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Il segreto di una donna

Titolo originale: Whirlpool
  • 1950
  • T
  • 1h 38min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
5057
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Gene Tierney, José Ferrer, and Richard Conte in Il segreto di una donna (1950)
Trailer for this psychological drama
Riproduci trailer2: 40
1 video
99+ foto
Film NoirCrimeDramaMysteryRomanceThriller

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA woman suffering from kleptomania is hypnotized in an attempt to cure her. Soon afterwards, she's found at the scene of a murder with no memory of how she got there, and seemingly no way to... Leggi tuttoA woman suffering from kleptomania is hypnotized in an attempt to cure her. Soon afterwards, she's found at the scene of a murder with no memory of how she got there, and seemingly no way to prove her innocence.A woman suffering from kleptomania is hypnotized in an attempt to cure her. Soon afterwards, she's found at the scene of a murder with no memory of how she got there, and seemingly no way to prove her innocence.

  • Regia
    • Otto Preminger
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Ben Hecht
    • Andrew Solt
    • Guy Endore
  • Star
    • Gene Tierney
    • Richard Conte
    • José Ferrer
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,7/10
    5057
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Otto Preminger
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ben Hecht
      • Andrew Solt
      • Guy Endore
    • Star
      • Gene Tierney
      • Richard Conte
      • José Ferrer
    • 71Recensioni degli utenti
    • 59Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video1

    Whirlpool
    Trailer 2:40
    Whirlpool

    Foto108

    Visualizza poster
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    + 102
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    Interpreti principali49

    Modifica
    Gene Tierney
    Gene Tierney
    • Ann Sutton
    Richard Conte
    Richard Conte
    • Dr. William Sutton
    José Ferrer
    José Ferrer
    • David Korvo
    • (as Jose Ferrer)
    Charles Bickford
    Charles Bickford
    • Lt. James Colton
    Barbara O'Neil
    Barbara O'Neil
    • Theresa Randolph
    Eduard Franz
    Eduard Franz
    • Martin Avery
    Constance Collier
    Constance Collier
    • Tina Cosgrove
    Fortunio Bonanova
    Fortunio Bonanova
    • Feruccio di Ravallo
    Beau Anderson
    • Soldier
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Myrtle Anderson
    • Ann's Maid
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Gail Bonney
    Gail Bonney
    • Minor Role
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Lovyss Bradley
    Lovyss Bradley
    • Nurse
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Margaret Brayton
    • Policewoman
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Sue Carlton
    • Elevator Girl
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Ruth Clifford
    Ruth Clifford
    • Nurse Eliott
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Clancy Cooper
    Clancy Cooper
    • First Policeman
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Oliver Cross
    • Minor Role
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Joan Dix
    • Minor Role
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Otto Preminger
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Ben Hecht
      • Andrew Solt
      • Guy Endore
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti71

    6,75K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7Mikeonalpha99

    "I can't remember anything about what happened!"

    One of the first things that struck me about Whirlpool is how good an actress Gene Tierney actually was. She does such a terrific job of portraying both the vulnerability and desperation of her character.

    Set in Los Angeles, Whirlpool is an unassuming and unpretentious thriller that sort of fits the mold of noir. The movie certainly isn't the best example of the genre, but it does have many fine elements that, combined with Ms. Tierney's performance, make it eminently watchable.

    Gene Tierney stars as Ann Sutton. Ann is the wealthy and respectable wife of successful psychiatrist Dr. William Sutton (a marvelous Richard Conte). The film opens as Ann is caught shoplifting a jeweled broach from a ritzy department store. The police and the store manager are determined to prosecute, but she gets off the hook thanks to David Korvo (Jose Ferrer), a mysterious hypnotist whom Ann employs to help her sleep.

    Ann initially thinks that Korvo is out to blackmail her, and she offers him a large some of money to keep him quiet. Korvo, however, has another, far more furtive agenda. As he gradually builds Ann's trust, it soon is revealed that he has been having an affair with Sutton's former patient Theresa Randolph (Barbara O'Neil).

    Shortly thereafter, Theresa turns up dead, and Ann is implicated as the murderer since she was found at the scene of the crime. Ann is arrested and charged with murder, but bitterly denies involvement telling her kindly husband that she just can't remember anything. So, who is the murderer? Surely it can't have been Korvo, as he was in the hospital during the time of Theresa's death.

