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La femme déshonorée

Original title: Dishonored Lady
  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Hedy Lamarr in La femme déshonorée (1947)
HeistPsychological DramaCrimeDrama

A beautiful editor at a fashion magazine has a breakdown due to the pressures of her work and her disappointing love life. A psychiatrist recommends that she start life fresh by moving into ... Read allA beautiful editor at a fashion magazine has a breakdown due to the pressures of her work and her disappointing love life. A psychiatrist recommends that she start life fresh by moving into a smaller apartment and under another name.A beautiful editor at a fashion magazine has a breakdown due to the pressures of her work and her disappointing love life. A psychiatrist recommends that she start life fresh by moving into a smaller apartment and under another name.

  • Director
    • Robert Stevenson
  • Writers
    • Edward Sheldon
    • Margaret Ayer Barnes
    • Edmund H. North
  • Stars
    • Hedy Lamarr
    • Dennis O'Keefe
    • John Loder
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Stevenson
    • Writers
      • Edward Sheldon
      • Margaret Ayer Barnes
      • Edmund H. North
    • Stars
      • Hedy Lamarr
      • Dennis O'Keefe
      • John Loder
    • 42User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast32

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    Hedy Lamarr
    Hedy Lamarr
    • Madeleine Damien
    Dennis O'Keefe
    Dennis O'Keefe
    • Dr. David S. Cousins
    John Loder
    John Loder
    • Felix Courtland
    William Lundigan
    William Lundigan
    • Jack Garet
    Morris Carnovsky
    Morris Carnovsky
    • Dr. Richard Caleb
    Natalie Schafer
    Natalie Schafer
    • Ethel Royce
    Paul Cavanagh
    Paul Cavanagh
    • Victor Kranish
    Douglass Dumbrille
    Douglass Dumbrille
    • District Attorney O'Brien
    • (as Douglas Dumbrille)
    Margaret Hamilton
    Margaret Hamilton
    • Mrs. Geiger
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    Gino Corrado
    Gino Corrado
    • Carl, Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Deery
    • Club Patron
    • (uncredited)
    James Flavin
    James Flavin
    • Police Sgt. Patella
    • (uncredited)
    Raoul Freeman
    • Bailiff
    • (uncredited)
    Curt Furberg
    • Courtroom Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Dick Gordon
    Dick Gordon
    • Club Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Haines
    • Trial Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Henry Hebert
    Henry Hebert
    • Attorney's Assistant
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert Stevenson
    • Writers
      • Edward Sheldon
      • Margaret Ayer Barnes
      • Edmund H. North
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    6.41.7K
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    Featured reviews

    9JLRMovieReviews

    Don't Diss a Dishonored Lady

    Hedy Lamarr once remarked, I believe, that most of her films were pretty forgettable. If she didn't, then most of her critics did. Maybe, looking back on them, none stood out as exceptional. But they can be called good for what they were. This film, Dishonored Lady, is one such example. It may not win any awards and may not be that important in the long scheme of things, but this is a good little programmer (or 'b' picture) that really packs a wallop and entertains for about 90 minutes. We open on Hedy sitting in her car, and after a time and after a cop asking if she's okay, she rams her car into a tree. A psychiatrist saves her and tries to get her to tell him her problems. She's thankful for his interest, but leaves not planning on going back. We then see how things develop as she ultimately leaves her job, wanting to find peace somewhere. She changes her name for a fresh start and meets Dennis O'Keefe, who's another tenant in the apartment. John Loder (who was one of Hedy Lamarr's husbands in real life) plays a client of hers from the fashion job who finds her in her new place and from there, things happen. William Lundigan, Morris Carnovsky as the psychiatrist, Natalie Schafer (from "Gilligan's Island",) Paul Cavanaugh, Douglas Dumbrille, and Margaret Hamilton (the Wicked Witch of the West from "The Wizard of Oz") make up the rest of the cast. Their names may not mean much to the average person today, but these are all very reliable actors who make the film even more enjoyable. What's unique about Lundigan and O'Keefe being in the same picture here is that usually they were competing for the same type of roles in films, the young man usually on the right side of the law and is set on solving a murder that is thrust upon them. Sometimes they played a detective and other times they were an average Joe, with a murder rap on their head to clear. If you ever get a chance to catch a "Dishonored Lady," see it for yourself. It may be one of the best of Hedy Lamarr's "forgettable films."
    7wndlz

