NORA
PRENTIIS
1947.....111
Minutes
Ann
Sheridan, Kent Smith, Bruce Bennett
A nightclub singer has an affair with an unhappily married San
Francisco doctor. Though the physician desperately wants to
leave his wife, he lacks the courage to ask for a divorce. In
retaliation, the singer accepts an offer to move East and start
up a new club in New York. Lost without the singer, the doctor
is without option until his partner suddenly dies. With a burst
of inspiration, he fakes his own death and flees to New York.
Later, he is horrified to learn that his death has been officially
declared a homicide, and so he goes into hiding in the singer's
apartment. To cope with his fear and the increasing success
of his lover, the physician begins drinking heavily. This only
makes him paranoid and more depressed and he begins to suspect
his lover is having an affair. Upon confronting the "lover,"
a fight ensues, the doctor wins, and thinking he killed his
rival, he takes off -- only to end up in a horrible traffic
accident that leaves his face unrecognizable. Though plastic
surgery gives him a new identity, it is at that time that he
is arrested and sent back to California to stand trial for his
own murder. Rather than burden his family with the shock that
he is still alive, the doctor insists that his lover keep mum,
and he stoically goes to trial where he is sentenced to Death
Row. Beautifully photographed by James Wong Howe in typically
expressionistic style, the film focuses on the desperation and
entrapment of the characters and expresses a true bleak, fatalistic
film-noir sensibility which makes this film unique in the genre.
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