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Gilda

  • 1946
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
37K
YOUR RATING
Rita Hayworth in Gilda (1946)
Theatrical Trailer from Columbia Pictures
Play trailer2:03
1 Video
99+ Photos
Film NoirDramaRomanceThriller

A small-time gambler hired to work in a Buenos Aires casino discovers his employer's new wife is his former lover.A small-time gambler hired to work in a Buenos Aires casino discovers his employer's new wife is his former lover.A small-time gambler hired to work in a Buenos Aires casino discovers his employer's new wife is his former lover.

  • Director
    • Charles Vidor
  • Writers
    • E.A. Ellington
    • Jo Eisinger
    • Marion Parsonnet
  • Stars
    • Rita Hayworth
    • Glenn Ford
    • George Macready
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    37K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Charles Vidor
    • Writers
      • E.A. Ellington
      • Jo Eisinger
      • Marion Parsonnet
    • Stars
      • Rita Hayworth
      • Glenn Ford
      • George Macready
    • 228User reviews
    • 112Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Gilda
    Trailer 2:03
    Gilda

    Photos230

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    Top cast93

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    Rita Hayworth
    Rita Hayworth
    • Gilda
    Glenn Ford
    Glenn Ford
    • Johnny Farrell
    George Macready
    George Macready
    • Ballin Mundson
    Joseph Calleia
    Joseph Calleia
    • Det. Maurice Obregon
    Steven Geray
    Steven Geray
    • Uncle Pio
    Joe Sawyer
    Joe Sawyer
    • Casey
    Gerald Mohr
    Gerald Mohr
    • Capt. Delgado
    Mark Roberts
    Mark Roberts
    • Gabe Evans
    • (as Robert Scott)
    Ludwig Donath
    Ludwig Donath
    • German Cartel Member
    Donald Douglas
    Donald Douglas
    • Thomas Langford
    • (as Don Douglas)
    Julio Abadía
    • Newsman
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    Enrique Acosta
    • Gambler
    • (uncredited)
    Ed Agresti
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Sam Appel
    Sam Appel
    • Blackjack Dealer
    • (uncredited)
    Sam Ash
    Sam Ash
    • Gambler
    • (uncredited)
    Nina Bara
    Nina Bara
    • Girl at Carnival
    • (uncredited)
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Gambler
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Board
    • American Cartel Member
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Charles Vidor
    • Writers
      • E.A. Ellington
      • Jo Eisinger
      • Marion Parsonnet
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews228

    7.637.3K
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    Featured reviews

    9dglink

    Red Hot Rita in Complex Film Noir Gem

    Rita Hayworth positively sizzles as Gilda in this film-noir classic. From her initial hair-tossing scene to her near striptease while she sings "Put the Blame on Mame," Hayworth is captivating and more than convincing as the object of every man's desires. However, beyond the overtly heterosexual lures of Ms. Hayworth lurks a complex and ambiguous romantic triangle that provides more intrigue than the surface plot, which involves a gambling casino that is a front for shady operations that originated in a recently defeated, Fascist country.

    Hayworth may either be the intruding wedge that comes between Glenn Ford and George Macready or the object of both men's romantic interests. From the initial meeting between Ford as two-bit gambler Johnny Farrell and Macready as Ballin Mundson the casino owner, an ambiguous, possibly homo-erotic, attraction is established between the two men. The lingering looks that they exchange can be read in several ways, but Bogie never looked into Cagney's eyes like Ford looks into Macready's. After Ford begins to work for Macready, his devoted care and slavish attention to his boss's needs exceed the bounds of employee and employer. When Hayworth moves into Macready's home as his new wife, Ford returns the key to the house as though he were a jilted lover. Ford's increasing jealousy becomes apparent after Hayworth's arrival on the scene, but it is unclear of whom he is jealous, Hayworth or Macready or possibly both. Perhaps Ford's character is as unsure of his own feelings as is the viewer, which makes the ambiguity even more intriguing. Macready's jealousy also grows as the heat between Ford and Hayworth intensifies, but, again, it is ambiguous of whom he is jealous.

