Bachelor Harry Quincey, head designer in a small-town cloth factory, lives with his selfish sisters, glamorous hypochondriac Lettie and querulous widow Hester. His developing relationship wi... Read allBachelor Harry Quincey, head designer in a small-town cloth factory, lives with his selfish sisters, glamorous hypochondriac Lettie and querulous widow Hester. His developing relationship with new colleague Deborah Brown promises happiness at last...thwarted by passive, then incr... Read allBachelor Harry Quincey, head designer in a small-town cloth factory, lives with his selfish sisters, glamorous hypochondriac Lettie and querulous widow Hester. His developing relationship with new colleague Deborah Brown promises happiness at last...thwarted by passive, then increasingly active opposition from one sister. Will Harry resort to desperate measures?
- Ben
- (as Harry VonZell)
- Biff Wagner
- (as Coulter F. Irwin)
- Neighborhood Boy
- (uncredited)
- Joe the Greek
- (uncredited)
- Joan Warren
- (uncredited)
- Matron
- (uncredited)
- Child
- (uncredited)
- Stationmaster
- (uncredited)
- Child
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Though falling some way short of the noir standards of Siodmak's best genre efforts ("The Killers"/"Criss Cross"), this none the less is a dandy piece dealing in various forms of obsession. Finding that it's produced by Joan Harrison gives weight to the notion that this is more a "Hitchcockian" small town thriller than an overtly film noir piece. Harrison of course wrote a number of screenplays for "Hitchcock", and sure enough as the film unfolds one feels like we are involved in something the big director would have revelled in. Quite what "Hitch" would have made of the palaver surrounding the ending of the film, one can only imagine, but yet again a nifty 40s thriller is saddled with an ending that has caused division across the decades.
Because of the Hays Code, five different endings were tested for the film, with the one chosen vastly different to the one in the play. So while I personally find the existing ending quirky, and certainly not film destroying, it's sad that the incestuous elements of the source have been jettisoned and therefore taking away a crucial dark edge to the turn of events in the last quarter of the film. Harrison was incensed and promptly quit Universal Pictures in protest. With hindsight now, they could have ended the film about ten minutes earlier and it would have worked better. But cest la vie and all that.
Sanders is superb, very touching as the shy, naive designer pushed to his limit by sibling suffocation. Fitzgerald is glamorous and nails the devious side of her character with much conviction. While Raines, a touch underused due to the story, has a hard quality that puts one in mind of a certain Lauren Bacall, and that to my mind is very much a good thing. Some food for thought though, I couldn't help wonder about if the roles had been reversed. Raines playing manipulative bitch and Fitzgerald the love interest definitely cries out as a winner me thinks.
It's a conventional story, but one that has depth and boasts a director capable of crafting the right sort of itchy mood. There's no technical trickery exactly, but attention to detail exists and between them the makers have produced an intelligent and gripping film, that, in spite of some foregoing of dark emotional undercurrents, is very recommended to noir and "Hitchcockian" supporters. 7.5/10
- hitchcockthelegend
- Mar 10, 2010
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe film was previewed with five different endings and the existing one (a complete departure from the play) was selected for reasons of popular response and censorship, prompting the resignation of producer Joan Harrison from Universal Pictures. She left with two more pictures left on her contract.
- GoofsIn the two newspaper headlines, The Concord Enterprise spells the family surname as Quincey, while Corinth Home News has it as Quincy. The former appears to be correct as that is how Harry spells it in his confession.
- Quotes
Harry Melville Quincey: As the poet said, Home is where you go, and they have to let you in.
- Crazy credits"In order that your friends may enjoy this picture, please do not disclose the ending."
- ConnectionsReferenced in Que la lumière soit (1980)
- SoundtracksAbide With Me
(uncredited)
Music by William H. Monk (as William Henry Monk)
Lyrics by Henry F. Lyte (as Henry Francis Lyte)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
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- Also known as
- The Strange Affair of Uncle Harry
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $886,100 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1