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Tension

  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
3.8K
YOUR RATING
Tension (1949)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:06
1 Video
51 Photos
Feel-Good RomanceFilm NoirPolice ProceduralTragic RomanceCrimeDramaRomanceThriller

A meek pharmacist creates an alternate identity under which he plans to murder the bullying liquor salesman who has become his wife's lover.A meek pharmacist creates an alternate identity under which he plans to murder the bullying liquor salesman who has become his wife's lover.A meek pharmacist creates an alternate identity under which he plans to murder the bullying liquor salesman who has become his wife's lover.

  • Director
    • John Berry
  • Writers
    • Allen Rivkin
    • John D. Klorer
    • John Berry
  • Stars
    • Richard Basehart
    • Audrey Totter
    • Cyd Charisse
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    3.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John Berry
    • Writers
      • Allen Rivkin
      • John D. Klorer
      • John Berry
    • Stars
      • Richard Basehart
      • Audrey Totter
      • Cyd Charisse
    • 88User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:06
    Trailer

    Photos51

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    Top cast26

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    Richard Basehart
    Richard Basehart
    • Warren Quimby
    Audrey Totter
    Audrey Totter
    • Claire Quimby
    Cyd Charisse
    Cyd Charisse
    • Mary Chanler
    Barry Sullivan
    Barry Sullivan
    • Lt. Collier Bonnabel
    Lloyd Gough
    Lloyd Gough
    • Barney Deager
    Tom D'Andrea
    Tom D'Andrea
    • Freddie
    William Conrad
    William Conrad
    • Lt. Edgar Gonsales
    Tito Renaldo
    • Narco
    Ray Bennett
    Ray Bennett
    • Theatre Manager
    • (uncredited)
    Virginia Brissac
    Virginia Brissac
    • Mrs. Andrews
    • (uncredited)
    Peter Brocco
    Peter Brocco
    • Balew
    • (uncredited)
    Steve Carruthers
    Steve Carruthers
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Bert Davidson
    • Reporter at Press Club Café
    • (uncredited)
    John Gallaudet
    John Gallaudet
    • Artie
    • (uncredited)
    Theresa Harris
    Theresa Harris
    • Woman in Drugstore
    • (uncredited)
    John Indrisano
    John Indrisano
    • Boxer Handler
    • (uncredited)
    George Magrill
    George Magrill
    • Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    Kitty McHugh
    Kitty McHugh
    • Agnes
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John Berry
    • Writers
      • Allen Rivkin
      • John D. Klorer
      • John Berry
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews88

    7.33.8K
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    Featured reviews

    9robert-temple-1

    Major noir classic with a spectacular Audrey Totter performance

    This is in a category of its own. The central role of a bad, bad girl is played by Audrey Totter with such spectacular power and intensity that you would think it would break the projectors in the cinema. She was like an earthquake on screen. She was also well supported by superb performances from Richard Baseheart as her husband, Barry Sullivan as a sardonic detective, and the elegant Cyd Charisse who exerts her powerful charms in a non-dancing role. This film does not conform to any strict formulae of noir construction, is almost quirky, but is a genuine classic of the genre by breaking so many of the rules. There is no murder for absolutely ages, but we forget that we are waiting for it, so mesmerised are we by Totter. The balance of attention shifts from character to character, and there is a lot of misdirection of attention to keep the audience guessing. This is absolutely not a film about a murder, which in itself is incidental. This is a powerful psychological study of extreme character types. There are absolutely superb minor touches of direction throughout, and John Berry, the director, would have had a future as one of the top directors in Hollywood after this if he had not been blacklisted. William Conrad (later 'Cannon' on TV for 102 episodes) was just as fat a cop then, and Barry Sullivan actually pulls a bag of popcorn out of his hand, gives it to a passing stranger, and pats Conrad on his bulging stomach to admonish him. The film is full of little things like that which are creative embellishments added by a director with his imagination and his eye both in top gear. The best touch of all is the stretching of a rubber band throughout the film by Barry Sullivan, who says 'everybody has his breaking point', and snaps the band. In the scenes with the greatest tension, the band comes out and gets stretched and stretched. In one amazing scene, Sullivan and Totter even stretch the rubber band together with their fingers both entwined in it absentmindedly, while the psychological tension builds. This use of the rubber band throughout the film as a motif actually works, because it is done so well and with such extraordinary subtlety. All the suspects are under tension bigtime, hence the title. There are many good lines, such as Sullivan saying to Totter: 'I've got a file on you going back as far as you can remember and into the future as far as you dare imagine.' They end up kissing. This film positively reeks of classic noir elements, while being put together in an original manner. We have irrational passion, greed, amorality, lust, love, betrayal, selfless devotion, murder, as well as an inability to kill despite wanting to. It's all there. Just add DVD and stir.
    7johno-21

