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IMDbPro

Mórbido Despeito

Título original: Obsession
  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1 h 36 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
3,2 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Phil Brown, Sally Gray, and Robert Newton in Mórbido Despeito (1949)
Filme NoirSuspenses psicológicosCrimeSuspense

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaClive Riordan plans a devilish revenge against his wife's lover.Clive Riordan plans a devilish revenge against his wife's lover.Clive Riordan plans a devilish revenge against his wife's lover.

  • Direção
    • Edward Dmytryk
  • Roteirista
    • Alec Coppel
  • Artistas
    • Robert Newton
    • Sally Gray
    • Naunton Wayne
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    3,2 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Edward Dmytryk
    • Roteirista
      • Alec Coppel
    • Artistas
      • Robert Newton
      • Sally Gray
      • Naunton Wayne
    • 62Avaliações de usuários
    • 21Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 indicação no total

    Fotos57

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    Elenco principal19

    Editar
    Robert Newton
    Robert Newton
    • Dr. Clive Riordan
    Sally Gray
    Sally Gray
    • Storm Riordan
    Naunton Wayne
    Naunton Wayne
    • Supt. Finsbury
    Phil Brown
    Phil Brown
    • Bill Kronin
    Ronald Adam
    Ronald Adam
    • Clubman
    Michael Balfour
    Michael Balfour
    • American Sailor
    Betty Cooper
    • Miss Stevens - Receptionist
    James Harcourt
    James Harcourt
    • Aitkin - Butler
    Roddy Hughes
    Roddy Hughes
    • Clubman
    Allan Jeayes
    Allan Jeayes
    • Clubman
    Olga Lindo
    Olga Lindo
    • Mrs. Humphries
    Russell Waters
    • Flying Squad Detective
    Lyonel Watts
    Lyonel Watts
    • Clubman
    • (as Lionel Watts)
    Monty the Dog
    • Monty - Storm's Dog
    Stanley Baker
    Stanley Baker
    • Policeman
    • (não creditado)
    Ernest Clark
    Ernest Clark
      Sam Kydd
      Sam Kydd
      • Club Steward
      • (não creditado)
      C.M. Pennington-Richards
      • Bit Part
      • (não creditado)
      • Direção
        • Edward Dmytryk
      • Roteirista
        • Alec Coppel
      • Elenco e equipe completos
      • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

      Avaliações de usuários62

      7,33.1K
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      Avaliações em destaque

      8gbill-74877

      Hidden gem

      A wonderful, tight drama that begins with a British gentleman (Robert Newton) turning up unexpectedly to surprise his wife (Sally Gray) and her American lover (Phil Brown). Angered by her string of infidelities, he's planned the perfect revenge, but I won't describe the plot further. I loved the intelligent, British dialogue put side by side with a truly dark crime. The performances are fine, and director Edward Dmytryk creates a nice noir feeling. The detective played by Naunton Wayne is a forerunner of Columbo, turning up to ask 'one more question' with a veneer of innocence, but flashing his understanding and unnerving the culprit. A hidden gem.
      7robert-temple-1

