ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,0/10
21 k
MA NOTE
Alors que deux couples visitent les chutes du Niagara, les tensions entre une femme et son mari atteignent le niveau du meurtre.Alors que deux couples visitent les chutes du Niagara, les tensions entre une femme et son mari atteignent le niveau du meurtre.Alors que deux couples visitent les chutes du Niagara, les tensions entre une femme et son mari atteignent le niveau du meurtre.
Max Showalter
- Ray Cutler
- (as Casey Adams)
Leon Alton
- Lodge Guest
- (uncredited)
Henry Beckman
- Motorcycle Cop
- (uncredited)
John Brascia
- Lodge Guest
- (uncredited)
Harry Carey Jr.
- Taxi Driver
- (uncredited)
Bill Coontz
- Young Man
- (uncredited)
Roy Damron
- Lodge Guest
- (uncredited)
Robert Ellis
- Young Man
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring filming of the shower scene, director Henry Hathaway had to keep yelling at Marilyn Monroe to keep away from the shower curtain and away from the lights as she insisted on being naked (as she was under the bed sheets at the beginning of the film). To pass the censors of the time, the scene was darkened in post-production.
- GaffesWhile energetically explaining the local layout to Ray and Polly Cutler, Mr. Kettering describes Chippawa, Ontario as the scene of a major American defeat in the Revolutionary War. However, U.S. forces in the Revolutionary War got no closer than 75 miles from the area. In fact, Chippawa was the scene of a major American victory in the War of 1812.
- Citations
[Upon seeing Rose Loomis in a low-cut, tight-fitting red dress]
Ray Cutler: Hey, get out the firehose!
[to Polly]
Ray Cutler: Why don't you ever get a dress like that?
Polly Cutler: Listen. For a dress like that, you've got to start laying plans when you're about thirteen.
- Générique farfeluMarilyn Monroe's hotel room was Room 801 in the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Niagara Falls. The hotel was formerly called the General Brock Hotel.
- ConnexionsEdited into Marilyn: Something's Got to Give (1990)
Commentaire en vedette
Marilyn hype aside, this is quite a good thriller. The sheer drama of the falls merge strikingly into the story as a whole. Some of the camera angles really showcase the waters in their crashing majesty, a sinister backdrop to the shadowy events. Then too, I hope TCF gave poor Jean Peters hazard pay for the way she gets doused around in that little boat. No glamour girl there.
I expect the movie's overall quality is due to director Hathaway, long one of Hollywood's most underrated movie makers. Catch, for example, that marvelous overhead shot in the bell tower of Marilyn lying dead. It's a composition worthy of the best of Welles. Also, I kept watching for process shots, Hollywood's usual expedient when dealing with difficult action set-ups. The only one I could spot in that long river sequence is Peters on the rock awaiting rescue. To me, that's quite a feat of expert movie-making.
Nothing special about the storyline itself. Faithless wife Monroe two-times her unbalanced husband Cotten who then stalks her amid the touristy Niagara setting. In fact, Cotten gets to do a lot of sinister lurking around. On the other hand, wholesome newly-weds Showalter and Peters make a charming, non-sappy contrast to the other couple-- and I'm not surprised that in real life, the notorious love-'em and leave-'em Howard Hughes ended up marrying the no-nonsense Peters. My only gripe is with the ever-exultant Don Wilson. He was such a good pitch-man on TV, but here it's like he's trying to sell us his glad-handing role instead of acting it out.
Anyway, the movie remains more than simply Marilyn's breakthrough role-- good as she is-- and can stand on its own as an expert scenic thriller.
I expect the movie's overall quality is due to director Hathaway, long one of Hollywood's most underrated movie makers. Catch, for example, that marvelous overhead shot in the bell tower of Marilyn lying dead. It's a composition worthy of the best of Welles. Also, I kept watching for process shots, Hollywood's usual expedient when dealing with difficult action set-ups. The only one I could spot in that long river sequence is Peters on the rock awaiting rescue. To me, that's quite a feat of expert movie-making.
Nothing special about the storyline itself. Faithless wife Monroe two-times her unbalanced husband Cotten who then stalks her amid the touristy Niagara setting. In fact, Cotten gets to do a lot of sinister lurking around. On the other hand, wholesome newly-weds Showalter and Peters make a charming, non-sappy contrast to the other couple-- and I'm not surprised that in real life, the notorious love-'em and leave-'em Howard Hughes ended up marrying the no-nonsense Peters. My only gripe is with the ever-exultant Don Wilson. He was such a good pitch-man on TV, but here it's like he's trying to sell us his glad-handing role instead of acting it out.
Anyway, the movie remains more than simply Marilyn's breakthrough role-- good as she is-- and can stand on its own as an expert scenic thriller.
- dougdoepke
- 7 avr. 2012
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 250 000 $ US (estimation)
- Durée1 heure 32 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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