    With a dazzling performance by Hayworth, excellent black-and-white photography by Rudoph Mate, fine direction by Charles Vidor, and layers of psychological possibilities to ponder, "Gilda" is as golden as its title suggests.
    9bkoganbing

    Steaming Up the Argentine

    Glenn Ford and Rita Hayworth made five films together, but when they are talked of as a screen team, it's only Gilda that people are really talking about. Their first film was before World War II, The Lady in Question where both are young Columbia contract players who were in the same film and no effort was made to bill them as a team. The Loves of Carmen which was made after Gilda was a disaster for Glenn Ford, though Rita was at her sexiest. Affair in Trinidad was a good effort to recapture the magic of Gilda after Rita's storm marriage to Aly Khan and the last film The Money Trap was a Glenn Ford film where Rita has a brief role as an old girl friend. She was the best thing in that film by far.

    Do you remember in Cabaret how both the Liza Minnelli and Michael York characters find out they are sex partners to the same German bi-sexual man? That's essentially what happens in Gilda though with the Code firmly in place it's not something we talk about. George MacReady, a man of many interests rescues Glenn Ford from the docks of Buenos Aires after he's won some money from sailors in a crap game. They hit it off and Ford becomes his right hand man in running the casino MacReady operates.

    Then MacReady brings home a wife and lo and behold it turns out to be an old girl friend of Ford's, Rita Hayworth. Add to that some Nazi refugees have some business with MacReady over some tungsten mines.

    The real emphasis in this film is sex and personified by the best embodiment of sex ever on the silver screen. This film raked in a lot of dollars for Harry Cohn and Columbia Pictures. Hayworth, voice dubbed as usual, had a big number here in Put the Blame on Mame. It became a signature tune for her the rest of her life.

    One thing did disappoint me about Gilda. For a story that took place in Buenos Aires who many say is the most beautiful city in the world, it would have been nice to see some location shots, even if it was just some newsreels to establish the time and place. The film might as well have been in Albuquerque.

    But when you've got Rita to look at, it could be at the South Pole.
    7theowinthrop

    The Great Tungsten Cartel Caper

    George Macready is playing the role that most people remember him for - Balin Munson, nightclub millionaire in Argentina, and a man with pure ice in his veins. He has two friends...Johnny (Glenn Ford), who Balin rescues from some toughs, and a slick, sharp little chum hidden in his walking stick - ever ready to cut up people that Balin doesn't like. He also has bigger plans. Men like Balin are not satisfied with successful nightclub/gambling casinos (however successfully they are run). During the Second World War several German and axis industrialists found Balin a comfortable man to do business with. It seems they were not sure if Der Fuhrer would win after all, so they transferred various papers concerning their international holdings in tungsten manufacturing to Balin for him to watch. Big mistake, for Balin realizes that the documents actually put these interests into his fully capable hands. And since he has managed to bribe a local tungsten manufacturer to sell out his plant in Argentina, if Balin can leave without police interference he can put together a cartel that will control the manufacture of such things as light bulb filaments. Sounds preposterous, but that is Balin's goal. He only has two problems: Johnny and Balin's beautiful wife Gilda (Rita Hayworth) apparently know each other and can't stand each other - but he has to leave them in charge of his nightclub while he's away. The other problem is Detective Maurice Obregon (Joseph Calleia) of the Argentine Police Department. Obregon suspects Balin's involvement in this illegal cartel scheme, and is watching him like a hawk.

    "Gilda" is the film that made Rita Hayworth a star, and (with "Paths of Glory") gave Macready his justifiable claims to being one of Hollywood's best villains. Ironically many people don't think of Macready as anything but a villain in movies. It is true that in films like "Lady Without a Passport" and "The Big Clock" he was a villain, but he also could play decent people. He tries to help Spencer Tracy escape recapture and execution in "The Seventh Cross", and he is the wise minister and reformer who helps thwart Ray Milland (a.k.a. the Devil) in "Alias Nick Beal". But his Balin is pure, malevolent ice. There has been some suggestion that Balin's relationship with Johnny is actually a homosexual one (the business with the knife in the cane possibly being a metaphor for a male sex organ). Perhaps, but it is a weird friendship of two cynics who (briefly) enjoy each other's cynicism.

