Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA gold-digger floozy marries a wealthy wine producer but she secretly takes a young lover with whom she conspires to murder her husband for his fortune.A gold-digger floozy marries a wealthy wine producer but she secretly takes a young lover with whom she conspires to murder her husband for his fortune.A gold-digger floozy marries a wealthy wine producer but she secretly takes a young lover with whom she conspires to murder her husband for his fortune.
Joe De Santis
- Gino Verdugo
- (as Joe DeSantis)
Dorothy Abbott
- Waitress
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Don Avalier
- Headwaiter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
John Barton
- Courtroom Spectator
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Lovyss Bradley
- Customer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizDirector John Farrow considered Ernest Borgnine for the role that went to Rod Steiger according to a contemporary article in The Hollywood Reporter during the film's pre-production in March 1956.
- BlooperThe evidence to convict Paul consisted of fingerprints on the gun, the fireplace poker, and Gino's St. Christopher medal keychain. However, no prints were lifted from Phyllis' note she placed in Gino's pocket, which would not have had Gino's prints on it since she never handed it to him. Further, Phyllis believed Emma committed suicide by taking the missing pills, yet the police took no prints from the pill box which would have confirmed that Emma had handled it and possibly did take some of the pills on her own.
- Citazioni
San Sanders: Been a week now. Every night since the fair began. When you didn't come tonight, I don't mind telling you it was kind of like the time I got trampled by a brahma bull. You got me goin', baby. Really goin'.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Arena: Blondes: Diana Dors (1999)
- Colonne sonoreOne for My Baby (And One More for the Road)
(uncredited)
Music by Harold Arlen
Lyrics by Johnny Mercer
Performed by Maxine Gates
[Sung by the bar performer in her act]
Recensione in evidenza
Diana Dors, Britain's answer to Marilyn Monroe, stars with Rod Steiger, Tom Tryon, Arthur Franz, and Beulah Bondi in "The Unholy Wife" from 1957.
Dors as her character, Phyllis, serves as the narrator, telling her own story. When we first see her, she's deglamorized and no longer a blond, but somehow, still beautiful with this natural look.
She tells the story of meeting a vineyard owner Paul Hochen (Steiger) in a bar, where she picks up guys with her friend (Marie Windsor). Here she is dazzling in a form-fitting silver gown and that signature platinum blond hair. Phyllis has a young son from a past relationship, and soon, she is married to Paul, living with him, her son, and his mother (Bondi) in a mausoleum of a house.
Everything with Paul is family tradition and the making of wine. She's bored, so she enters into a liaison with a cowboy (Tryon). Then she decides enough is enough and begins to plot her way out of her situation with murder. Her plan doesn't work the way she wanted, so she has to improvise.
This is a slow, dark film, and the actors underplay - even Steiger, who is so off the wall in The Big Knife. I mean, the man can go big. Here he's a simple, proud man who takes care of his mother, is devoted to Phyllis' son, and has a priest for a brother. Obviously he and Father Stephen were raised with a different set of values from Phyllis.
The film comes off as average. Comparing Dors to Monroe is a mistake. Dors was sultry and sensusal, but she didn't have Monroe's charisma, presence, or likeability. However, had she played down the bombshell routine, she probably would have been considered a good actress.
Routine, but the stars made it interesting.
Dors as her character, Phyllis, serves as the narrator, telling her own story. When we first see her, she's deglamorized and no longer a blond, but somehow, still beautiful with this natural look.
She tells the story of meeting a vineyard owner Paul Hochen (Steiger) in a bar, where she picks up guys with her friend (Marie Windsor). Here she is dazzling in a form-fitting silver gown and that signature platinum blond hair. Phyllis has a young son from a past relationship, and soon, she is married to Paul, living with him, her son, and his mother (Bondi) in a mausoleum of a house.
Everything with Paul is family tradition and the making of wine. She's bored, so she enters into a liaison with a cowboy (Tryon). Then she decides enough is enough and begins to plot her way out of her situation with murder. Her plan doesn't work the way she wanted, so she has to improvise.
This is a slow, dark film, and the actors underplay - even Steiger, who is so off the wall in The Big Knife. I mean, the man can go big. Here he's a simple, proud man who takes care of his mother, is devoted to Phyllis' son, and has a priest for a brother. Obviously he and Father Stephen were raised with a different set of values from Phyllis.
The film comes off as average. Comparing Dors to Monroe is a mistake. Dors was sultry and sensusal, but she didn't have Monroe's charisma, presence, or likeability. However, had she played down the bombshell routine, she probably would have been considered a good actress.
Routine, but the stars made it interesting.
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 34 minuti
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By what name was Furia infernale (1957) officially released in India in English?
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