The Scarlet Hour

Another Dramatic Hit From Academy Award Director Michal Curtiz !

5.1
19561h 35m

An unhappy wife uses her powers of manipulation to draw an infatuated man into an ill-fated jewelry heist.

Production

Logo for Paramount Pictures

Cast

Photo of Carol Ohmart

Carol Ohmart

Pauline 'Paulie' Nevins

Photo of Tom Tryon

Tom Tryon

E.V. 'Marsh' Marshall

Photo of Jody Lawrance

Jody Lawrance

Kathy Stevens

Photo of James Gregory

James Gregory

Ralph Nevins

Photo of Elaine Stritch

Elaine Stritch

Phyllis Rycker

Photo of E.G. Marshall

E.G. Marshall

Lt. Jennings

Photo of Edward Binns

Edward Binns

Sgt. Allen

Photo of David Lewis

David Lewis

Dr. Sam Lynbury

Photo of Billy Gray

Billy Gray

Tom Rycker

Photo of James Todd

James Todd

Inspector Paley

Photo of Nat King Cole

Nat King Cole

Nightclub Vocalist (singing 'Never Let Me Go')

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

The Kiss Off.

The Scarlet Hour is directed by Micahel Curtiz and written by Rip Van Ronkel, Frank Tashlin and John Lucas. It stars Carol Ohmart, Tom Tryon, E.G. Marshall, Elaine Stritch, Jody Lawrance and James Gregory. Music is by Leith Stevens and cinematography by Lionel Lindon.

It has been a hard to locate film noir for may a year, which when you consider it's directed by such a titan of classic cinema comes as a surprise. The plot dynamics are very familiar to noir fans, and coming as it does late in the original film noir wave it does lack a bit of freshness, but there's little deviations in the shenanigans of the principals to at least give this its own identity.

We essentially have an abused wife (Ohmart) having an affair with one of her husbands (Gregory) employees (Tryon). They plan to run away together but need money to do so. As it happens, during one of their love sessions in a parked car they over hear crooks planning a jewelry robbery and she convinces her man to hold up the thieves so as to take the jewels for themselves. In true noirville form this becomes a road to nowhere and danger lurks on every corner, with dodgy alibis, unrequited passions and a few twists and turns to keep the narrative perky.

This is no shoddy production either, it comes out of Paramount and the presence of Curtiz shows you that the studio wasn't merely making a contract filler. Though the absence of chirascuro from Lindon is a shame, we do get some nifty sequences such as violence enacted that we only see via shadows. There's moments of humour as well, while there's also a musical surprise as Nat King Cole turns up to croon Never Let Me Go. Cast are fine, Ohmart has classic fatale looks and legs from heaven, but her character trajectory is a little muddled in the writing. Tryon plays the dupe competently, Lawrance sparkles in a secondary role, as does the scene stealing Stritch.

I'd stop at calling this a hidden gem, as some other amateur reviewers have, though it does rather depend on how many other similar noirs you have seen previously. This doesn't come close to Double Indemnity, The Postman Always Rings Twice or Thérèse Raquin, but that doesn't stop it being a good film, because it is and for sure it's well worth noir fans tracking it down. 7/10

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