    It is left up to Lt. Colton (Charles Bickford) to use his detective skills and Dr. Sutton as the committed psychiatrist to break the hold that Korvo has on Ann and finally learn the truth behind the Theresa's murder.

    Ferrer is terrific as the enigmatic Korvo. From the beginning it's plainly obvious that he's a sleazy, amoral confidence trickster, who is probably out to milk the Ann of her money and nothing happens to compromise his position. Richard Conte is also very good as Ann's concerned husband; he knows that his wife is not guilty but he's frustrated at the lack of inaction on behalf the local police to prove her innocence.

    The issues of hypnotherapy, especially with the idea that hypnosis can make people do stuff they don't want to, is also interesting. Although, by today's standards it perhaps doesn't carry the kind of psychological weight and dramatic punch that it did back when the film was made.

    Perhaps influenced by the wave of films during the period that utilized the growing field of hypnotherapy the picture might have seemed a bit fresher when it was first released. However, the Whirlpool is still fun to watch, especially for the lovely Gene Tierney who apparently used Whirlpool as a comeback after a two-year absence. Mike Leonard September 05.
    7Lejink

    Deeper and Down

    Another complex, at times morally ambiguous film noir from Otto Preminger, engaging the services of top writer Ben Hecht and actors of the quality of Gene Tierney & Jose Ferrer to give it life. It's old ground of course for all of them, Preminger and Tierney had teamed up in "Laura" and, with Hecht were to do so again in the soon-come "Where the Sidewalk Ends" while Hecht had previously turned psychoanalysis to thrilling effect in Hitchcock's "Spellbound". There are certainly some typically subversive little Preminger / Hecht touches, I detect, of voyeurism and fetishism, running the film close, I would imagine, to the prevailing moral code of the day, which the former was to take on further in "The Moon Is Blue" and to some kind of apogee in "Anatomy Of A Murder" 10 years later. Look and listen closely here and you'll see the camera fading out a shot of Tierney's husband just about to disrobe his wife after she falls into a hypnotically induced deep-sleep and at another point the salacious quote addressed to Tierney by morally corrupt blackmailing hypnotist/astrologist (what a CV!) Ferrer about "undressing her scruples". I was even pulled up by the scenes of the blood-marks on the floor from Ferrer's character as something you didn't see everyday in the sanitised, Hollywood still coming to terms with the Communist witch-hunt in the post-war era. The playing is excellent, Tierney, who I've only just discovered as an actress (largely through watching old film-noirs!) is again radiantly beautiful as the ashamed kleptomaniac, desperate for a cure, but at the same time conveying her character's complexity and inner toughness as she finally breaks the hypnotic spell cast on her by Ferrer. For me, Ferrer steals the movie, making your skin crawl in every scene he plays once his perverted (in every sense of the word) designs become apparent. Their scenes together, where he can hardly conceal his lust for Tierney and desire to break up her happy home are electric and he also gets a lengthy scene where he hypnotises himself against the excruciating after-effects of his self-conducted gall-bladder operation. He completely convinces you of his strength of will over his physical pain to enable him to go after Tierney as she struggles to recover her amnesia which will of course expose his own guilt. The direction is taut, the cinematography excellent, the settings convincing and I also especially appreciated the excellent use of music to dramatise key scenes. Naturally there's a large degree of implausibility about just how Tierney finds herself under the control of such a toxic character and the denouement is perhaps more complicated and played out than it might be but this is still a highly intelligent, challenging piece of cinema, further pushing back the barriers of adult cinema in late 40's Hollywood.
    6jonathan shankey

    Charles Bickford's performance

    Just watched this last night. I'm a fan of Otto Preminger and was therefore full of hopes, but after a terrific opening 20 minutes, it sort of falls away after all that I think. However, what a fantastic performance from Charles Bickford as the Lieutenant. Brilliant. Worth it to see his performance alone -- Ferrer is wonderful in the opening scene when he defends Gene Tierney and generally adds the right dosage of menace, but the self-hypnosis in the hospital bed is unlikely and the final ten minutes in the house are vaguely ridiculous. The relationship between him and Tierney is very strong however. It is sad to think that Tierney struggled so much health-wise, because to my mind she was the most beautiful of her generation and is utterly plausible in any of the movies that I have come across..
    7Quinoa1984

    mostly run-of-the-mill with some hypnosis-babble, but strong acting all around

    Oh sure, Ann Sutton could pay for that pin - or for many other things - but there's something, probably, about the thrill of taking something, very non-chalant out of a store, especially as an unsuspecting adult white woman in the late 40's, and not getting caught. Is it Kleptomania? Perhaps. But the point is, at the start of Whirlpool, Ann gets caught at a department store stealing a pin, and she's in luck that David Korvo is there to help excuse her away - these are false charges after all, she has the money to buy a dozen of these pins, right - but there's a catch to her being let go: not so much for money, at least it seems at first. She tries to pay him, but for five thousand, p-shaw. No, he wants to get at her mind, to find what it is that made her do this thing... but it will lead to murder.

