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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Binding: DVD
EAN: 5035673006146
Format: PAL
Number Of Discs: 1
Region Code: 2
Sales Rank: 221228
Theatrical Release Date: November 28, 1949
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: Laura will always be director Otto Preminger's most beloved movie, but he gets closer to the essence of film noir in this fascinatingly slippery item about a psychiatrist's wife whose weakness for kleptomania makes her prey to an oily hypnotist, con artist, and manipulator par excellence. The fashion-plate wife (dresses, robes, and peignoirs by Oleg Cassini) is played by Laura herself, Gene Tierney. The mellifluous conniver is Jose Ferrer, coming off like the illegitimate son of Waldo Lydecker ('I'm so glad you're here--you make Tina's party seem an almost human event'). Among other things, Ferrer would probably like to get Tierney into bed, and a good many people--including Richard Conte as the caring husband--come to believe he has. But that's not the extent of his ambitions, and before long Tierney has been framed for a murder of convenience to clear up another bit of messiness in the cad's career. Whirlpool's mise-en-scène has a sinuous fluidity and subtle play of light and shadow (it was among the last films shot by that master of black-and-white, Arthur C. Miller), and the complexly structured screenplay--by Ben Hecht and Andrew Solt--takes us by surprise in reel after reel. There's nothing redeeming about Ferrer's character (except how much pleasure his villainy affords), but Preminger doesn't really side with any of the characters or permit our facile identification with anyone. Different parts of the movie are dominated by each of the key figures, including police detective Charles Bickford, and we keep learning there's more to each of them than we initially assumed. Whirlpool's a good title for it. Dive in. --Richard T. Jameson
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - No 'Laura' but Still Enjoyable
This isn't a great film. Part of the problem lies with the character assigned to Gene Tierney. The character she plays comes across more as distraught and hysterical than anything else. It's hard to imagine that anyone, regardless of how much they loved her, could believe in her. To make matters worse some of the dialogue she delivers is awful. There isn't an actor dead or alive who could make a character like that fully believable. But part of the fault lies with Tierney herself. She spends most ... Read More
Rating: - OTTO PREMINGER, OPUS 14
***1/2 1949. WHIRLPOOL, based on the Guy Endore novel, was produced and directed by Otto Preminger. Ann Sutton, the wife of a well-known psychoanalyst, is kleptomaniac but doesn't dare to speak about it with her husband. She prefers to trust Dr. Korvo, a swindler who'll take advantage of her. Although this film is a minor entry in the filmography of Otto Preminger, it nevertheless delivers its share of pleasure to the curious movie lover. First of all, the performance of José Ferrer as David Korvo ... Read More
Rating: - A Must-Have Noir
Jose Ferrar !!! The late '40s....Hypnosis, Murderous Intrigue !!! Who Could ask for More. If you Like this Era 40s -50s Noir Film, this Should be Part of your Collection. Also "Laura"-Vincent Price; Strangers on a Train-Robert Walker; The Blue Dalhia; The Glass Key-Ladd and Lake, which should be Back in Proper "Print" . Whirlpool is a Great price too !! AMC Lost the Rights to This too(?). I Shoulda Recorded Everything, in the Early to Mid 90s-AMC !!?!!!
Rating: - Not sure this is a noir, but...
Worth seeing for Jose Ferrar's performance as the oily "hypnotist" and womanizer. The film has Preminger's usual delight in the unsavoury and dark in human nature, but it also has Richard Conti rather miscast as a succesful California psychologist (kinda of like De Niro playing an Irish priest in "True Confessions"...) Of course, Gene Tierney is pretty easy on the eyes, but the film is not really noir, more of a psychological thriller. Not a good place to start if your just getting into classic film ... Read More
Rating: - Noir, schmoir. Enjoy this little-seen gem
Let's be honest, the two best reasons to sit through Whirlpool are 1) to see Gene Tierney at the peak of her luminous beauty, and 2) to enjoy Jose Ferrer at the peak of his ingratiating, oily charm. Slow? Is it slow? Yes, but a brisk wisecracking script about hypnosis, infidelity, and seduction would have been -- jarring. Another way of saying "slow" could be "building suspense". Charles Coburn is great as a crusty cop with a poignant backstory. Richard Conte is less convincing as a psychiatrist. ... Read More
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