Mentre due coppie stanno visitando le Cascate del Niagara, le tensioni tra una moglie e il marito arrivano all'omicidio.Mentre due coppie stanno visitando le Cascate del Niagara, le tensioni tra una moglie e il marito arrivano all'omicidio.Mentre due coppie stanno visitando le Cascate del Niagara, le tensioni tra una moglie e il marito arrivano all'omicidio.
Max Showalter
- Ray Cutler
- (as Casey Adams)
John 'Scotty' Watson
- Police Officer on Spanish Aerocar
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Leon Alton
- Lodge Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Henry Beckman
- Motorcycle Cop
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
John Brascia
- Lodge Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Harry Carey Jr.
- Taxi Driver
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Bill Coontz
- Young Man
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Roy Damron
- Lodge Guest
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Robert Ellis
- Young Man
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDuring filming of the shower scene, director Henry Hathaway had to keep yelling at Marilyn Monroe to keep away from the shower curtain and away from the lights as she insisted on being naked (as she was under the bed sheets at the beginning of the film). To pass the censors of the time, the scene was darkened in post-production.
- BlooperWhile energetically explaining the local layout to Ray and Polly Cutler, Mr. Kettering describes Chippawa, Ontario as the scene of a major American defeat in the Revolutionary War. However, U.S. forces in the Revolutionary War got no closer than 75 miles from the area. In fact, Chippawa was the scene of a major American victory in the War of 1812.
- Citazioni
[Upon seeing Rose Loomis in a low-cut, tight-fitting red dress]
Ray Cutler: Hey, get out the firehose!
[to Polly]
Ray Cutler: Why don't you ever get a dress like that?
Polly Cutler: Listen. For a dress like that, you've got to start laying plans when you're about thirteen.
- Curiosità sui creditiMarilyn Monroe's hotel room was Room 801 in the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Niagara Falls. The hotel was formerly called the General Brock Hotel.
- ConnessioniEdited into Marilyn: Something's Got to Give (1990)
Recensione in evidenza
Niagara is one of those wonders who came out of the dream factory of the fifties and still manage to leave deep impressions in fresh viewers. Technically it is simply perfect: the story is like in a film noir, but Niagara is anything but «noir»! This is a true color movie with high artistic and aesthetic value. The best possible use was made of the location; it is an idealized place for honeymooners, with gleaming surfaces, gaudy colors and happy faces. The viewers see the postcard-image of the place it's the era of President Eisenhower, renowned for its uplifting moral integrity, right? But behind the surfaces are dark rooms, depression, madness and scheming thoughts. Innocuous facades conceal quarrels, discontent and eventually murder. And in its midst roars the waterfall, at once beautiful and menacing. The message of the movie is conveyed largely through pictures, the location not the screenplay is the story.
The actors are part of the location. As far as I can remember there are hardly any close ups. Marilyn Monroe looks feverish and disturbed throughout, she elicits compassion rather than arousing sexual desires. Joseph Cotten is very good in the role of her confused and deranged husband. His mental condition seems to stem from war experiences (although in the movie this is treated as a kind of a side remark, its being mentioned is worth remembering, it happens seldom enough). To the disturbed couple are added a «normal» couple and an older, «seasoned» couple (very good, sensible performances by Lurene Tuttle and Don Wilson). The cast aptly represents the chances and pitfalls of life and human relations as behind them water flows down the river and falls over the edge.
Niagara shows a highly artistic approach to a specific place and uses symbols in the way of earlier black and white movies. I can highly recommend it to everyone. It is a pity that the potential of the technical means of this kind of widescreen color movies was not explored further in that direction, creating a direct link between the style of film noir and that of «film couleur». The wet asphalt in the early morning light is just unforgettable.
The actors are part of the location. As far as I can remember there are hardly any close ups. Marilyn Monroe looks feverish and disturbed throughout, she elicits compassion rather than arousing sexual desires. Joseph Cotten is very good in the role of her confused and deranged husband. His mental condition seems to stem from war experiences (although in the movie this is treated as a kind of a side remark, its being mentioned is worth remembering, it happens seldom enough). To the disturbed couple are added a «normal» couple and an older, «seasoned» couple (very good, sensible performances by Lurene Tuttle and Don Wilson). The cast aptly represents the chances and pitfalls of life and human relations as behind them water flows down the river and falls over the edge.
Niagara shows a highly artistic approach to a specific place and uses symbols in the way of earlier black and white movies. I can highly recommend it to everyone. It is a pity that the potential of the technical means of this kind of widescreen color movies was not explored further in that direction, creating a direct link between the style of film noir and that of «film couleur». The wet asphalt in the early morning light is just unforgettable.
- manuel-pestalozzi
- 11 feb 2004
- Permalink
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 1.250.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 32 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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