    Unusual and Entertaining Movie

    This movie was generally well made. The critics have not been kind to this movie over the years. I think it had a 'dream and erotic' quality. I think it did a good job of implying sexual behavior, so as not to incense censors of that time. Hedy was beautiful, and I thought her rather ambiguous performance, gave the film a nice sense of mystery. Again, the supporting cast was generally second rate. I think budget concerns were responsible for some rather lack-luster actors. I do believe Hedy Lamarr needed strong supporting performances, to help carry her movies, and inspire her performances.
    8oldblackandwhite

    Gorgeous Hedy Lamarr Outshines Glizy Fashions and Psychology on the Half-Shell

    It would be a mistake to say that Hedy Lamarr was just a pretty face for two reasons. 1) Pretty would be a gross understatement. She had a gorgeous face, and all the rest of her was likewise, if you get what I mean. 2) She really could act, as she proved taking on a complex role in Dishonored Lady. Okay, she wasn't in a class with Bette Davis. But then Bette Davis would not have been believable in Hedy's role, because no one would believe all those men would have been so obsessively attracted to the frumpy Ms. Davis.

    Dishonored Lady is an early example of the "pycho-drama" and possibly one of the best in that typically dreary, and not so entertaining genre. The average American of the late 1940's wasn't really sure what a psychiatrist was, unless he was a WWII veteran suffering from what is now called post-traumatic stress syndrome. But the high-living Hollywood crowd knew all about that shadowy type of doc. So, it is not surprising we started seeing movies about people with structural problems in the upper stories. Joan Crawford at this stage of her career glommed on to this overwrought type of dramas. Not surprisingly, since it would be a major shocker if a dame like her didn't have a shrink on the payroll.

    In Dishonored Lady the shrink, played with great verve by Morris Carnovsky, is the pivotal character. Hedy's character is a high-paid advertising designer, surrounded by shallow, dishonorable men who take advantage of her promiscuous nature. I say promiscuous, but I mean by the standards of the late 1940's, when the world was only just starting to go mad. By today's drop-your-drawers-if-somebody-just-looks-like-they-want-you-to standards maybe she would be regarded as a prude. At least she has some guilt feelings about it. In fact she becomes so disgusted with herself that she tries to commit suicide by ramming her speeding car into a stone fence. She has the good luck 1) not to be seriously injured and 2) to fall right into the attentions of psychiatrist Carnovsky, who owns the house behind the fence. He proceeds to help her get over the suicidal urge and to put some corners on her round heels.

    Turns out she has found in this psychiatrist one of the best of that iffy bunch. Though we see the couch business in his office as if he were a practitioner of the now-discredited Freudian branch of psychoanalysis, he is in reality a common sense psychologist. Like one of those good, old-time, tough priests, he doesn't mind telling someone he or she is doing wrong and just needs to straighten up. Best line in the movie -- when one of Hedy's rich, carnivorous ex-boyfriends takes offense at Carnovsky's criticism of his ways, the psychiatrist replies, "I usually get paid for insulting people." It goes on from there, and this is a very entertaining movie. It's part psycho-drama, part crime drama, part courtroom drama, part love story. All works well. Heddy's supporting cast, led by Carnovsky and Dennis O'Keefe are all very good. O'Keefe, cast somewhat against type, plays a nice medical research doctor who thinks of nothing but germs until he falls in love at first sight with Hedy (and what man wouldn't). But we get to see a little of his tough guy side before the end. To say any late 'forties movie has good cinematography and fluid editing is redundant.

