than Davis ever could, and Gunther Gerszo's dramatic sets are garnished with appropriate photography by Alex Phillips and a 'psychological' theremin score by Raul Lavista.
The final scene is a classic, although it does take a long time getting there.
Although I liked very much the detailed review of "Melvelvit" I would like to add that this interesting film, one of the best in the Mexican movies history, is due to the collaboration of American writer Rian James and one of the most important Mexican writers of the era, José Revueltas, and the Mexican film director Roberto Gavaldón. Actually, "La Otra" is one of the best Del Río and Gavaldón films, as well the set designer Gunther Gerszo (sometimes written Gerzso or Gerzo)and photographer Alex Phillips, all important figures in the artistic Mexican world. The "gothic nightmare... somber night-world ambiance" is due to Mexican Gerszo, who studied and worked at the Cleveland Play House in the USA, and combined his movie jobs with painting, becoming one of the most important Mexican abstract painters. In movies, he worked with John Ford ("Sombrerito", in Hollywood), John Houston ("Under the Volcano"), Luis Buñuel ("Susana", "Una mujer sin amor" and "El Bruto" with Kathy Jurado) as well with the most important Mexican directors. He did the sets for Mexican cult films "El Vampiro" (The Vampire) and its sequel, El Ataud del Vampiro" (The Vampire Coffin) about which he claimed, never even watched once they were finished (and they're great as camp Mexican movies examples!)
By the early 1940's the actress described by Marlene Dietrich as 'the most beautiful woman ever to come to Hollywood', found life in Tinseltown to be untenable and returned to her native Mexico where the films she made with director Emilio Fernández not only established her as the biggest star of that country's Golden Age but enabled her to excel in roles that would have been inconceivable in Hollywood. Another director for whom Dolores del Rio shone was Roberto Gavaldón and this magnificent 'Noir' marks their first collaboration.
Gavaldón has directed with flair and finesse whilst cinematographer Alex Phillips, set designer Gunther Gerszo and composer Raúl Lavista have created an eerie, otherworldy feel although some might question excessive use of the theremin.
Unlike the other 'twin sister' movies released the same year: 'Stolen Life' and 'Dark Mirror', Gavaldón's film cleverly blurs the moral boundaries and throws in some Catholic guilt for good measure. Despite playing a murderess del Rio engages our sympathy and at a very well preserved forty-two is convincing in the romantic interludes whereas the remake from 1964 had to be drastically rewritten to accommodate a Bette Davis in her late fifties.
Gavaldón's is a quintessential film of its type, the final scene of which lingers long in the memory.
Gavaldón has directed with flair and finesse whilst cinematographer Alex Phillips, set designer Gunther Gerszo and composer Raúl Lavista have created an eerie, otherworldy feel although some might question excessive use of the theremin.
Unlike the other 'twin sister' movies released the same year: 'Stolen Life' and 'Dark Mirror', Gavaldón's film cleverly blurs the moral boundaries and throws in some Catholic guilt for good measure. Despite playing a murderess del Rio engages our sympathy and at a very well preserved forty-two is convincing in the romantic interludes whereas the remake from 1964 had to be drastically rewritten to accommodate a Bette Davis in her late fifties.
Gavaldón's is a quintessential film of its type, the final scene of which lingers long in the memory.
Based on a Rian James ' thriller , it was remade with Bette Davis in America as "dead ringer" ,but the first version is much better .They are even shades of "vertigo" in the relationship between Maria turned Magadalena and her ex-suitor ; the last scene is so intense that it's quite possible that the distraught man has finally discovered the horrible truth .And neither "vertigo" nor the French novel on which the screenplay was written "d'entre les morts" existed in 1946.
Death and madness are the keynotes as it would be in "El niño y la niebla "(1953) and "Mascario" (1960)-which began with the feast of dead in Mexico . Like Olivia De Havilland in "the dark mirror" released the very same year , Dolores Del Rio plays two parts ,but unlike the Siodmak psychological suspense , there is no "good one" and "bad one" ;after all when you put Maria and Magdalena together ,you get the name of a biblical woman who was in turn a sinner and a saint .
Physically and morally ,both sisters are worlds apart : Maria looks like a spinster , Magdalena a sexy socialite whose most fervent wish is to get rid of her mourning clothes .Maria is exploited,economically and sexually , by a society that leaves only one hope : to win on the lottery (signs often appear on her way) .
Roberto Gavaldon's directing is ,as usual ,brilliant : the opening scene ,a funeral , the murder (the shot is lost in the din of the firecrackers ,while a clown's head is dangling , a threatening omen (in El niño y la niebla (1953) , in the masked ball ,a terrifying dancer represents madness); when she comes back to her victim's house , the mourners are praying for her brother-in-law 's soul ,and the viewer before he hears the incantations thinks Maria is losing her mind.And afterward she becomes almost crazy in the empty house where shadows and lights create a presence (a sublime shot of a mirror reflects three images of the woman ).
And finally ,when she is aware of her brother-in-law's will ,she will understand she threw away her most precious things ;the buck who woos her (her sister's lover) is a hateful fortune-hunter who blackmails her.
Suspense is sustained till the last minute ,as I write above , and " la otra" compares favorably with the best American films noirs.
Death and madness are the keynotes as it would be in "El niño y la niebla "(1953) and "Mascario" (1960)-which began with the feast of dead in Mexico . Like Olivia De Havilland in "the dark mirror" released the very same year , Dolores Del Rio plays two parts ,but unlike the Siodmak psychological suspense , there is no "good one" and "bad one" ;after all when you put Maria and Magdalena together ,you get the name of a biblical woman who was in turn a sinner and a saint .
Physically and morally ,both sisters are worlds apart : Maria looks like a spinster , Magdalena a sexy socialite whose most fervent wish is to get rid of her mourning clothes .Maria is exploited,economically and sexually , by a society that leaves only one hope : to win on the lottery (signs often appear on her way) .
Roberto Gavaldon's directing is ,as usual ,brilliant : the opening scene ,a funeral , the murder (the shot is lost in the din of the firecrackers ,while a clown's head is dangling , a threatening omen (in El niño y la niebla (1953) , in the masked ball ,a terrifying dancer represents madness); when she comes back to her victim's house , the mourners are praying for her brother-in-law 's soul ,and the viewer before he hears the incantations thinks Maria is losing her mind.And afterward she becomes almost crazy in the empty house where shadows and lights create a presence (a sublime shot of a mirror reflects three images of the woman ).
And finally ,when she is aware of her brother-in-law's will ,she will understand she threw away her most precious things ;the buck who woos her (her sister's lover) is a hateful fortune-hunter who blackmails her.
Suspense is sustained till the last minute ,as I write above , and " la otra" compares favorably with the best American films noirs.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe script for "La Otra" was owned by Warner Bros. and is the same script as the 1964 version, Chi giace nella mia bara? (1963), starring Bette Davis. Warners chose to pass on making it as a film in the 1940s because it bore too close of a resemblance to the film Davis had just made, L'anima e il volto (1946).
- ConnessioniFeatured in Dolores del Río - Princesa de México (1999)
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- How long is The Other One?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 38 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was Vita rubata (1946) officially released in Canada in English?
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