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This Was a Woman

  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
286
YOUR RATING
This Was a Woman (1948)
CrimeDrama

A wife whose goal is power begins a game of manipulation that insidiously destroys her family.A wife whose goal is power begins a game of manipulation that insidiously destroys her family.A wife whose goal is power begins a game of manipulation that insidiously destroys her family.

  • Director
    • Tim Whelan
  • Writers
    • Joan Morgan
    • Val Valentine
  • Stars
    • Sonia Dresdel
    • Barbara White
    • Walter Fitzgerald
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    286
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tim Whelan
    • Writers
      • Joan Morgan
      • Val Valentine
    • Stars
      • Sonia Dresdel
      • Barbara White
      • Walter Fitzgerald
    • 13User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos

    Top cast16

    Edit
    Sonia Dresdel
    Sonia Dresdel
    • Sylvia Russell
    Barbara White
    • Fenella Russell
    Walter Fitzgerald
    Walter Fitzgerald
    • Arthur Russell
    Cyril Raymond
    Cyril Raymond
    • Austin Penrose
    Marjorie Rhodes
    Marjorie Rhodes
    • Mrs. Holmes
    Emrys Jones
    Emrys Jones
    • Terry Russell
    Celia Lipton
    • Effie
    Scott Forbes
    Scott Forbes
    • Dr. Valentine Christie
    • (as Julian Dallas)
    Lesley Osmond
    • Sally
    Kynaston Reeves
    • Dr. Morrison
    Percy Walsh
    • Professor of Music
    Noel Howlett
    Noel Howlett
    • Chief Surgeon Barclay
    Clive Morton
    Clive Morton
    • Company Director
    Joan Hickson
    Joan Hickson
    • Miss Johnson
    Stanley Bell
    Gus McNaughton
    Gus McNaughton
    • Vet Surgeon
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Tim Whelan
    • Writers
      • Joan Morgan
      • Val Valentine
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.8286
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    Featured reviews

    5boblipton

    So It Was

    Sonia Dresdel is the wife of Walter Fitzgerald and the mother of Barbara White and Doctor Emrys Jones. She's one of those women who dominate everything about the house. When Miss White gets married to Scott Forbes, she's mildly incredulous; it soon becomes apparent to the audience that she is trying to cause a rift between the two of them. As for the others in her family, well, she has plans for them all.

    Tim Whelan directs this Queen Bee movie well enough, but the score by Mischa Spoliansky is way over the top, informing the audience that something really important is going on, even at the movie's most banal moments. It's a horrid score that mickey-mouses every plot twist -- not that there are many once you understand the basic thesis that Miss Dresdel is going to get her own way, even when it makes no sense at all. Perhaps without this score, it might have been an interesting melodrama, but with it, it's almost laughable.... or would be if didn't go on for one hundred minutes.
    8ulicknormanowen

    Mommie dearest

    Sylvia Russel is akin to Harriet Craig ,one of Joan Crawford's triumphs (1950) ; and Sonia Dresdel's impressive performance compares favorably with her American colleague's.

    Sylvia is even more terrifying than Harriet: if eyes could kill ,hers certainly would."Mother's always watching us, her eyes are X rays ". She's a monster , a mentally-ill person , a frustrated woman who hates mediocrity (represented by her meek husband's world which consists of his dog and his roses),who wants power and uses the others as puppets .

    She's got everything to live a comfortable bourgeois life: her son and her son-in-law are both doctors .But a routine life does not satisfy her ,the coming of handsome Austin makes her even more destructive .

    But it had begun before: a woman asking the vet to put a good old dog to sleep? A mother who warns her daughter against her husband? Who urges her maid to seduce her son-in-law by making her read "lady Chatterley's lover",a book forbidden in the UK till 1960 (an under-the- counter French edition : the novel was first tranferred to the screen by Yves Allégret in 1955 in this country ,but in a chaste way)?

    Sylvia gets her kicks by destroying her family's life ; you should see her sweetly smile when she sees her "power" on the others .

    This is first-rate film noir ; Sonia Dresdel's piercing eyes (when she watches her sick husband , they will give you the jitters)will haunt you after the viewing .Try to forget them!
    6blanche-2

    Manipulating monarch

    Sonia Dresdel goes Joan Crawford in Queen Bee one better in This Was A Woman, a British film from 1948.

    Dresdel was considered one of Britain's finest actresses, and there was widespread disappointment that she never played Lady Macbeth. That's just to give you a heads up of what's coming.

    Dresdel plays the matriarch of a home, with a husband, a son, and a daughter. She does horrific things to all of them.