    Dishonored Lady is an enjoyable watch and a good showcase for Hedy Lamarr's beauty and talent.
    bruno-32

    Gorgeous Hedy

    I must admit I have been a Hedy Lamarr fan since "Algiers", which was a great big hit back in 1938, so I do not understand some reviewers here saying, unfortunately, most of her movies are "forgettable". She was one actress that one can just go and admire her looks. Other gorgeous actress's, and there were plenty, never given me that same effect. As for her other 'unforgettable' films she was fine in "H.M Pulham, esq.", "Comrade X", "Tortilla Flat","Experiment Perilous", and "The Strange Woman".In all her roles, someone, the leading man, feature players always had to comment on her beauty...like we had to be reminded. I never heard those attributes given to other leading actress's of that period...Rita, Gene and etc. So there must have been a reason for her to get that title of 'the most beautiful woman in films". Aside from her looks, I always thought she was a fine actress, and a fine comedienne, when given such roles, which were few... . In this movie, she had one 'drunken' scene that I thought she was great. I actually believed she was 'high'. it was the scene in the night club where she was suppose to help her gossipy ex-coworker. It's not easy to portray someone that is 'high' on a few drinks..one can actually see when one is overdoing it. Another trivia ...it took another studio, Paramount, to put her in a Technicolor movie, "Samson & Delilah" for the first time after being at MGM, since 1938...11 years later. During that same period, Betty Grable was making technicolor movies, one after another musical and Dorothy Lamour with her Jungle roles.
    7mortlich

    Never a Dull Moment

    I was delightfully surprised in every way by the quality of this film in respect of the sharpness of the picture and the clarity of the sound, AND by its sheer entertainment value. Set in New York in the immediate post-war years, "Dishonored Lady" grabs our attention straight from the outset, as Hedy Lamarr walks to work at her office, and from there it is non-stop interest as the story unfolds, in the office itself, in cocktail bars, the opulent mansion of predatory male, John Loder (twice, as well as twice in his chauffeur-driven limousine), in Hedy's flat where she has started a new life, in the courtroom and at the airport. Hedy, as Madeleine Damien, has a lot of acting to do, and she does it quite superbly. She is well supported by the rest of the cast, in what is a film that deserves recognition as 90 minutes of gripping cinema, with the bonus of seeing Lamarr throughout, whose role as a woman that men can't resist is entirely credible.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The play "Dishonored Lady" opened on Broadway at the Empire Theatre on April 30, 1930, running for 127 performances. The play was written by Margaret Ayer Barnes and Edward Sheldon, directed by Guthrie McClintic and starring Katharine Cornell.
    • Goofs
      District attorney says Lamarr saw victim, went to his home, made love to him all for the purpose of influencing him, but when that failed, she murdered him. He says this is first degree murder. With no prior intent, at best this is manslaughter.
    • Quotes

      Victor Kranish: Madeleine you're a bundle of lies, a lovely bundle of lies, beautifully bound together.

    • Alternate versions
      There are two versions of this film, exactly the same length, one with the car crash scene at the opening (possibly the TCM-screened version) which is moved to occur after Hedy's encounter with Courtland at his house (the version is available on Paramount Plus streaming service). Both versions work but it would be interesting to know the backstory about the two major edits. The only clue to the real version seems to support the opening with the car crash scene, because in that version Hedy dances at a club before meeting Courtland and while dancing with character Jack Garet who comments he can attest that she has no broken bones (meaning the opening scene with the car crash is correct). Yet, it is a somewhat strange scene to open with the suicide attempt with no groundwork, while a suicide attempt after her (regretful/guilty) encounter with Courtland at his home (in the Paramount version) is logical as well.
    • Connections
      Featured in Dry Run (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Tristan und Isolde
      Written by Richard Wagner

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 16, 1947 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Pasión que redime
    • Filming locations
      • Samuel Goldwyn Studios - 7200 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Hunt Stromberg Productions
      • Mars Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 25 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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