    MGM Film Noir

    MGM's Film Noir's may not have been up to par with RKO's during this time period but this is a pretty good film that doesn't actually become a Film Noir until well into the film but it has the look of a Film Noir throughout. Cinematographer Harry Stradling Sr. had a 50 year career in films beginning in the 20's as a young man and up until he died in 1970. Before this he had photographed such films as The Picture of Dorian Gray, Till The Clouds Roll By and had worked on the classic Intermezzo among his many films. He would go on to do A Streetcar Named Desire, Johnny Guitar, Gus & Dolls, My Fair Lady, Funny Girl, Hello Dolly and The Owl & The Pussycat. Director John Berry had made some dramas in the 40's and was really moving into Film Noir with this film. Unfortunately had also just completed a documentary about the blacklisted Hollywood filmmakers that got himself blacklisted and went to Europe to make films before returning to the USA and making some mediocre films. This is the story about a meek and mild mannered night manager of a 24 hour pharmacy/diner who toils 12 hour shifts to save money to make a comfortable life for his gold-digging, fast and loose wife. They are a mismatch who married while he was in the service because she thought he looked cute in his uniform but their life with living above the pharmacy is something she would like to ditch and she finally does. Audrey Totter is your classic femme fatal bad girl in a bullet bra. Richard Basehart is the pharmacist husband with a plan to seek a new identity. Cyd Charise is his new interest and Lloyd Gough is Totter's. Barry Sullivan and William Conrad are the detectives and Tom D'Andrea is the sympathetic late night counter guy. A story by John D. Klorer and screenplay by Allen Rivkin. 21 year old André Previn before he became a noted composer and conductor provides the film's score. I would give this a 7.0 out of 10.
    6bkoganbing

    Trapped with his own identity

    Tension is neat little noir thriller from MGM where some of their second line players get a chance to show their stuff without any of the big marquee names to take the audience's attention.

    Richard Basehart stars as a meek pharmacist whose wife Audrey Totter has been seeing loudmouthed liquor salesman Lloyd Gough and she's not even keeping it a secret. After Basehart gets slapped around he conceives of a plan to murder Gough involving hthe creation of a second identity. But then at the last minute Basehart can't go through with it. In my favorite scene in the film he tells Gough you can have the tramp, she's your problem now.

    But then Gough is killed and the cops Barry Sullivan and William Conrad go looking for the man who doesn't really exist. More I cannot say this one has more twists than your small intestine.

    Totter is one nasty slattern of a woman. In contrast to neighbor Cyd Charisse who Basehart has fallen for. But at the moment he and Totter are trapped by circumstances.

    Even the detectives aren't quite what they seem. Barry Sullivan has some unique investigative methods that I'm sure the LAPD would not approve of.

    You'll like how this one goes down. I'd check it out.
    dougdoepke

    Half of a Good Noir

    Putting glasses on the very versatile Richard Basehart and sticking him with a drugstore and a faithless trophy wife (Totter) is almost inspired. His Warren Quimby is such a timid, dependent little guy, and when wife Claire thrusts out her ample chest at any well-dressed man who walks by, we feel for the put-upon pharmacist. He's working day and night trying to please her, but she could care less, especially when she hooks up with the flashy Barney Deager (Gough) and rubs Warren's nose in it. Or rather it's Deager who does the nose-rubbing in the sands of his Malibu beach house. Now Warren may be no Clark Kent, but he's finally had enough humiliation, and there is an alter-ego waiting to break out of that timid soul. The alter-ego is named Paul Southern. He doesn't wear a red cape, but he does sport a very unWarren-like checked jacket and no glasses. More importantly, he's got a plan, a nifty plan for revenge on his two tormentors. In the meantime, he's picked up a new girl (Charisse) who admires the forceful Southern style. So now Quimby-Southern is ready for a new life with his new girl once his nifty revenge plan succeeds.

