Home > Mystery >

Black Widow

Black Widow (1954)

October. 28,1954
|
6.7
| Mystery

A young stage hopeful is murdered and suspicion falls on her mentor, a Broadway producer.

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Marketic
1954/10/28

It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.

More
Dorathen
1954/10/29

Better Late Then Never

More
Chirphymium
1954/10/30

It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional

More
Portia Hilton
1954/10/31

Blistering performances.

More
JohnHowardReid
1954/11/01

Copyright 1954 by 20th Century-Fox Film Corp. New York opening at the Roxy: 27 October 1954. U.S. release: November 1954. U.K. release: March 1955. Australian release: 28 May 1955. Sydney opening at the Regent. 8,520 feet. 95 minutes.SYNOPSIS: Murder mystery in which a Broadway producer is suspected of strangling a girl he had befriended. A moderately ingenious but disagreeable story, tamely developed. — "Sight & Sound". NOTES: Fox's 18th CinemaScope feature and the first to return only a modest profit (on what was a very modest investment at that). CinemaScope was already losing its box-office lure.COMMENT: A murder mystery in CinemaScope certainly sounds novel and promising, but alas this movie gives the idea such an indifferent work-out it's impossible to reach any conclusion as to the Scope screen's effectiveness in dramatizing this sort of entertainment. The whodunit aspects are indifferently, even perfunctorily handled, and the characters are so one-dimensional that little if any suspense is generated. True, Ginger Rogers plays her vindictive actress with a certain amount of bite and sparkle, and Peggy Ann Garner is briefly effective as the "All About Eve" clone and victim, but the rest of the players come nowhere near these standards. George Raft just rattles off his lines, while Van Heflin as usual seems to go out of his way to be plain dull. Reginald Gardiner is handed some pungent lines, but he is so unbelievable that his observations count for little. In fact, all the pretentious allusions in the dialogue generally fall flat. Production values are minor, CinemaScope being poorly utilized, while a most incompatible and obvious stand-in pretends to be Van Heflin in the New York location shots.

More
seymourblack-1
1954/11/02

This glossy murder mystery features a group of sophisticated characters who live in luxurious apartments in Manhattan and are associated in various ways with the Broadway theatre business. Their affluence is emphasised visually by the movie being filmed in CinemaScope and Technicolor and using some stunning cinematography to highlight the attractiveness of their upmarket surroundings. Its plot about an innocent man, whose ill-judged actions lead to him becoming the prime suspect in a murder case, also contains enough twists and surprises to ensure that the action never loses pace and remains engaging right through to its conclusion.At his wife's insistence, successful Broadway producer Peter Denver (Van Heflin) attends a cocktail party being held by his upstairs neighbour Carlotta "Lottie" Marin (Ginger Rogers) who happens to be the star of his latest Broadway show. As he doesn't really like these types of parties (or his hostess) very much and his wife is out of town visiting her ailing mother, he aims to spend as little time as possible fulfilling his social obligation. In a quiet spot at the party, however, he meets a rather lost-looking young lady called Nancy "Nanny" Ordway (Peggy Ann Garner) who tells him she's a writer who hasn't, so far, had any of her work published. At Peter's suggestion, they leave early and have a meal together before going their separate ways.When Peter telephones Iris later that night, he gives her a full account of what had transpired and Iris predicts that he'll be hearing from Nanny again and that she'll ask him to use his influence, in some way, to help her to advance her career. Peter thinks this is unlikely because Nanny appears to be so sweet and naïve but he knows nothing of how ruthless and ambitious she actually is.Shortly after their first meeting (and at her request), Nanny again has dinner with Peter and skilfully gets him to offer her the use of his apartment to do her writing in when he's out at work. This arrangement is due to end when his wife returns home but when Peter and Iris arrive at their front door after he'd met her at the airport, the music that they hear coming from inside leads them to believe that Nanny must still be there. When they enter, however, it initially seems that there's no-one present, but shortly after, when Iris goes into the bathroom, she discovers Nanny's dead body hanging from a rope and a note found close-by makes it appear that Nanny had, in fact, taken her own life.A little while later, when it becomes clear that Nanny was murdered and was pregnant, other circumstantial evidence also points to Peter being culpable and so he quickly decides to carry out his own investigation to track down the real killer.Stangely, for a movie that wasn't adapted from a stage play, "Black Widow" looks very stagy because a high proportion of the action takes place in two identical apartments and the style of acting is frequently rather mannered. Van Heflin is an exception to this as he seems completely natural and believable as a mild-mannered, nice guy who, because of his gullibility, sleepwalks into a nightmare. Ginger Rogers, on the other hand, overacts outrageously as Lottie, a domineering gossip who ultimately reveals some vulnerabilities that aren't evident throughout most of the action. The cast also benefits from producer/director Nunnally Johnson's high-quality dialogue which helps to compensate a little for the movie's lack of realism and the rather unnatural way in which some of the developments unfold.

More
LeonLouisRicci
1954/11/03

Here we have a Movie that is Mistitled and Mislabeled. There isn't a Widow in this Film, let alone a Black Widow and this is often called Film Noir (even released on DVD in a Noir Series). Please can we have just a little bit of clarity in Marketing. Oh well.Very typical of the 1950's this is quite the representation of one of those Hollywood attempts at luring Adults to the Movie Theatre by offering something, anything, that they couldn't get for Free from the "One Eyed Monster". Like a Star Studded Cast, Technicolor, Cinemascope, and some Daring Themes (here read, Out of Wedlock Pregnancy).This is basically a "Who Done It?" that plods right along, although it is held back frequently so Audiences can gawk at the impressive Wide Screen where the Actors stand on extreme right and extreme left and Talk to one another while the Colors drip from the Screen and delightfully decorated Backgrounds sit there dutifully. An observation emerges, this could be the Theatre, not the Movie Theatre, but the Theatre Theatre.The Aging Cast all seem so Professional, in a Non-Stanislovsky kinda way, taking their Style from the Studio System. There are some Cynical lines and the Murder Mystery has a sense of a Writer who Loves His Craft. It is all a package with some Entertainment Value, and as an Historical Icon that is like a Motion Picture Postcard from 1954.

More
Spuzzlightyear
1954/11/04

So imagine a film noir. Now, imagine that film noir as a technicolor Cinemascope production, and you have Black Widow. A certainly interesting, but just passable noir about a Broadway producer framed for a murder he didn't commit. Fleeing from the police, he picks up clues about the victim, and realizes his friends are not what they seem (of course). While this is pretty to look at, unfortunately, once you figure out what the cops are doing. the suspense disappears somewhat, and completely collapses at the end when we do find out the real murderer as it's almost presented as an anticlimax. Still worth a look though for it's amazing photography.

More