AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
1,7 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAfter her father is killed in an accident, mill heiress Deborah Chandler marries the plant manager, Selden Clark, but his motives are suspicious.After her father is killed in an accident, mill heiress Deborah Chandler marries the plant manager, Selden Clark, but his motives are suspicious.After her father is killed in an accident, mill heiress Deborah Chandler marries the plant manager, Selden Clark, but his motives are suspicious.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
William Gould
- Train Conductor
- (cenas deletadas)
Fred Aldrich
- Bus Passenger
- (não creditado)
Gertrude Astor
- Woman in Drugstore
- (não creditado)
Ralph Brooks
- Counterman at Bus Depot
- (não creditado)
Morgan Brown
- Train Conductor
- (não creditado)
Peggie Castle
- Diner Waitress
- (não creditado)
Angela Clarke
- Clara May's Mother
- (não creditado)
David Clarke
- Moyer
- (não creditado)
Tom Coleman
- Plant Worker
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Where has this movie been all of my life? It's a great noir. Deborah Chandler (Ida Lupino) is planning a long term trip to New York. Her dad (John Litel) owns the mill in Clarksville - A huge source of employment for the town. Seldon Clark IV (Steve McNally) is the general manager of the mill and has matrimonial aspirations towards Deborah, but Deborah's dad holds him in low esteem. He sees him as the same as the previous Seldon Clarks - headstrong dreamers with a flair for the melodramatic.
Just before Deborah can leave for New York, her father dies in an accident at the mill. This causes her to get closer to Seldon and they marry a few months later. On their honeymoon an angry past paramour of Seldon's shows up at their honeymoon cabin - she's obviously been there before with Seldon - and pretty much sows tons of doubt into Deborah's mind about Seldon's motives. A car accident with Deborah as the driver and lone passenger follows, and she believes it was a murder attempt by Seldon, so she decides to stay "dead".
Seldon has choreographed this entire thing out carefully, but the authorities not being able to find the body makes him wonder if Deborah isn't still alive. He puts out an ad in papers across the nation offering a five-thousand-dollar reward if she is found. His clever plan has been to claim Deborah was not in her right mind when she dashed off on their wedding night in their car, that her death was a suicide, and that if she is alive, she is still mentally unstable - Just so nobody would believe her and so that he can commit her and get control of her estate and thus the mill.
Enter stage left Howard Duff as a semi employed drifter who sees Deborah, sees the reward offer, and from her strange behavior genuinely believes she is a danger to herself and that Seldon has only her interest at heart - at first.
This was a great noir with a good use of score and cinematography to build tension. It casts against type in that Peggy Dow is not playing a good girl here and Howard Duff plays a well meaning character for once. I have to credit the film for taking place in the south without having the entire cast sound and act like they are something out of a Tennessee Williams play. Highly recommended and hard to find.
Just before Deborah can leave for New York, her father dies in an accident at the mill. This causes her to get closer to Seldon and they marry a few months later. On their honeymoon an angry past paramour of Seldon's shows up at their honeymoon cabin - she's obviously been there before with Seldon - and pretty much sows tons of doubt into Deborah's mind about Seldon's motives. A car accident with Deborah as the driver and lone passenger follows, and she believes it was a murder attempt by Seldon, so she decides to stay "dead".
Seldon has choreographed this entire thing out carefully, but the authorities not being able to find the body makes him wonder if Deborah isn't still alive. He puts out an ad in papers across the nation offering a five-thousand-dollar reward if she is found. His clever plan has been to claim Deborah was not in her right mind when she dashed off on their wedding night in their car, that her death was a suicide, and that if she is alive, she is still mentally unstable - Just so nobody would believe her and so that he can commit her and get control of her estate and thus the mill.
Enter stage left Howard Duff as a semi employed drifter who sees Deborah, sees the reward offer, and from her strange behavior genuinely believes she is a danger to herself and that Seldon has only her interest at heart - at first.
This was a great noir with a good use of score and cinematography to build tension. It casts against type in that Peggy Dow is not playing a good girl here and Howard Duff plays a well meaning character for once. I have to credit the film for taking place in the south without having the entire cast sound and act like they are something out of a Tennessee Williams play. Highly recommended and hard to find.
