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Over-Exposed

  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
870
YOUR RATING
Cleo Moore in Over-Exposed (1956)
Sexy blonde dance club girl learns the photography trade and moves to New York in pursuit of a new career.
Play trailer1:42
1 Video
74 Photos
Film NoirCrimeDrama

Sexy blonde dance club girl learns the photography trade and moves to New York in pursuit of a new career.Sexy blonde dance club girl learns the photography trade and moves to New York in pursuit of a new career.Sexy blonde dance club girl learns the photography trade and moves to New York in pursuit of a new career.

  • Director
    • Lewis Seiler
  • Writers
    • James Gunn
    • Gil Orlovitz
    • Richard Sale
  • Stars
    • Cleo Moore
    • Richard Crenna
    • Isobel Elsom
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    870
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lewis Seiler
    • Writers
      • James Gunn
      • Gil Orlovitz
      • Richard Sale
    • Stars
      • Cleo Moore
      • Richard Crenna
      • Isobel Elsom
    • 22User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    Trailer

    Photos74

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    Top cast46

    Edit
    Cleo Moore
    Cleo Moore
    • Lila Crane
    Richard Crenna
    Richard Crenna
    • Russell Bassett
    Isobel Elsom
    Isobel Elsom
    • Mrs. Payton Grange
    Raymond Greenleaf
    Raymond Greenleaf
    • Max West
    Constance Towers
    Constance Towers
    • Shirley Thomas
    James O'Rear
    • Roy Carver
    Donald Randolph
    Donald Randolph
    • Coco Fields
    Dayton Lummis
    • Horace Sutherland
    Jack Albertson
    Jack Albertson
    • Les Bauer
    • (uncredited)
    Barbara Aler
    • Nightclub Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Shirlee Allard
    • Nightclub Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Leon Alton
    Leon Alton
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Bice
    Robert Bice
    • Patrolman Outside Office Building
    • (uncredited)
    Barry Brooks
    • Henchman
    • (uncredited)
    Norma Brooks
    Norma Brooks
    • Doris
    • (uncredited)
    Chuck Cason
    • Taxi Driver
    • (uncredited)
    John Cason
    John Cason
    • Studio Thug
    • (uncredited)
    George Cisar
    George Cisar
    • Club Customer Photographed by Lila
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lewis Seiler
    • Writers
      • James Gunn
      • Gil Orlovitz
      • Richard Sale
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.1870
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    Featured reviews

    7ksf-2

    lila climbs to the top, using whatever means...

    Cleo moore is lila, getting kicked out of town, for hanging around in a bar. She meets up with max (ray greenleaf), who teaches her photography skills. She ends up in new york, where russ (crenna, from the rambo films) helps get her set up with a job. The only actor I recognize is jack albertson, from willie wonka and poseidon adventure. Les (albertson) runs the nightclub where lila works. As she gets rich and successful, her friends notice that she loses her home town girl compassion. Lila acts so greedy, that the one time she does the right, compassionate thing, no-one believes her. And now she's in danger. Can russ and max get her out of a jam before she gets in trouble with the mob? Tcm host eddy muller does a prologue and and epilogue for this film. Apparently, the story is partially based on a real female photographer. Moore died so young at 43, from a heart attack. Directed by lewis seiler. This was one of his last films. He didn't win any oscars, but worked with bogart five times!
    6planktonrules

    Not bad...but NOT film noir

    This is from a new DVD collection of B film noir flicks from Columbia. However, inexplicably, this film was included in the collection--even though I'd argue that it's NOT an example of film noir. Perhaps it has a few noir elements towards the end of the film--but that is all. Instead, it's a picture about a very ambitious lady (Cleo Moore) who is bent on being a success--and possibly at all costs. I think that the presence of Ms. Moore in the film is exactly why they marketed it as noir--as she did make quite a few crime films in the 1950s.

    The film begins with Moore blowing into a small town and getting arrested--even though she'd done nothing wrong. It was simply a matter of being in the wrong place at the wrong time--plus she just looked "bad"! Soon, an old photographer comes to her assistance and she, being a very jaded lady, assumes the worst. However, he really is a very decent fellow and helps her get on her feet and teaches her the trade. She also helps him stay sober and make something of himself.

    Eventually, she and the old guy leave on amicable terms and she goes off to the big city to make a name for herself as a photographer. At first she tries to get a job with the local newspaper and when that doesn't pan out, she is able to make a much better living as a fashionable photographer--making the rich look great as well as doing commercial work. However, she also makes a deal with some underworld folks along the way--showing she is mostly concerned with her career and not how she makes it to the top. During this time, she has an on-again off-again relationship with a very young Richard Crenna. To me, this was a shortcoming in the film, as the crusty and highly curvaceous platinum blonde and young idealistic reporter seemed to have little in common.

    Eventually, while at the very top of her career, she runs afoul of the mob so it's up to Crenna to come to save the day. This is cool, but you also wonder why he didn't just get the cops! Duh. still, it's a dandy film--mostly because Moore did such a nice job in the lead and it was nice to see her play a different role--a very competent 'dame'.

