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The Other Woman

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
309
YOUR RATING
Hugo Haas and Cleo Moore in The Other Woman (1954)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

Feeling humiliated and angry after failing a line reading, an aspiring actress plots to ruin the life and career of the film's director.Feeling humiliated and angry after failing a line reading, an aspiring actress plots to ruin the life and career of the film's director.Feeling humiliated and angry after failing a line reading, an aspiring actress plots to ruin the life and career of the film's director.

  • Director
    • Hugo Haas
  • Writer
    • Hugo Haas
  • Stars
    • Hugo Haas
    • Cleo Moore
    • Lance Fuller
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    309
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hugo Haas
    • Writer
      • Hugo Haas
    • Stars
      • Hugo Haas
      • Cleo Moore
      • Lance Fuller
    • 12User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos5

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    Top cast22

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    Hugo Haas
    Hugo Haas
    • Walter Darman
    Cleo Moore
    Cleo Moore
    • Sherry Steward
    Lance Fuller
    Lance Fuller
    • Ronnie
    Lucille Barkley
    Lucille Barkley
    • Mrs. Lucille Darman
    John Qualen
    John Qualen
    • Papasha
    Jack Macy
    • Charles Lester
    Jan Arvan
    Jan Arvan
    • Police Inspector Collins
    Carol Kelly
    • Marion
    • (as Karolee Kelly)
    Mark Lowell
    • Bob, 2nd Assistant Director
    Jan Englund
    • Replacement Actress
    Steve Mitchell
    • 1st Assistant Director
    Arthur Marshall
    • Film Cutter
    Sue Casey
    • Script Girl
    Melinda Markey
    • Actress
    Sharon Dexter
    • Party Guest
    Ivan Haas
    • Newspaper Vendor
    James Conaty
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Garcio
    Joe Garcio
    • Joe
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Hugo Haas
    • Writer
      • Hugo Haas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.4309
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    Featured reviews

    HarlowMGM

    Cleo Moore's Baddest Bad Girl

    B queen Cleo Moore is known affectionately as the "Queen of the B Movie Bad Girls" among latter-day movie buffs for her string of 1950's melodramas but actually in most of her films she's a fairly good girl who makes bad choices. That's not the case in THE OTHER WOMAN where she plays a malevolent blonde so vicious she comes close to making Ann Savage's legendary Vera in DETOUR look angelic.

    Cleo stars as Sherry Stewart, a bitter film extra who is suddenly given a chance at a bit part with lines by film director Hugo Haas. Hopelessly incompetent at saying her three lines, she is gently replaced by another woman. Irrational and furious at Haas, she sets up an elaborate scheme to blackmail Hugo if not destroy him.

    Although she looks sensational in one segment in a black gown and wrapped in white fur, Cleo's character is presented as cheap and a bit unbalanced and she receives some of the least flattering cinematography of her career, apparently to emphasize the character's hardness and lack of class. There are some good scenes (Sherry's disastrous attempt attempt at acting, her inner humiliation as the extras and crew smirk) but it seems a bit ironic for the less-than-spectacular director Haas to play a director with ambitions of art. This is one of Haas' better acting performances however as the luckless soul who doesn't know what has hit him, a staple film noir situation. Cleo is very good in a rather sketchy role as a vengeful blonde out of control. THE OTHER WOMAN is not likely to land on anyone's list of favorite movies but it is a fairly intriguing and unusual film noir set in Hollywood.
    6petersjoelen

    another bad girl

    Hugo Haas made films that were quite different from what was normally made in Hollywood, the women were often uncompromisingly mean or at least unpleasant and there was usually no happy ending.

    I must admit that i often like that in his films , ik makes the female characters much more realistic .

    This film is not much different, Cleo Moore plays her nasty role very well, maybe with some overacting but still good, Hugo Haas once again plays himself in his own film, the man is far from being a top actor but it is enough.

    It is a shame that these films have always been stuck in the B segment, because there was potential in this story.
    8planktonrules

    Sherry is a very odd and troubled young lady....and vicious through and through!

