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The Locket

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Director
  
Music director
  
Duration
  

Country
  
United States

7.2/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Drama, Film-Noir

Screenplay
  
Sheridan Gibney

Writer
  
Sheridan Gibney

Language
  
English

The Locket movie poster

Release date
  
December 20, 1946 (1946-12-20)

Cast
  
(Nancy Monks Blair Patton), (Dr. Harry Blair), (Norman Clyde), (John Willis), (Nancy: age 10), (Andrew 'Drew' Bonner)

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Tagline
  
Her Mysterious Secret Wrecked 3 Men's Lives! Not love, not money...but a haunting hunger drove her to lie, cheat, steal. Why? IT'S THE STRANGEST SECRET EVER TOLD!

The locket 1946 robert mitchum


The Locket is a 1946 film noir directed by John Brahm, starring Laraine Day, Brian Aherne, Robert Mitchum, and Gene Raymond, and released by RKO Pictures. The film is based on a screenplay by Sheridan Gibney, adapted from "What Nancy Wanted" by Norma Barzman, wife of later-blacklisted writer Ben Barzman. It is noted for its complex use of layered flashbacks (flashbacks within flashbacks) to give psychological depth to the narrative.

Contents

The Locket movie scenes

The locket 1946


Plot

The Locket movie scenes

A story told in a number of flashbacks from different points of view, this psychological drama tells the story of a bride-to-be (Day) who, as a child, was falsely accused of theft. She grows up to become a kleptomaniac, inveterate liar, and eventually a murderess.

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Apparently, all her misdeeds are an attempt by the woman to get her revenge on the world that has falsely accused her of stealing as a child by ruining people's lives. After splitting up with an artist (Mitchum), and her psychiatrist husband (Aherne), she becomes engaged to the son (Raymond) of the woman who had accused her of thievery. Back in the present day, at her wedding, the young woman collapses physically and mentally as she walks to the altar.

Cast

The Locket The Locket 1946

  • Laraine Day as Nancy Monks Blair Patton
  • Brian Aherne as Dr. Harry Blair
  • Robert Mitchum as Norman Clyde
  • Gene Raymond as John Willis
  • Sharyn Moffett as Nancy, age 10
  • Ricardo Cortez as Drew Bonner
  • Katherine Emery as Mrs. Willis
  • Helene Thimig as Mrs. Monks
  • Reginald Denny as Mr. Wendell
  • Nella Walker as Mrs. Wendell
  • Henry Stephenson as Lord Wyndham
  • Lillian Fontaine as Lady Wyndham
  • Martha Hyer (guest at reception for bride-to-be, uncredited)
  • Ellen Corby (kitchen cook, uncredited)
  • Background

    The Locket The Locket 1946 Toronto Film Society Toronto Film Society

  • Hume Cronyn originally bought the Norma Barzman screenplay to produce and direct the film with his wife Jessica Tandy in the lead role, but later sold the rights to RKO Pictures, which then assigned Gibney to rewrite the screenplay. The original Barzman screenplay is in the Cronyn-Tandy papers at the Library of Congress.
  • The interiors used for the house of Mrs. Willis are clearly the same as those used for the house of Alex Sebastian (Claude Rains) in Alfred Hitchcock's Notorious, released by RKO in September 1946.
  • Critical response

    The Locket The Locket 1946 Toronto Film Society Toronto Film Society

    When the film was released the staff at Variety magazine praised the film, writing, "Story carries the flashback technique to greater lengths than generally employed. The writing by Sheridan Gibney displays an understanding of the subject matter and proves a solid basis for the able performances achieved by John Brahm’s direction. Latter gears his scenes for full interest and carefully carries forward the doubt – and audience hope – that Nancy is not the villainess."

    The Locket The Locket 1946

    Film historians Alain Silver and Elizabeth Ward praise the unusual melodrama in the RKO visual style. "It is distinctive in its flashbacks within flashbacks, with the story often being told by a third or fourth person removed. This device is handled effectively in preparation for the climactic flashback, which reveals the truth."

    The Locket The Locket 1946 Cassandras Revenge Nitrate Diva

    Film critic Dennis Schwartz gave the film a mixed review, writing, "A psychological drama about a woman with a dark secret from her childhood that is carried over to her adult life. It's a post-war baroque melodrama, creaky as wooden steps in a mildewed house ... It was too wooden a presentation to generate anything but a few sparks ... It's a somber story, with a lot of heavy-handed things going on. The complexities of the heroine's character were well presented. The analyst's comments about her stealing to get even with Mrs. Willis seemed to be a reasonable explanation, if taken at face value ... The Locket only had some glitter but not enough substance. Though, as muddled as it was, it still kept me alert wanting to know what gives. The problem is I never satisfactorily found out what gives."


    The Locket The Locket 1946 Flickers in TimeFlickers in Time

    References

    The Locket Wikipedia
    The Locket IMDb The Locket themoviedb.org