    I just wish the second half succeeded as well as this riveting first half. But the focus shifts abruptly over to wise-guy cop Bonnabel (Sullivan) and we lose the compelling thread of humiliation and revenge. It's almost like the script didn't know what to do with Basehart following the Malibu showdown. The remainder of the film plays out in kind of fuzzy, not very believable fashion. It's like a screenplay in two very unequal chapters. The movie is another of Dore Schary's attempts to bring sunny MGM into the post-war world of noir. Like many of the others, the effort here only partially succeeds. There's some good location photography and an excellent cast. However, director Berry adds little to the erratic script, and I'm tempted to say that neither he nor the studio had a feel for this kind of RKO material. Nonetheless, that compelling first half remains.
    7TheLittleSongbird

    Hit hard with a vengeance

    The cast was my main reason in seeing 'Tension'. Richard Basehart, Audrey Totter, Cyd Charisse, William Conrad and Barry Sullivan were all actors of considerable talent and all did fine work in other films of theirs. 'Tension' is also another film that had a very interesting sounding story, and also watched it due to loving mystery and noir-ish films and due to loving classic film. Having seen some very well done films recently in the same genre and similar, there was a lot of high expectations.

    High expectations that were mostly met if not exceeded. 'Tension' has a lot to recommend and it is another recently seen film that is rather under-valued. It is though uneven and one half is better than the other, something that has already been picked up to a few. There are better films in the mystery and noir genres, but also worse and in no way should 'Tension' be compared to Hitchcock. Not a fair comparison and something that it was not striving to be.

    Am going to begin with the good. Generally, 'Tension' looks good. Particularly the moody and smooth photography and eerie lighting. A young Andre Previn provides a score that gels beautifully with the atmosphere and even enhances it, sounding very ominous and unsettling. While the direction is not exceptional it is at least competent, especially in the first half. The script is intelligent and tightly paced.

    On the whole the story absorbs, though it is not consistent. The first half is great, very intriguing and atmospheric without taking too long to set up. The best thing about 'Tension' is the acting, Basehart contrasts his two roles beautifully and with ease and Totter is a smouldering knockout and steals the film. Conrad injects his role with a lot of juice and Charisse is charming despite her character being on the one-dimensional side.

    With all that being said, 'Tension' isn't perfect. The second half is not as strong. The tone shift is abrupt and jarring and the storytelling in the second is not as focused or as riveting, could have done with more tension and surprises. The conclusion and the truth are not hard to figure out at all.

    For my tastes, Sullivan is on the bland side. Will agree too that some of the rear projection is distractingly fake.

    Concluding, pretty impressive. Rough around the edges, but with more than enough to earn a recommendation. 7/10.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After Richard Basehart's character of Quimby decides to create another identity for himself, he gets the idea for the name Sothern when he sees a movie fan magazine with Ann Sothern on the cover. "Tension" producer Robert Sisk was then in the process of prepping L'ombre sur le mur (1950) to star Miss Sothern in the last film of her long-term MGM contract.
    • Goofs
      When Claire is flirting with Junior and orders dessert, there is an advertisement for Dad's Root Beer on the wall behind her; the word "beer" is marked out. Then when she flirts with a customer, the sign is not marked Also, the salt shaker, absent from the first shot, appears on the counter in the latter shot; other condiment containers on the counter also are in different positions.
    • Quotes

      Warren Quimby: What are you doing?

      Claire Quimby: I'm leaving. I'm through. I got what I'm looking for and I'm gonna grab it while I got the chance.

      Warren Quimby: Barney Deager?

      Claire Quimby: A real guy.

      Warren Quimby: Claire, don't do this, I'm asking you, don't do it.

      Claire Quimby: There's nothing to talk about. It was different in San Diego, you were kind of cute in your uniform. You were full of laughs then. Well, you're all laughed out now.

    • Connections
      Featured in Tension: Who's Guilty Now? (2007)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Tension?Powered by Alexa
    • Why did Barney back down from the fight with Quimby?
    • What was Claire's motive?Claire was somewhat of a nymphomaniac and pursued "new" men who caught her attention without a second thought. She apparently had a history of such behavior as alluded to in Bonnabel's brief description of her past. She presumably got into a confrontation with Barney when he learned of her two-timing him, and she shot and killed him with his gun.
    • Why was Claire foolish enough to date Bonnabel?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 19, 1949 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tensión
    • Filming locations
      • 10350 Bellwood Avenue, Century City, Los Angeles, California, USA(Paul Sothern's and Mary Chanler's apartment building - exteriors)
    • Production company
      • Loew's
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $682,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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