      British Noir about Sadistic Psychiatrist Holding a Man Captive

      This film is based on a novel ('A Man about a Dog') by Alec Coppel, who wrote Hitchcock's 'Vertigo'. This story is far creepier and more sinister than that one. Robert Newton, who the previous year had entranced people as Bill Sikes in 'Oliver Twist', and who was to be cursed with the role of Long John Silver the next year, from which he would struggle to escape for the rest of his life, here shows what a fine standard British actor he was. He plays a highly articulate and urbane London psychiatrist who beneath his mask is actually an obsessive and sadistic psychopath. Anyone who thinks psychiatrists cannot be more mentally ill than their patients is naive: I have known two psychiatrists personally (no, I was not a patient) who were totally insane. It is a good place to hide when you are psychotic, as no one can question you. Newton is perfect in this part, and his calm never leaves him till the end, as he carries out his odious plans with the unruffled manner of a cleaner dusting a bookshelf (and he has plenty of bookshelves). Newton is married to a compulsively unfaithful wife, played with style by the glamorous Sally Gray (who made one more film the next year and then became Lady Oranmore and retired from the screen). One day he snaps, and Phil Brown is the American lover who bears the brunt. As Newton says to him: 'You've heard about the straw that broke the camel's back? Well, you're the straw.' With meticulous cunning, Newton imprisons Brown in a cellar on a deserted bombsite (this is just after the War, and bombsites were everywhere in London). He holds him for months, and Brown very cleverly creates a character who attempts to bond with his captor, in the hope that he can somehow escape. Brown is kept chain within a chalked circle of his subterranean den, and Newton stands just at the edge of it and lectures Brown about how each time he comes he brings a hot water bottle full of yet more acid with which he is slowly filling the bath tub into which he will place Brown's body when it comes time to kill him, where it will dissolve. 'So I'll just go down the plug?' asks Brown, and Newton solemnly agrees. This film is really nasty and does not let up in showing us the calculating manner in which a psychopath goes about his carefully coordinated crime plan. Ed Dmytryk directs chillingly and tautly, and surprisingly the music is by Nino Rota of Italy, who later would become famous for composing the music for major Italian directors like Visconti and Fellini. Naunton Wayne plays a Scotland yard superintendent with a calm and menace which exceeds even that of Newton's. This film in a sense is a study in the mannered British way of behaving, and the politenesses exchanged between a criminal and a detective who are enemies, as well as between a husband and a wife who loathe each other but for some reason never split up, living on in their elegant house with no children but the dog Monty, played by a real dog called Monty. And here is the rub: Monty messes things up in a major way, but that would be telling. For those who can bear the extremely grisly and claustrophobic aspects of this sick tale, which was a forerunner of 'The Collector' with Samantha Eggar, this film could be recommended as good noir fare. But it is not pleasant, and it lacks the surreal and haunting quality of 'Vertigo' entirely. It is certainly a savage comment on the arch hypocrisy of traditional upper middle class British manners, and all that they can conceal, such as 'something nasty in the shed'.
      7RanchoTuVu

      remarkably well-done plot

      A London psychiatrist (Robert Newton) catches his wife (Sally Gray) in an affair with an American (Phil Brown). Apparently this is not her first affair, and Newton, as the objective and self-controlled psychiatric professional, decides to settle things in a well-thought-out way by first kidnapping and then imprisoning the American in a hidden room not too far removed from the actual residence, with the ultimate goal of killing him without leaving any incriminating traces. The film could have been more dramatic by playing up the relationship between Newton and the beautiful Sally Gray. Gray seems to be telling the viewer that Newton never really loved her, although it also seems as if her youth and passion were too much for his middle-aged character to handle. In any event the plot, which is remarkably well done, inevitably leads to a police or Scotland Yard type investigation and eventual solving of the crime, rather than a dark story.
      8hitchcockthelegend

      Man's Best Friend.

      Obsession (AKA: The Hidden Room) is directed by Edward Dmytryk and adapted to screenplay by Alec Coppel from his own book and play. It stars Robert Newton, Phil Brown, Sally Gray and Naunton Wayne. Music is by Nino Rota and cinematography by C.M. Pennington-Richards.

      Finally having had enough of his wife's affair with a young lover, Dr. Clive Riordan (Newton) plots a devilish scheme of kidnap and murder...

      The motive that drives the plot of Obsession is simple in the extreme, this is out and out a revenge for infidelity, but the presentation by Dmytryk is superbly crafty in that Hitchcockian way. The doctor is a most elegant and calm man, he has the perfect murder in mind for his wife's lover (Brown) and he, being a purveyor of psychological smarts, is going to enjoy the luxury of methodically taunting his prey over a period of time.

      With the man ingeniously incarcerated down in a bombed out abode, and subjected to daily visits from the doctor, Dr. Clive is then seen going about his normal routines. Exchanging brandy sips with cultural chatter in the gentleman's club, swatting away the attentions of his increasingly fraught wife (Gray), and of course dealing with the close attentions of Scotland Yard; here in the form of Naunton Wayne's astute Superintendent Finsbury. The "good" doctor even has plenty of time to indulge in his love of model train set construction.

      The initial plot machinations are slowly paced by the recently blacklisted director, but it's a deliberate ploy since the whole complexion of the movie changes once the kidnap occurs and the police and the press become involved. The atmosphere becomes tense, and this even as captor and captive enjoy some straight backed - prim and proper - verbal exchanges. There's a meticulousness to the murder based thematics that strike a chord, the mention of Crippen and obvious nods to John George Haigh keep the film buzzing with real life serial killer atrocities.