    Curiously enough the business of the tungsten cartel is rarely discussed in going over the film. Like "Notorious" which came out about the same time, "Gilda" reminded American audiences of the large numbers of Nazis and collaborators who fled to South America in this period. In "Notorious" it was Brazil, and the gang (led by Alex Sebastian - Claude Rains) was fooling around with uranium. Here the idea of such people controlling a useful metal's manufacturing was not probed as much, probably because Balin was set to double cross them. But it is worrying to think of them coming so close to it.

    In a discussion of the Warner Baxter film, "Such Men Are Dangerous" I mentioned that (like that film) there is a hint here of the 1928 mysterious death of millionaire Alfred Loewenstein, who managed to fall out of his private airplane over the English Channel. Here, to evade both the Nazis and Calleia, Balin arranges his plane to explode over the ocean (although the audience and Calleia see a figure parachute before it does so). Not quite the same problem as the Loewenstein mystery, but one can see the seed of the idea was there.

    I would say this was certainly one of the better film noirs. It even was somewhat thought provoking.
    8four_star_diva

    Put the Blame on that Dress

    And to think there used to be movies without graphic sex scenes that still got the point across, and how. The sexual tension between Ford and Hayworth in this movie is enough to make you run for the cold showers.

    Hayworth is gorgeous and so is Ford. They are so good together and in this movie they are positively great. When great screen lovers are mentioned, I've often wondered why Ford and Hayworth aren't among them.

    This is one of my absolute favorites.
    stephen-357

    A fusion of sexual heat, jealousy, fear and hatred - terrific stuff!

    Johnny is a small time, but talented, hustler who finds himself at the wrong end of a gun on the dark back streets of Buenos Aires. He is rescued by a mysterious and controlling stranger, Ballin Mundson, who ends up being the owner of a club/casino that operates under the radar of the law. Johnny and Ballin form a close partnership with Johnny being the "man who runs the joint" and Ballin the Master. When Ballin takes a short leave and comes back married to the gorgeous Gilda, a threesome develops that puts a strain on the partnership. There is a burning mutual dislike between Johnny and Gilda. When Gilda feigns ignorance over not remembering his name, she coyly replies, "Johnny. So hard to remember . . . and so easy to forget." Of course there's much more to their acquaintance than they are willing to acknowledge, and a fusion of sexual heat, jealousy, fear and hatred keep the tension tightly wound which fuels the film. And of course there is Rita Hayworth up front and center. All the accolades that have been showered on her sexy "striptease" interpretation of "Put the Blame on Mame" are true! And still this film has much more to offer; an economical but effective story line; a tight witty script loaded with innuendo; and superb acting all around, especially the overlooked icy performance of George Macready as Ballin Mundson.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      There is a rumour that this film is the only time Rita Hayworth's real singing voice is heard, but that is not true. According to the bonus features from the DVD, Hayworth actually never recorded her own singing voice and was a talented lip-syncher. Anita Ellis dubbed almost all of her singing in this film. Hayworth always wanted to do her own singing, and Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn paid for her voice lessons, but she never developed a voice he considered strong enough to be used; Hayworth remained bitter about that for the rest of her life.
    • Goofs
      When Farrell asks to cut the deck at the blackjack table, he shuffles the deck prior to the cut; this is not allowed.
    • Quotes

      Gilda: You do hate me, don't you, Johnny?

      Johnny Farrell: I don't think you have any idea of how much.

      Gilda: Hate is a very exciting emotion. Haven't you noticed? Very exciting. I hate you too, Johnny. I hate you so much I think I'm going to die from it. Darling...

      [they kiss passionately]

      Gilda: I think I'm going to die from it.

    • Connections
      Edited into Head (1968)
    • Soundtracks
      Put the Blame on Mame
      by Allan Roberts and Doris Fisher

      Performed by Anita Ellis

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Gilda?Powered by Alexa

    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 28, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "CineClips" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Love Love" YouTube Channel
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Ґильда
    • Filming locations
      • Hollywood, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $5,999
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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