    Sherry Steward (Cleo Moore) is an aspiring actress and finally got a break...a very tiny part in a picture. However, she blows her few lines repeatedly and you cannot blame the director* for replacing her...especially after she loudly starts badmouthing him on the set! Despite this, she blames him for her problems. In other words, instead of learning from the incident or accepting any responsibility, she externalizes all her problems...and vows revenge. Clearly Sherry is a....well, IMDb won't let me use that word! But she sure is!

    Sherry then comes up with a crazy scheme to discredit and ruin the director...talk about an overreaction! First, she manages to get the director to her apartment where she drugs him. Second, when he awakens she said that he's been intimate with her and was going to blackmail him. And, since he's a married man AND his father-in-law owns the company making his film, he's in a real bind! What's next? Well, she ends up putting this innocent man through hell, that's for sure!!

    This is a very intriguing film. It has many film noir elements, though isn't exactly a noir picture. The plot is clearly very unique (though elements are a bit like the film "The Suspect", 1944) and Cleo Moore is simply terrific as an incredibly evil and vicious woman. And, Hugo Haas sure outdid himself, as he not only directed and wrote the film but actually stars in the film as the beleaguered director! All in all, very dark, exciting and original...and a film that should not be missed.
    6st-shot

    Hugo's cinema of Cherchez la Femme.

    Even when he doesn't fall for the dame auteur Hugo Haas manages to get undone by the duplicitous species. In The Other Woman, Haas introduces Cleo Moore who would become in-house fatale to his pathetic doormat characters for half a dozen pictures with similar outcomes.

    Director Walter Darman (Haas) is pressed for a minor replacement for his picture and chooses an extra (Moore) who quickly flubs her chance with a couple of lines. Humiliated she swears vengeance and concocts a story that would destroy his marriage and career. He overreacts and things quickly spiral out of control.

    Hell's fury and then some, scorned Cleo pulls out all the stops to even the score with Darman whose drinking and thinking play co-culprit to banshee Moore's plotting. What she wasn't expecting is Darman's over reaction.

    Moore is an unrepentant creep, hard to sympathize with beyond her cringeworthy screen test. Haas is his usual slow on the uptake self before finding himself mired in murder. The crime itself and a Columbo like Jan Arvan bring a touch of suspense to the picture but overall it is a more frustrating than tragic B in which the two myopic leads could settle matters by each being given a good shaking and told to grow up.
    6blanche-2

    A director comes up against a monster

    Your heart really breaks for Hugo Haas as he confronts "The Other Woman" in this B film also starring Cleo Moore. Lance Fuller, and John Qualen.

    Moore plays a would-be actress who couldn't act her way out of phone booth with the door open. When she fails miserably with three lines, the director (Haas) replaces her. An angry and deeply disturbed woman, she decides to destroy him and sets him up for blackmail.

    After suckering Walter Darman (Haas) into giving her a ride home, Sherry (Moore) slips him a mickey. The next morning he has lipstick on his face and shirt, and Moore is acting as if they had a night of fun. And she makes sure her friend (Lance Fuller) stops by to see Darman there. All part of the plan.

    Sherry later claims to be pregnant and wants $50,000. Darman is sure she is lying, that nothing happened, but she calls and visits his office frequently, putting on the pressure.

    Hugo Haas and Cleo Moore made I think seven films together, B movies, and made a good team. Haas in his native Czechoslovakia wa a well-known actor until he had to flee the Nazis. He continued acting in the states but also became a writer and director, specializing in these B noirs.

    Cleo, a blond sexpot in the Monroe tradition, has the street-wise femme fatale down and looks fantastic. Married at one time to Huey Long's son, she actually ran for Governor of Louisiana in 1956 (a publicity stunt).

    Moore quit movies in 1961 when she married a multimillionaire. She certainly was a better actress than the character she played. Sadly, she died young and didn't live to see the cult status she achieved in the '80s, which continues.

    All in all, like other Haas films, entertaining.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 2, 1954 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Turmoil
    • Filming locations
      • Kling Studios, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Hugo Haas Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 21m(81 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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