'Woman in Hiding', when hearing of it through a fellow user recommendation, has the sort of concept that immediately had me sold. Being a fan of the genre (a mix of film noir and crime) and that type of film. While not considering Michael Gordon (my first exposure to him being 'Pillow Talk' and 'Move Over Darling') one of my favourite directors, he didn't fare too badly if not exceptionally in the genre. Both Ida Lupino and Steven McNally have been great in other films.
There may be many other films of the genre or with not too dissimiliar stories, both before and since, that are a lot better than 'Woman in Hiding'. It is still a good example of how good Gordon was at directing film noirs when the material was good, which it generally is here despite being imperfect, and how far he had come on from his "B-movie" period in the early 40s. Both Lupino and McNally come over well, though to me both have been better.
Am going to start with what 'Woman in Hiding' didn't do so well. Some of the story is on the ridiculous side and strains credibility, especially towards the end such as Deborah being that trusting of Patricia. Likewise with the rather vague and foolish motivations and decision making that make the characters at times seem idiotic.
Did feel that the hotel convention scene was not as suspenseful as it should have been and came as too busy and silly.
Having said all of this, 'Woman in Hiding' is a tightly plotted film and does have a dark and tense atmosphere a lot of the time. Did get creeps and chills a fair few times. Despite it going downhill a bit from the hotel convention scene, it does pick up in the climax. Which was not a predictable one and was genuinely anxiety-inducing. Gordon directs in an assured fashion and the script intrigues and entertains enough. All the cast perform expertly, Howard Duff's role does not sound interesting but actually he is a strong sympathetic presence in it. Peggy Dow does very well as Patricia.
Lupino has the most difficult part and plays it with searing intensity and pathos. McNally is genuinely menacing, the character is obvious but his performance does give the creeps. 'Woman in Hiding' is very atmospherically and stylishly photographed and lit, really enhancing especially the mill setting later on. The music is suitably ominous and the sound did give me the jitters without over-emphasising.
All in all, not great but pretty good despite a few frustrations. 7/10
There may be many other films of the genre or with not too dissimiliar stories, both before and since, that are a lot better than 'Woman in Hiding'. It is still a good example of how good Gordon was at directing film noirs when the material was good, which it generally is here despite being imperfect, and how far he had come on from his "B-movie" period in the early 40s. Both Lupino and McNally come over well, though to me both have been better.
Am going to start with what 'Woman in Hiding' didn't do so well. Some of the story is on the ridiculous side and strains credibility, especially towards the end such as Deborah being that trusting of Patricia. Likewise with the rather vague and foolish motivations and decision making that make the characters at times seem idiotic.
Did feel that the hotel convention scene was not as suspenseful as it should have been and came as too busy and silly.
Having said all of this, 'Woman in Hiding' is a tightly plotted film and does have a dark and tense atmosphere a lot of the time. Did get creeps and chills a fair few times. Despite it going downhill a bit from the hotel convention scene, it does pick up in the climax. Which was not a predictable one and was genuinely anxiety-inducing. Gordon directs in an assured fashion and the script intrigues and entertains enough. All the cast perform expertly, Howard Duff's role does not sound interesting but actually he is a strong sympathetic presence in it. Peggy Dow does very well as Patricia.
Lupino has the most difficult part and plays it with searing intensity and pathos. McNally is genuinely menacing, the character is obvious but his performance does give the creeps. 'Woman in Hiding' is very atmospherically and stylishly photographed and lit, really enhancing especially the mill setting later on. The music is suitably ominous and the sound did give me the jitters without over-emphasising.
All in all, not great but pretty good despite a few frustrations. 7/10
As the opening credits roll, newly wedded Ida Lupino (as Deborah Chandler) desperately tries to stop herself from crashing her car. In an attempted murder, the brakes have been disabled. We see the car drive off a North Carolina bridge and listen to Ms. Lupino's ghostly narration. But don't assume she's dead, or that the accident ends the story
After the prologue fails to uncover a dead body, we begin earlier. Inheriting a profitable mill upon the subsequently suspicious death of her father, Lupino marries the plant's general manager Stephen McNally (as Selden Clark). Apparently, they were a long-term couple; the wedding is the first of several implausible story developments. Lupino asks, "Why didn't I see it?" Don't know...
