Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDolores Del Rio plays a dual role as identical twins - one good and one bad.Dolores Del Rio plays a dual role as identical twins - one good and one bad.Dolores Del Rio plays a dual role as identical twins - one good and one bad.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 6 nominations au total
Dolores Del Río
- Magdalena Montes de Oca
- (as Dolores del Rio)
- …
José Arratia
- Médico forense
- (uncredited)
Daniel Arroyo
- Hombre en funeral
- (uncredited)
Ricardo Avendaño
- Cocinero
- (uncredited)
Luis Badillo
- Agente policía
- (uncredited)
Carmen Cabrera
- Invitada a fiesta
- (uncredited)
Elisa Christy
- Empleada tienda
- (uncredited)
Carmen Cipriani
- Invitada fiesta
- (uncredited)
Julio Daneri
- Señor Domínguez
- (uncredited)
Genaro de Alba
- Hombre en funeral
- (uncredited)
Felipe de Flores
- Empleado tienda
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe script for La Otra was owned by Warner Bros. and is the same script as the 1964 version, La mort frappe trois fois (1963), starring Bette Davis. Warners chose to pass on making it as a film in the 1940's because it bore too close of a resemblance to the film Davis had just made, A Stolen Life (1946).
- ConnexionsFeatured in Dolores del Río - Princesa de México (1999)
Commentaire en vedette
This movie is rarely seen in the United States. This is a shame. This film is filled with suspense, atmosphere and poetry, from its visuals to its score.
There is a hint of German Expressionism here, as in all Noir movies of the forties and fifties. (This was made in 1946 by a studio in Mexico City.) Del Rio is statuesque and, at the same time, vulnerable. Her work in the silent era informs this performance. I have a feeling Billy Wilder had a glance at this. It preceded SUNSET BOULEVARD by a few years, and Del Rio could very easily have played Norma Desmond.
The other actors here are solid, and they each have doppelgängers. (Del Rio plays twins.) There is a good guy who courts the protagonist and there's a bad guy doing the same.
There is a mood of regret bordering on a fear of damnation and Del Rio conveys this mood with her face. Mexico City looks holy, haunted and hard, what with the monumental stonework in every shot.
1946 may have been the best time to film this, and Mexico the best place. Nothing is overt, but it is a daring, dramatic look at a life lived under the surface.
There is a hint of German Expressionism here, as in all Noir movies of the forties and fifties. (This was made in 1946 by a studio in Mexico City.) Del Rio is statuesque and, at the same time, vulnerable. Her work in the silent era informs this performance. I have a feeling Billy Wilder had a glance at this. It preceded SUNSET BOULEVARD by a few years, and Del Rio could very easily have played Norma Desmond.
The other actors here are solid, and they each have doppelgängers. (Del Rio plays twins.) There is a good guy who courts the protagonist and there's a bad guy doing the same.
There is a mood of regret bordering on a fear of damnation and Del Rio conveys this mood with her face. Mexico City looks holy, haunted and hard, what with the monumental stonework in every shot.
1946 may have been the best time to film this, and Mexico the best place. Nothing is overt, but it is a daring, dramatic look at a life lived under the surface.
- fcwemyss
- 30 juin 2024
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- How long is The Other One?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 38 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1
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