    By the way, although the film played well at the time, some of it seems rather sexist and dated. Crenna wants to marry Moore and naturally it's expected that she'll give up her career--even though she is far more successful than he is! My how times have changed! Well acted and interesting, but not without a few logical flaws that, fortunately, don't harm the film so much that it isn't worth seeing. For Moore's character alone, however, it is worth seeing.
    6bmacv

    Cleo Moore's demonstration of Blonde Ambition, mid-1950s style

    In Over-Exposed, Cleo Moore makes an ascent from B-Girl to reigning photographer of café society that's as rapid as it is unpersuasive. She's a mid-1950s version of Blonde Ambition, or, as she puts it, `Where there's money, there's Lila – green becomes me.'

    She wasn't always Lila, least of all not the night the clip joint she'd just started working for got raided. The alcoholic, has-been shutterbug (Raymond Greenleaf) who snaps her mug outside the police station takes pity on her by showing her the rudiments of his craft. She's a quick study and, more to the point, a shrewd operator, buttering up monied old janes with appeals to their deluded vanity.

    Off to New York, she tries in vain to land a job as a photojournalist, though she befriends a young reporter (Richard Crenna). Instead, she opts for the glamor and easy money to be had as a `flash-girl' in a nightclub; on the side, she snaps compromising photos for a sleazy columnist (James O'Rear). Soon, she holds a concession at the poshest watering-hole in town, the Club Coco; the fact that it's mob-operated doesn't bother her, but it bothers straight-arrow Crenna, who's thinking of popping the question.

    Invited to snap a birthday celebration at the club for grand dame Isobel Elsom, Moore inadvertently records the dowager's death throes as she slumps while displaying her newly acquired skills at the mambo. Moore decently destroys the photo, only to have O'Rear steal and publish the negative; closing ranks, her society clients drop her like a hot brick. Up against a wall, Moore decides to dabble in blackmail, using as bait another inadvertent picture – one that demolishes the alibi of one of club's mob backers, wanted for murder....

    With elements of Shakedown and the soon-to-come Sweet Smell of Success, Over-Exposed stays a little too nice to rival them. It pulls back from any real nastiness and grit in its eagerness to keep the hard cookie Moore soft at the center (and insure smiles at the ending). Still, there are smirky glimpses into the world of parasites and lick-spittles who buzz around money, as well as welcome, old-school turns from Greenleaf and Elsom. Moore flashes solid credentials as a brassy schemer, while Crenna takes yet another step in the career that would stretch, chiefly through the magic of television, from Our Miss Brooks to The Rape of Richard Beck. Over-Exposed, diverting enough to watch, is quite under-developed.
    10tcchelsey

    TRIBUTE TO CLEO MOORE

    Cleo Moore was more-less competition (via B films) for Marilyn Monroe. It is a shame that her career was short as she was a very good actress, but was saddled with innumerable low budget projects. She was long associated with indie producer Hugo Haas who generally cast her as a femme fatale in a series of "bad girl" films, which made a fortune, but did not elevate her career. The films eventually gained cult status, unfortunately, long after she left the screen. In OVER EXPOSED, and despite a slim budget, Moore is at her best playing a young blond with ambition. The film has a rather clever twist as she plays a photographer, but instead of posing in front of the camera ( in a bikini!), she works it as a business enterprise and, of course, there is a price to pay for that move as well. A neat little film noir that has been re-released via Columbia Pictures in a dvd box set, worth the price. Moore retired from films in the late 1950s and entered the real estate market, but to this day has a devout following. Some of her Hugo Haas productions have been re-issued on dvd, remastered prints, so keep watch.
    6secondtake

    Some nice edgy stuff between the falters and the camp...worth watching!

    Over-Exposed (1956)

    "You'd use your grandmother's bones to pry open a cash register." That's the best line in "Over-Exposed," a surprisingly solid crime and ambition (and cheesecake) movie. But then, the second best line is when the leading bleach blonde model/photographer played by Cleo Moore has made it big, and she says, "Green becomes me."

    This is a better movie than it could have been, with little known cast and crew and a story that seems at a glance to be a cross between formulaic gangster and splashy girl-photographer with some spunk. There is a love interest (a really nice guy who sees through our heroine's hard gloss to a decent kid inside) who comes and goes and seems to a lifeline to her salvation. But the real lure overall is success and money, which is found at a nightclub run by classy thugs. The movie remains a bit cheesy throughout, however, letting Lila be a club photographer wearing scant clothes, kind of like a cigarette girls did in those days.

    One of the surprises was how central and accurate the photography was to the whole movie, start to finish, and I'm not talking cinematography, which was good, but the role of the photography in the plot, including shooting and developing and retouching. And blackmail, by the end. The friendly old man photographer at the start is a strong balance to the wayward and snippy young girl (Moore), and the two end up helping each other throughout.

    So there is a lot going on, actually, and it's pretty well done in the main, with those occasional hiccups of a lower budget enterprise. Look for Constance Towers, who later made fame in a couple of hard hitting Sam Fuller movies (like "Naked Kiss"). Give this one a go. And know that the second half is more exciting than the first.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Lila charges (more like finagles) Mrs. Gulick $25 extra "without the frame of course", for the colorized portrait photo. This was in 1956 when a typical salary was $50 per week. (In 2022, the extra fee would be about $250.)
    • Quotes

      Russell Bassett: [to Lila] If I thought a beating would bring you to your senses, I'd have done it myself.

    • Connections
      Referenced in We Jam Econo: The Story of the Minutemen (2005)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 1956 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Bizarre Noir" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Helona Music" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Supraexpus
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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