      There's a case to be made here that this is Dmytryk's best British film? Certainly his ability to build suspense without histrionics or blood letting is a masterclass in Brit thriller staging. While his directing of Newton and Wayne, both of whom are excellent, is also worthy of a pat on the back. Visually it's straight black and white photography, except for the odd time we are out on the wet cobbled streets and the gaslights ooze the ethereal. But although there's some debate about if it deserves film noir status, I personally feel it's the sort of crime/thriller mounted with enough skill to make it worth seeking out by the film noir loving crowd.

      Some of the support turns are stiff, but mercifully not film harming, while you do have to accept that the locale of the crime is hardly water tight and most likely would have been found with ease. But minor itches be damned, this is cunning, crafty and a British chiller of some worth. 8/10
      8Spondonman

      Every dog has its day!

      Since I first saw Obsession 30 years ago it's remained one of my favourite post War British thrillers – although directed by and starring Americans it's nowhere near noir but a very British take on a calculated attempt at a perfect murder. The idea shown is almost as foolproof and institutionally British as dismembered body parts in suitcases checked into railway station lockers. Some cogent concise acting, scripting, production and black & white photography all go to make an engrossing 93 minutes UK TV running time.

      Erudite doctor Robert Newton plays a husband who gets terminally jealous of his philandering wife Sally Gray and decides to bump off her current lover Phil Brown in an ingenious and supposedly undetectable manner. Bomb ravaged London comes into play here with the kidnapped lover temporarily installed in a derelict hidden room underneath a broken brick wasteland to await his gruesome but quick death at manic Newton's hands. And it is Newton's picture - although Naunton Wayne gives him a run for his money later on - his perfect diction matching his impassive body language (maybe exhausted after all the gurning he'd just done in Oliver Twist) and creating a perfectly clinical analysis of the mind of a hopeful murderer. Monty sure was a lucky dog to have escaped a bath though!

      A great little film with plenty for you to think about and an atmosphere all of its own when the British made good British films with only the British in mind – even with Yank input!

      Interesses relacionados

      Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in À Beira do Abismo (1946)
      Filme Noir
      Rosamund Pike in Garota Exemplar (2014)
      Suspenses psicológicos
      James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Família Soprano (1999)
      Crime
      Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasita (2019)
      Suspense

      Enredo

      Editar

      Você sabia?

      Editar
      • Curiosidades
        Bill mentions the "brides in the bath" in talking about murder. The reference is to the infamous British serial killer, George Joseph Smith. He was a bigamist who would woo well-to-do women, marry them, then drown them in the bathtub. Specifically, he would complain to doctors that his new wife was having dizzy spells and headaches to procure sedatives for them, drug their drinks, then recommend they take a warm bath to feel better. The women essentially would pass out in the tub, and, with or without him holding them under the water, they would drown, leaving him all their money. It was a very famous case for decades after Smith was caught and executed in 1915. It's still well-known in forensics as the case that brought to light how criminals will use the same methods (the famous "MO" or modus operandi) over and over again.
      • Erros de gravação
        A crew member with folded arms is visible in the reflection of the car window when the Superintendent is sending his officers back the station.
      • Citações

        Dr. Clive Riordan: Are you married, Mr. Finsbury?

        Supt. Finsbury: No... I've often thought about it. Trouble is, I've thought about it so long, I'm afraid I've missed the bus.

        Dr. Clive Riordan: Just one of life's little jokes, isn't it?... It points out our mistakes too late for us to profit by them.

      • Conexões
        Featured in A Man About a Film - Richard Dyer on Obsession (2024)

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      Perguntas frequentes15

      • How long is The Hidden Room?Fornecido pela Alexa

      Detalhes

      Editar
      • Data de lançamento
        • 3 de agosto de 1949 (Reino Unido)
      • País de origem
        • Reino Unido
      • Idioma
        • Inglês
      • Também conhecido como
        • The Hidden Room
      • Locações de filme
        • Grosvenor Square, Mayfair, Westminster, Greater London, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(scene with the American sailors)
      • Empresa de produção
        • Independent Sovereign Films
      • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

      Especificações técnicas

      Editar
      • Tempo de duração
        • 1 h 36 min(96 min)
      • Cor
        • Black and White
      • Proporção
        • 1.37 : 1

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