When they arrive at Mr. McNally's mountain cabin for a honeymoon, sexy Peggy Dow (as Patricia Monahan) is waiting. She reveals herself as McNally's "little business trips" lover and is understandably furious with Lupino's presence. After husband and lover smack each other around, Lupino decides she wants the marriage annulled, but McNally refuses. Lupino runs off, changes her name to "Ann Carter" and tries to hide from her homicidal husband. She meets handsome and helpful Howard Duff (as Keith Ramsey), but he isn't sure who is telling the truth. Beautiful black-and-white photography by William Daniels, effective direction from Michael Gordon and engaging performances make "Woman in Hiding" well worth following.
******* Woman in Hiding (12/27/49) Michael Gordon ~ Ida Lupino, Howard Duff, Stephen McNally, Peggy Dow
When they arrive at Mr. McNally's mountain cabin for a honeymoon, sexy Peggy Dow (as Patricia Monahan) is waiting. She reveals herself as McNally's "little business trips" lover and is understandably furious with Lupino's presence. After husband and lover smack each other around, Lupino decides she wants the marriage annulled, but McNally refuses. Lupino runs off, changes her name to "Ann Carter" and tries to hide from her homicidal husband. She meets handsome and helpful Howard Duff (as Keith Ramsey), but he isn't sure who is telling the truth. Beautiful black-and-white photography by William Daniels, effective direction from Michael Gordon and engaging performances make "Woman in Hiding" well worth following.
******* Woman in Hiding (12/27/49) Michael Gordon ~ Ida Lupino, Howard Duff, Stephen McNally, Peggy Dow
"Woman in Hiding" from 1950 stars Ida Lupino, Stephen McNally, and Howard Duff.
The film begins with a narration by Lupino, over a scene where police are trying to find her dead body after a car crash.
After her father (John Litel) dies from a fall, Deborah Chandler inherits the successful mill the family owns. She marries the general manager Selden (McNally). On her wedding night, they go to a cottage and find a girlfriend (Peggy Dow) of Selden's who has let herself in with a key.
Deborah then finds out that Selden killed her father. She flees from the cottage, only to find out that Selden, knowing she would do this, has cut the brakes of the car. Deborah jumps out before the car hits the water.
Selden isn't sure she's dead because no body was found; he wants to know for sure so he can inherit the mill free and clear. So he offers a $5000 reward for anyone who can find her. Deborah sees the ad while working in a restaurant and takes off. Passing a beauty salon, she hatches the idea to change her appearance.
Well, this is a not too great part of the story. She reappears with her hair maybe two shades lighter - she keeps calling herself a blonde, but she isn't - no sunglasses, hat, nothing. A man, Keith Ramsey (Duff) running the newspaper counter at the bus station remembers meeting her. When he sees her again, he takes off in pursuit.
Keith manages to earn Deborah's trust. His motives are a little ambiguous. He calls Selden and says he's not totally sure it's his wife, and he seems concerned about her. As Deborah attempts to keep running, things get rough.
Very exciting film with good performances. Lupino gives a strong performance as frightened and vulnerable woman; McNally is good at playing evil; and a young Howard Duff is handsome and charming. As Selden's girlfriend, Peggy Dow is terrific. The screen lost a real beauty as well as a fine actress when she married and retired.
The last ten minutes or so are nerve-wracking. Enjoy.
The film begins with a narration by Lupino, over a scene where police are trying to find her dead body after a car crash.
After her father (John Litel) dies from a fall, Deborah Chandler inherits the successful mill the family owns. She marries the general manager Selden (McNally). On her wedding night, they go to a cottage and find a girlfriend (Peggy Dow) of Selden's who has let herself in with a key.
Deborah then finds out that Selden killed her father. She flees from the cottage, only to find out that Selden, knowing she would do this, has cut the brakes of the car. Deborah jumps out before the car hits the water.
