Wicked Woman

Post Reply
User avatar
ChiO
Posts: 3899
Joined: January 2nd, 2008, 1:26 pm
Location: Chicago

Wicked Woman

Post by ChiO »

Written and directed by Russell Rouse, whose other other credits include THE OSCAR (1966)(director & screenplay), PILLOW TALK (1959)(story), CHICAGO CONFIDENTIAL (1955)(director & writer), and D.O.A. (1950)(story & screenplay), this 1953 film noir inhabits its own seedy and tawdry universe.

Blond floozy Beverly Michaels (you know she's a floozy because of the music her hips seem to cue each time she walks into the frame) moves into town looking for a job. Hired by Evelyn Scott, the lush co-owner of a local watering hole, to be a server, she soon becomes very friendly with the other co-owner, bartender and Scott's husband, Richard Egan. During this time, Michaels is also deflecting the advances of the lascivious voyeur who lives across the hall at the rooming house where she lives. Egan and Michaels eventually develop a plan to defraud Scott and a prospective bar buyer involving Michaels pretending to be Egan's wife and forging Scott's name to the bar's deed and sales agreement. They will then take the money and run off to Mexico to live happily ever after. But...

In his stalking of Michaels, her neighbor hears the plot and starts blackmailing her, not for money, but for dinners and the promise of fulfilling his desires. She, of course, keeps these activities a secret from Egan. Their plan unravels when Egan arrives unannounced at her room and finds the neighbor kissing and otherwise slobbering over her neck. Enraged, Egan admits the fraud, which the prospective buyer forgives, and returns to Scott, who acts as if she will take him back just in order to nag him about this episode for the rest of her life.

What is the primary reason that what otherwise appears to be a minor B-noir melodrama (many shades of THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE) is elevated to glittering B-noir melodrama status? The neighbor, the Lothario that can send Richard Egan (or any man) into a blind jealous rage, the sexual obstacle to a couple's life of riches and romance:

Percy Helton!

Only in the twisted B-noir Universe.
Everyday people...that's what's wrong with the world. -- Morgan Morgan
I love movies. But don't get me wrong. I hate Hollywood. -- Orson Welles
Movies can only go forward in spite of the motion picture industry. -- Orson Welles
User avatar
knitwit45
Posts: 4689
Joined: May 4th, 2007, 9:33 pm
Location: Gardner, KS

Re: Wicked Woman

Post by knitwit45 »

yipes! just the thought of Percy slobbering.....YIPES!!!!!!! :shock: :shock:
Mr. Arkadin
Posts: 2645
Joined: April 14th, 2007, 3:00 pm

Re: Wicked Woman

Post by Mr. Arkadin »

I guess I missed recording this one. I remember it showing and I remember wanting to record it, but I guess the mental and physical were not in sync that day. Now, I really want to see it!
Mr. Arkadin
Posts: 2645
Joined: April 14th, 2007, 3:00 pm

Re: Wicked Woman

Post by Mr. Arkadin »

Stop the presses, I just found a copy! Apparently, I labeled it 1943 instead of 53, so I was looking in the right place, but the film was stashed in the wrong decade. I will try to give this a watch over the weekend and report back.
User avatar
mongoII
Posts: 12340
Joined: April 14th, 2007, 7:37 pm
Location: Florida

Re: Wicked Woman

Post by mongoII »

Good stuff. I saw the movie on the big screen in the 1950s. As a youth I loved it. Sleaze at it's best.
Beverly Michaels as Billie is a dilly.
Joseph Goodheart
Post Reply