    Her mild-mannered husband has prize roses- which she cuts and puts around the house. He has a beloved dog. The minute I saw him, I knew he was doomed. She doesn't like his barking and has him put down.

    Her daughter is engaged to be married. Her mother brings a young maid into the house to give him slutty books, hoping she'll make a play for the fiancé.

    Then she scares her daughter about sex so horribly that she won't even let her new husband kiss her. The maid starts looking pretty good.

    Finally, she meets a successful friend of her husband and decides hubby has to go.

    Outrageous. It's not like no one stands up to her, but they don't seem to hold a grudge. In the next scene, everything seems fine.

    A tour de force for Dresdel. She's hateful. Must be seen to be believed.
    8wilvram

    Neglected melodrama is not easily forgotten

    The formidable Sonia Dresdel reprises her stage role as the monstrous Sylvia Russell, manipulative, sadistic, and finally murderous. Venerating power and success, she demoralizes her husband and schemes to break up her daughter's marriage, though it is not altogether clear as to what she stands to gain from the latter act. In the course of this she attempts to corrupt the maid, including lending her an under-the-counter edition of Lady Chatterley's Lover, then banned in Britain though available in English versions from France, and quite possible to get hold of if you had the money. (Had the prosecutor in the later obscenity trial, who famously asked the jury whether they would be happy if their wives or servants read it, watched this by any chance?). There is also a suggestion of lesbianism as Sylvia strokes the maid's hair, telling her how beautiful she is.

    Though some these days could no doubt advance other explanations for Sylvia's behaviour, the original play opened in 1944, and with her cruelty and belief that the ends justify the means, she was surely intended as an embodiment of those evils we were supposedly fighting. It had been written by Joan Morgan, another remarkable woman, an actress in silent films turned playwright who lived on into the present century. In common with several other British films from this period, including Compton Bennett's Daybreak, and Lawrence Huntington's The Upturned Glass, there is a very dark and pessimistic outlook on human nature, reflecting a general mood of despair at recent revelations to the depths to which humanity could sink. Though there is some hope, in that Sylvia's nemesis comes partially through her son, whom has inherited something of her iron will, and as doctor will be caring for rather than destroying others.

    The film's main weakness is the lack of any explanation of why Sylvia's poisonous character has never manifested itself previously during all those years she had been bringing up the family. There is no sign of rationing and few people post-war could afford servants so it is presumably set in the late Thirties. It does remain fairly theatrical, though this enables a great power and tension to build in the final scenes. And some of the acting from the younger members of the cast is remarkably feeble. Nevertheless, this is another British film of its time that deserves to be much better known. Not always an easy watch for dog lovers though.
    4jromanbaker

    Simplistic Concept of Evil

    I read recently that Sonia Dresdel made a great ' Hedda Gabler ' on stage, and I can believe it but sadly her films fell far short of that achievement. She fell into the trashy cinematic trap that a lot of 1940's melodrama's fell into; the fundamentally evil woman. In this example she is a woman seeking power and perhaps a better sexual life than she has been having. She reads ' Lady Chatterley's Lover ' and of course in the 1940's this was a forbidden book that only the depraved read and brought over from France. Absurdly she gives it to her female ' servant ' so as to lure her son in law away from his wife. Tellingly her Doctor son considers male sexuality to be ' aggressive ' and inferred in this that it was the natural order of things. Certainly if you want to see a portrait of a repressive and class obsessed UK during this period of cinema then this film is a film to see. Slowly and painfully in society we have hopefully evolved a little from this. Inevitably she kills her husband's dog and on a destructive bent seeks to destroy those around her. Dresdel seemed to enjoy the role as she also played it on stage, and no doubt this was what the public of the time wanted from her. I give this a 4 as the acting and direction is good but the ending was sickening and no doubt again pleasing to the public. Of sociological interest only and for those who still believe we are ' born ' evil.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Celia Lipton's debut.
    • Goofs
      At about 16:00 as Mrs. Russell is taking the dog to the vet, the shadows of the cameraman is at bottom left.
    • Quotes

      Sylvia Russell: Fenella is not meant for marriage - she's too sensitive, too highly strung, hysterical almost. When she fell in love with you I hoped she'd alter. But if anything, marriage has intensified her abnormality.

    • Crazy credits
      The listing of the actors' names in the opening credits ends with "etc, etc".
    • Connections
      Referenced in Ken Adam: Designing Bond (2000)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 29, 1948 (Sweden)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Classic Movies 40s 50s 60s" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Dream Classic Movies" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Brottets skörd
    • Filming locations
      • Riverside Studios, Hammersmith, London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Marcel Hellman Productions
      • Excelsior Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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