Sneha Girap (Editor)

The Cobweb (film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
6.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron
6.6
1 Ratings
100
90
80
70
61
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This

Director
  
Vincente Minnelli

Initial DVD release
  
January 22, 1992

Duration
  

Language
  
English

6.4/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama

Music director
  
Leonard Rosenman

Country
  
United States

The Cobweb (film) movie poster

Release date
  
July 15, 1955 (1955-07-15)

Based on
  
The Cobweb (1954 novel)  by William Gibson

Writer
  
John Paxton (screenplay), William Gibson (additional dialogue), William Gibson (novel)

Cast
  
Richard Widmark
(Dr. Stewart 'Mac' McIver),
Lauren Bacall
(Meg Faversen Rinehart),
Charles Boyer
(Dr. Douglas N. Devanal),
Gloria Grahame
(Karen McIver),
Lillian Gish
(Victoria Inch),
John Kerr
(Steven W. Holte)

Similar movies
  
Shutter Island
,
Bottle Rocket
,
Howl
,
I Am
,
Hellbound: Hellraiser II
,
The Ward

Leonard rosenman music score from vincente minnelli s the cobweb 1955 main end titles


The Cobweb is a 1955 American MGM Eastmancolor film. It was directed by Vincente Minnelli and based on a novel by William Gibson. It was released on DVD as part of the Warner Archive Collection on January 18, 2011.

Contents

The Cobweb (film) movie scenes

The film features an elite cast, revolving around the disturbed psyches of inmates and staff members at a posh psychiatric clinic. Stewart McIver (Richard Widmark) leads the way as the head of the clinic, while his wife Karen (Gloria Grahame) takes it upon herself to select new drapes for the hospital's library. These seemingly ordinary drapes set off a melodrama with an equal amount of love and lunacy.

The Cobweb (film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters6011p6011p

The opening credits are followed by the following onscreen words:

The Cobweb (film) The Cobweb film Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

"The trouble began."

The Cobweb (film) SelfStyled Siren The Cobweb 1955

At the end of the film, the words appear onscreen.

The Cobweb (film) The Cobweb 1955 Vincente Minnelli Richard Widmark Lauren Bacall

"The trouble was over."

The Cobweb (film) SelfStyled Siren The Cobweb 1955

Plot

Dr. Stewart McIver (Richard Widmark) is now in charge of a psychiatric facility, one run for many years by medical director Dr. Douglas Devanal (Charles Boyer).

McIver must address the needs of a number of disturbed patients, among them Steven Holte (John Kerr), a possibly suicidal artist, and the self-loathing Mr. Capp (Oscar Levant). All of his responsibilities keep McIver so busy that his wife, Karen (Gloria Grahame), feels increasingly frustrated and ignored.

When new drapes are needed for the clinic's library, the dour and penny-pinching Victoria Inch (Lillian Gish) orders unattractive ones. Karen McIver takes it upon herself to buy a more expensive and colorful set instead, gaining the approval of chairman of the board Regina Mitchell-Smythe (Mabel Albertson) but without the knowledge of her husband. What should be an insignificant matter is complicated further by Dr. McIver giving the patients, principally Stevie, permission to design and create the new drapes themselves.

Personalities clash. Dr. Devanal, who has a drinking problem, has been having an affair with his secretary Miss Cobb (Adele Jergens) and makes a clumsy pass at McIver's wife as well. McIver begins to fall in love with Meg Rinehart (Lauren Bacall), a member of his staff. Miss Inch privately schemes to expose the unseemly behavior of Devanal at the next meeting of the board and issues a veiled threat to do so to McIver as well, while Devanal's wife, Edna (Fay Wray), mistakenly believes McIver to be behind the plot to discredit her husband.

Having felt stable enough to go on a date with Sue Brett (Susan Strasberg), another patient, Stevie Holte is very upset to discover that new drapes have been installed, not the ones his artwork was meant to inspire. He disappears, causing a search party to look for him and McIver to fear a suicide. In the end, Stevie reappears, the McIvers agree to work on their marriage and Miss Inch decides not to disclose everyone's actions. A grateful Dr. Devanal, his reputation intact, submits his resignation to the board.

Music

The score was composed, conducted and orchestrated by Leonard Rosenman. The music distinguishes itself by "having the first predominantly twelve-tone score ever written for a motion picture."

The first release of portions of the score was on MGM Records on LP in 1957. The complete score in stereo was issued on cd in 2003, on Film Score Monthly records.

Reception

According to MGM records the film earned $1,385,000 in the US and Canada and $593,000 elsewhere resulting in a loss of $1,141,000.

References

The Cobweb (film) Wikipedia
The Cobweb (film) IMDb The Cobweb (film) themoviedb.org