    Gene Tierney and Jose Ferrer play Ann and Korvo, and they're both excellent here. Even a one and a half note character (not quite one, maybe, almost two dimensional, if it tried) like Ann's husband Bill gets a solid performance out of Richard Conte, to the point where we really feel for their marriage, and see the conflict very plain as soon as Ann 'turns' on to her 'nothing's the matter' tone of voice to her husband after she comes home and tells the maid that there's something very wrong and she must speak to her husband soon as he gets home. Is she crazy? Has she been driven mad? She's no femme fatale really - she is in what seems to be a fairly happy marriage (though at one critical point she'll say otherwise in a very tense confessional). But she is flawed and interesting, and that helps.

    It's especially good that this character is so strong, as well as Korvo being an equally strong, conniving villain, and we know he's a villain from basically minute one but the fun is seeing how he does things like slip a glass with the lady's fingerprints into his jacket while she's away for a minute from the lunch table. But there's a couple of plot holes here that are jarring - one is more character-based and comes in the third act, it felt like a scene was missing that involved convincing a particular character to give Ann one more chance, and there was a connective tissue from the convincing to her not in prison - and I have to wonder how much they cut out of the book. It seems like a lot. Not to mention the notion of how completely tight the hypnosis can be, just how air-tight a plot can be (that we don't really see be suggested by the way) for Ann to go out in her car and get those records and then for that other thing to happen.

    Whirlpool isn't weak tea by any means, but I have to think Preminger, despite some clever camera angles and the usual flair for hardcore film noir as a director (the tension in that final scene is really terrific, especially how a character hides just until a certain moment) would have had some trouble without this cast. Thankfully, Tierney gives this character credibility and she makes her fragile, torn and frayed, and when she's in her hypnotic trances it's like she's walking on air. I even liked the one/two scene turn by Barbara O'Neil (Constance Collier also has some good lines). Not something to rush to see, but it's a fair follow-up for the director and star from Laura - more of a B-side if one were to screen them back to back
    8BumpyRide

    Whirlwind

    Movies were meant to entertain, and not all movies can be a "Citizen Kane" but this movie does what it's meant to do. Gene Tierney, perhaps the most beautiful actress ever to grace the screen, and highly under rated, handles the task of playing the fragile, accused murderess in the movie. An odd choice but Jose F. does a great job too...his hospital scene still makes me wince when he gets up from his bed! Barbara O'Neil (aka, Scarlet's mother) pops up in the most unlikeliest of places, but I have a new appreciation for her work. She adds style and elegance to every movie she appears in, including this one as the murdered socialite. Sure the movie might have some flaws, but if you listen carefully everything can be explained. It's great viewing time and again.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Ben Hecht's anti-British statements in the late 1940s (due to their involvement with Israel) so angered the nation that the UK prints replaced his name with a pseudonym, Lester Barstow.
    • Blooper
      At the beginning of the film, it is obvious that the store's "glass" doors have no glass in them whatsoever.
    • Citazioni

      David Korvo: You were wise not to tell your husband, Mrs. Sutton. A successful marriage is usually based on what a husband and wife don't know about each other.

    • Versioni alternative
      In the movie "Laura" also directed by Preminger and starring Gene Tierney some of the same works of art appear. A standing Buddha is owned by Constance Collier's character in Whirlpool and by Waldo Lydecker in Laura. Waldo Lydecker also owns a collection of masks that are also owned by Jose Ferrer in Whirlpool.
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Fino all'ultimo respiro (1960)
    • Colonne sonore
      Again
      (uncredited)

      Music by Lionel Newman

      Played at the hotel lounge

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 28 aprile 1950 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • Streaming on "Chris T" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Cinema Gems Restored" YouTube Channel
    • Lingue
      • Inglese
      • Italiano
    • Celebre anche come
      • Whirlpool
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(Studio)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 38 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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