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Phantom Lady

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Phantom Lady

A mystery woman is a murder suspect's only alibi for the night of his wife's death.

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Release : 1944
Rating : 7.2
Studio : Universal Pictures, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Art Direction, 
Cast : Franchot Tone Ella Raines Alan Curtis Aurora Miranda Thomas Gomez
Genre : Thriller Crime Mystery

Cast List

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Reviews

Solemplex
2018/08/30

To me, this movie is perfection.

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Micitype
2018/08/30

Pretty Good

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Odelecol
2018/08/30

Pretty good movie overall. First half was nothing special but it got better as it went along.

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Guillelmina
2018/08/30

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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drjgardner
2017/06/14

If you're a fan of film noir, don't be fooled by the many false references to this motion picture as film noir. Many people make mistakes about what is/isn't film noir, but of all the films that are mistaken as film noir, this one is probably the least noir. Here are but a few reasons why it isn't noir, keeping in mind that not all film noir have all the essential elements.The main element in film noir is an innocent man who makes a choice, that he knows he probably shouldn't make, but makes it anyway, and this choice starts a descent. Usually the choice is made based on the presence of a femme fatale.In this film the main character makes no real choice. He goes out to a show, his wife is killed, and he gets arrested.There is no femme fatale. In fact there is a middle west down-to-earth great woman who sticks by his side. You never see this in film noir.As a third essential element, film noir demands a sad ending. It's usually deadly, but it's never happy. This film has a happy ending. Boy gets girl. You can't be less film noir than this.A fourth main element in film noir is the photography - dark, asymmetrical, and reminiscent of the German expressionist films. This film has almost none of that (exception in the jazz club). Mostly it's bright and crisp.Film noir often takes place at night and in the rain. I don't recall a single rain drop, though there are many night scenes.A fifth element of film noir is the ragtag motley crew that usually accompanies the main villain. There is no gang here. And apart from Alisha Cook Jr, none of the characters are quirky or memorable.A sixth element of film noir is the emphasis on crime. The main character is usually from law enforcement (in this case he's an engineer!) and there is usually an ongoing murder or robbery involved. The main focus of this film seems to be on insanity, or "paranoia" as Inspector Thomas Gomez insists. Crime, per se, seems incidental.The only thing that might lead to to think this is film noir is the director, Robert Sidomak. Sidomak was a German and he did do some great film noir (e.g., The Suspect in 1944, The Killers in 1946, Criss Cross in 1949) but he also did lots of other genres (Son of Dracula, The Crimson Pirate, Custer of the West).So this isn't film noir. Is it any good? No.Franchot Tone thinks by stroking his hands and caressing his temple he looks like a crazy person. The central alibi revolves around a hat, but no one stops to think that the hat is irrelevant. The time line attested to by half a dozen people, places the engineer away from his home at the time of the murder. The fact that no one recalls the lady in the hat is irrelevant.

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classicsoncall
2016/04/11

It's a pretty safe bet this movie couldn't be made exactly the same way today. Can you imagine a woman strolling the streets of New York City after dark by herself? Or a police detective revisiting a closed case after the man he put away is sentenced and awaiting execution? In fact there are a lot of less than credible elements in the story, but it's all put together in such a moody and atmospheric manner that one is willing to overlook most of them and just go with the flow of the story.There was one significant event though that kept intruding on my viewing pleasure. For all of Carol Richman's (Ella Raines) plucky resolve to find the real killer, how is it she wasn't overcome with remorse over the death of the bartender? It's not even arguable that he would have still been alive if she hadn't followed him to the train station. She gave every indication of being a pretty straight individual, so that should have been somewhat devastating.But say, how about that jazz club scene with Elisha Cook Jr.? Cook managed to land quite a few creepy roles during his career but in THAT scene he came completely unglued. I dare say it's the one thing about the picture you'll remember long after the rest of it fades out of memory. Come to think of it, Raines' character went a bit over the wire in her response as well, but you could chalk that up to faking it as part of her mission. Still, it's a cinematic treat one must see if you want to call yourself a film noir fan.

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marymorrissey
2013/05/29

moves like a slug the two leads are beautiful ella raines is so lovely.but what a cheapie! what about those court scenes that are nothing but looking at a stenography pad! for a full half hour we do nothing but visit all these idiots who fail to remember "phantom lady". boring.finally when it picks up a little when leading lady goes all floozie underground for some reason my mac DVD player gets stuck, I need to crash the computer to escape "the beach ball" and every time I try to continue watching it's the same thing full screen and beach ball and no more movie. Maybe the mac is showing me some mercy.really hated watching the 45 minutes of this I did...

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Spikeopath
2012/10/14

Phantom Lady is directed by Robert Siodmak and adapted to screenplay by Bernard C. Schoenfeld from the story written by Cornell Woolrich (pseudonym William Irish). It stars Ella Raines, Franchot Tone, Alan Curtis, Thomas Gomez, Elisha Cook Jr and Fay Helm. Music is by Hans J. Salter and cinematography by Woody Bredell.Out drowning his sorrows, Scott Henderson (Curtis) meets an equally unhappy woman in a bar, agreeing to her request to not exchange names, but to merely enjoy each others company, Henderson takes her to a show. Upon returning home Henderson finds his wife has been strangled and he is arrested as the prime suspect for the murder. When he frantically tries to prove he has an alibi by way of the "phanton lady" he spent the evening with, he comes up against a wall of silence with nobody able to prove he was with anybody. The electric chair awaits unless someone can prove his alibi. Enter Henderson's intrepid secretary Kansas Richman, who not only carries a torch for her boss, but appears to be his only hope of proving his innocence...An important film in the film noir cycle given that its success kicked opened further the American doorway for German director Robert Siodmak (The Killers); something that all fellow film noir fans are eternally grateful for. Often cited as a top draw noir or one of the best from the early 40s output, it's a frustrating experience in many ways. Undeniably the middle third is an absolute visual treasure, where Siodmak and Bredell (also The Killers) craft the essential film noir style with highly detailed shadows and lighting gaining maximum atmospheric impact. An extended sequence that sees the wonderful Raines (Impact) stalk a witness through dark and dank streets to a subway station is clinical in its photographic brilliance. I love the quote from Bredell where he said that after being coached by Siodmak he felt he could light a football pitch with only a match! This middle third of Phantom Lady is the meeting of two visual minds and it's a class combination.Elsewhere Siodmak emphasises objects and weird art to keep his world off kilter, while a key character's obsession with his hands also keeps things simmering in the realm of the strange. There's also a "famed" suggestive sex scene as Elisha Cook Jr (as always, memorable) pounds his drum kit to a climax as Raines positively smoulders in front of him. All of these things are set to the backdrop of a ticking clock format, where the innocent Henderson's life hangs in the balance. These are all film noir traits and executed with such skill it hides the fact that the film is primarily studio bound, in fact this can be seen as a marker for how to do "studio noir" effectively.Unfortunately there is good reason why Phantom Lady is divisive in film noir circles. The dialogue is often plain daft, almost as daft as the plot itself. The murderer is revealed at the mid point and therefore we are robbed of the mystery element and sadly it sign posts the finale as being obvious and disappointing. Plot in the final third puts our heroine in constant danger at the hands of the real murderer, suspense is meant to be wrung out, but it never hits home the way it should. While on the acting front Curtis is too stiff to really make a telling innocent man hanging by a thread character and Tone is equally as flat in a critical role. However, do these things stop Phantom Lady from being a great film? No, I don't think so, there's just too much good in the mix to stop it from deserving some of the (admittedly exaggerated) praise put its way. 7.5/10

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