Selden isn't sure she's dead because no body was found; he wants to know for sure so he can inherit the mill free and clear. So he offers a $5000 reward for anyone who can find her. Deborah sees the ad while working in a restaurant and takes off. Passing a beauty salon, she hatches the idea to change her appearance.
Well, this is a not too great part of the story. She reappears with her hair maybe two shades lighter - she keeps calling herself a blonde, but she isn't - no sunglasses, hat, nothing. A man, Keith Ramsey (Duff) running the newspaper counter at the bus station remembers meeting her. When he sees her again, he takes off in pursuit.
Keith manages to earn Deborah's trust. His motives are a little ambiguous. He calls Selden and says he's not totally sure it's his wife, and he seems concerned about her. As Deborah attempts to keep running, things get rough.
Very exciting film with good performances. Lupino gives a strong performance as frightened and vulnerable woman; McNally is good at playing evil; and a young Howard Duff is handsome and charming. As Selden's girlfriend, Peggy Dow is terrific. The screen lost a real beauty as well as a fine actress when she married and retired.
The last ten minutes or so are nerve-wracking. Enjoy.
We first hear Ida Lupino's voice, in sepulchral voice-over, as we watch the wreck of a car that has plummeted over a bridge in North Carolina. "That's my body they're looking for..." she informs us. She's having a bad year; her father has died suddenly in an "accident" in the mill he owned and she up and married its general manager (Steven McNally), whom her father loathed (with reason: McNally killed him). On her wedding night she learned the truth about McNally (who seemed to specialize in deranged, controlling husbands, as in Make Haste to Live), and, trying to flee, found herself in a vehicle which he had rendered brakeless.
She's presumed dead, leaving McNally to inherit the mill (his plan all along), but just to be sure he puts out a reward for finding her. And Howard Duff, a newsstand clerk at a bus station in a nearby town, spots her, now blonde and on the lam. They strike a few sparks, but McNally convinces Duff that Lupino is emotionally disturbed, insuring that she'll be institutionalized and under his thumb.
All in all, Woman in Hiding's title says it all: It's a fairly standard woman-in-distress picture, but one with a superior cast. In addition to the tried-and-true team of Lupino and Duff (they were married at te time), Peggy Dow invests her few brief scenes as a ruthless rival for McNally's attention with memorable flair. The film looks good, too, especially in the darkened mill at the conclusion -- a conclusion which anticipates by a couple of years that of Sudden Fear, in which Joan Crawford fends of a homicidal busband who's got a bad girl on the side. Woman in Hiding is no masterpiece, nor is it one of Lupino's best performances, but it's well made, swift and satisfying.
She's presumed dead, leaving McNally to inherit the mill (his plan all along), but just to be sure he puts out a reward for finding her. And Howard Duff, a newsstand clerk at a bus station in a nearby town, spots her, now blonde and on the lam. They strike a few sparks, but McNally convinces Duff that Lupino is emotionally disturbed, insuring that she'll be institutionalized and under his thumb.
All in all, Woman in Hiding's title says it all: It's a fairly standard woman-in-distress picture, but one with a superior cast. In addition to the tried-and-true team of Lupino and Duff (they were married at te time), Peggy Dow invests her few brief scenes as a ruthless rival for McNally's attention with memorable flair. The film looks good, too, especially in the darkened mill at the conclusion -- a conclusion which anticipates by a couple of years that of Sudden Fear, in which Joan Crawford fends of a homicidal busband who's got a bad girl on the side. Woman in Hiding is no masterpiece, nor is it one of Lupino's best performances, but it's well made, swift and satisfying.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesIda Lupino did not want to make this movie let alone with Howard Duff, who she considered arrogant and obnoxious. Lupino and Duff would marry the year after the release of this film, on the day after her divorce from her second husband and film-making business partner Collier Young.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe pattern of the wet spots on Selden Clark's suit changes.
- Citações
Deborah Chandler Clark: [voice over as searchers are looking for her corpse in the river] That's my body they're looking for.
- ConexõesReferenced in Columbo: Murder, Smoke and Shadows
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- How long is Woman in Hiding?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 32 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.33 : 1
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