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Outrage

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Outrage

A young woman who has just become engaged has her life completely shattered when she is raped while on her way home from work.

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Release : 1950
Rating : 6.7
Studio : The Filmakers, 
Crew : Production Design,  Set Decoration, 
Cast : Mala Powers Tod Andrews Robert Clarke Raymond Bond Lillian Hamilton
Genre : Drama Crime

Cast List

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Reviews

Dorathen
2018/08/30

Better Late Then Never

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RipDelight
2018/08/30

This is a tender, generous movie that likes its characters and presents them as real people, full of flaws and strengths.

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Maleeha Vincent
2018/08/30

It's funny, it's tense, it features two great performances from two actors and the director expertly creates a web of odd tension where you actually don't know what is happening for the majority of the run time.

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Zandra
2018/08/30

The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.

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JohnHowardReid
2018/04/03

Producer: Collier Young. Copyright 25 September 1950 by RKO-Radio Pictures, Inc. A Filmmakers Presentation. New York opening at the Criterion: 14 October 1950. U.K. release: floating from December 1951. Australian release: 23 February 1951. 6,988 feet. 77 minutes. SYNOPSIS: A traumatized assault victim flees her home town.NOTES: Third film for director Ida Lupino and final film for veteran electrician S.H. Barton (Son of Kong, The Little Minister, etc.). Although elaborately "introduced" in the movie, both Mala Powers and Tod Andrews made their movie debuts in the early 1940s. Rita Lupino is the director's younger sister.COMMENT: Despite its deceptive poster, trailer and pre-credits sequence, this well-polished "B" is not a film noir. True, both plot and staging have noirish elements, but the bulk of the movie is a one-sided romance between an affable young minister (Tod Andrews aka Michael Ames) and the psychologically disturbed heroine (convincingly played by Mala Powers). Ida Lupino, as director and co-writer has ensured that the movie looks and sounds true-to-life by utilizing some evocative locations as well as conventional studio sets. The support roster, headed by dull-as-ditchwater Robert Clarke, merely serves as background to the main Andrews-Powers romantic action, though Paris and Mellen are each allowed an effective moment.

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schell-7
2014/10/29

The didacticism and sheer sweetness (a function of film score as well as script and direction) of the cinematic action following the deft direction of a traumatic rape scene will strike many of today's viewers as dated. But upon closer inspection "Outrage" is subtle where least expected--both in terms of its understandings of rape and its expression of a feminine point of view in cinema.Lupino will not allow a male finance's hasty and almost violent insistence on marriage immediately following the rape of the protagonist (played by Mala Powers) to become separated in the victim's--and by extension the viewer's--mind from the central theme, and plot-motivating device, of rape itself. The villainy of rape cannot be solved by the seemingly heroic gesture of the male, whose "sacrifice" places as much emphasis on the woman's exceptional circumstances as do the violation committed by the rapist. Such attempts to deny the reality of rape simply serve to ensure its persistence. The attempt to erase part of victim's past is another way of treating her as less than human.The scene in which Powers' character hits an overly aggressive playboy with a wrench lacks the semblance of realism because Lupino shoots it from the point of view of the victim whose action in the present is dictated by the emotions triggered by her remembrance of the past. It's doubtful that any male director would have captured the scene in such non-violent, non-realistic detail and yet enabled us to see the action for what it is--an attempt by the character to erase the impression that the initial criminal act has left on her emotion-mental being.Some modern viewers will no doubt accuse Lupino of being overly idealistic in portraying the rapist less as a criminal than himself the victim of an illness--one that would be curable, moreover, in a more socially aware and progressive culture. Unfortunately, the sheer logistics of psychological treatment leading to cures of those guilty of such heinous criminal acts will make Lupino's sentiments seem hopelessly naive to today's viewers. But is that sufficient reason to fault the director for acknowledging the gender divide as a two-way street?Aside: Notice the scene in which the empowering new male friend is shown playing the piano from a camera POV just opposite his hands. In a subsequent scene, the piano is shown placed against the wall, which would make such a shot impossible.As first I couldn't help but marvel at the similarity of a heavy detective to Hal March, host of the the highly popular "60,000 Question," prior to its exposure. Looking at the credits will reveal that it IS Hal March (the loss of 15-20 pounds obviously didn't hurt his career as much as the downfall of the popular quiz show).

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bmacv
2004/01/25

Ida Lupino was one of the few women to break through the directorial glass ceiling in Hollywood under the studio system. Not surprisingly, she also tackled proto-feminist themes that, when touched at all, were approached in so gingerly a manner that it was seldom quite clear what was being talked about. In Outrage, she treats rape and its aftermath, and though throughout the short movie it's referred to as `criminal assault,' she leaves, for once, no doubt about what happened.Mala Powers (in her official debut) plays a secretary-bookkeeper at a big industrial plant; she lives with her parents but is engaged to a swell guy (Robert Clarke), who just got a raise and now makes $90 a week. Leaving the plant after working late one night, she finds herself being stalked. In the ensuing scene – the best in the movie – she tries to escape her pursuer in a forbidding maze of buildings and alleys but fails.When she returns home, disheveled and in shock, the police can't get much out of her; she claims she never saw her attacker (who manned a snack truck outside the factory). Trying to pretend that nothing happened, she returns to her job but falls apart, thinking that everybody is staring at her, judging her. She goes into a fugue state, running away to Los Angeles on a bus but stumbling off at a rest stop. Waking up in a strange ranch house, she learns that she's been rescued by Tod Andrews, a young minister in a California agricultural town. She lies about her identity and takes a job packing oranges. The two fall vaguely in love, but it's clear to Andrews that Powers is keeping dire secrets. When, at a company picnic, she seizes a wrench and cracks the skull of Jerry Paris, who was trying to steal a kiss, the truth about her past comes out....It was a courageous movie to come out in 1950, and that may explain and excuse some of its shortcomings. Lupino never recaptures the verve of the early assault scene, and the movie wanders off into the bucolic and sentimental, ending up talky and didactic. Yes, Lupino had important information to impart, but she didn't trust the narrative to speak for itself. Her cast, pleasant but bland and generic, weren't much help, either, reverting to melodramatic postures or homespun reassurance. But Outrage was a breakthrough, blazing a trail for later discourse on what the crime of rape really is, and what it really means to its victims.

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jenabaum
2000/08/25

I saw this little (only an hour and 15 minutes) movie last night, remarkable for it's subject matter (rape and its aftermath) and notable because it's director is Ida Lupino. It was interesting because rape is not a subject that was often depicted in dramatic features, albeit a B-level feature in the early 50's. The story was told in an honest way, and after I got used to the avoidance of the term "rape", substituted for "criminally attacked" (hey, this was the 50's and it did have to get an MPAA rating) I was kept interested for the rest of the film.

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