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Laura
(1944)
In unconventional producter/director Otto Preminger's
haunting, hard-edged noir romance - it might be called a psychological
study of deviant, kinky obsession - even at the height
of the Hays Code enforcement period. The gripping,
moody, stylish murder mystery was a classic, complex film noir and
tale of romance based on the 1943 novel by Vera Caspary. The film
contained troubling, unsettling, obsessive undertones of voyeurism,
sexual obsession, and ghoulish necrophilia by the hard-boiled detective
for a dead woman that he was investigating. With both sharp and witty
dialogue, and a great ensemble group of character actors, it was
an Academy Award winner for Best Black/White Cinematography. It also
featured the haunting melody of the title theme song, David Raskin's "Laura."
Street-wise police detective Mark McPherson (Dana Andrews)
investigated the shotgun slaying/murder of a beautiful young socialite
Laura Hunt (Gene Tierney) - her face had been blown away. During
his interviews and work on the case, he became personally absorbed
in the details of the young woman's life and found himself irresistibly
falling in love with a large portrait of the mysterious victim and
his pieced-together image of her. Almost everyone
in the cast loved the 'murdered' title character.
The detective's
earthy directness and toughness was contrasted to the smug, pseudo-intellectualism
of the victim's upper crust, socially-prominent friends in Manhattan,
including Laura's elderly mentor Lydecker (Clifton Webb), Laura's
fiancee - an effeminate gigolo and "kept man" named Shelby Carpenter
(Vincent Price), and Laura's own amoral spinster aunt Anne Treadwell
(Judith Anderson) who was Shelby's companion. It was revealed in
the film's plot twist halfway through the film that the murdered
girl was not Laura, but model Diane Redfern, after Laura returned
from a long weekend in the country.
- the opening title and
credits played atop the haunting portrait of the eponymous title
character as the haunting 'Laura' theme music was heard (the film's
famous atmospheric theme tune by David Raksin)
- in the memorable opening
scene, the camera panned around the interior of a New York penthouse;
the occupant's narration (in voice-over) by given by celebrated,
prissy, acidic-witted, cynical gay columnist Waldo Lydecker (Clifton
Webb) (purportedly based upon columnist,
broadcaster, and The New Yorker theater critic Alexander Woollcott),
who unfolded part of the story in flashbacks
- the camera
tracked from left to right across glass cabinets with beautifully-displayed
shelves of priceless objets d'art (plus it viewed a baroque grandfather
clock with pendulum - an important plot point) - in the alcove
of Lydecker's elegantly-expensive apartment; it was the hottest
day of the summer of 1944, and it was revealed that the story took
place in the recent past, at the time of socialite Laura Hunt's
(Gene Tierney) death the previous morning: ("I shall
never forget the weekend Laura died. A silver sun burned through
the sky like a huge magnifying glass. It was the hottest Sunday
in my recollection. I felt as if I were the only human being left
in New York. For Laura's horrible death, I was alone. I, Waldo
Lydecker, was the only one who really knew her. And I had just
begun to write Laura's story when - another of those detectives
came to see me. I had him wait. I could watch him through the half-open
door. I noted that his attention was fixed upon my clock. There
was only one other in existence, and that was in Laura's apartment
in the very room where she was murdered")
- the first view of the pompous, snobby and arrogant
Lydecker was as he was typing his notes in his bathtub, as he was
questioned by handsome homicide gumshoe/police detective Mark McPherson
(Dana Andrews) of the Homicide Bureau; while listening to "Laura's
Theme" on
the phonograph, Lydecker asked McPherson: "Have
you ever been in love?" with the reply: "A doll in Washington
Heights once got a fox fur out of me"
- an investigation into Laura's murder was pursued
by both Lydecker and McPherson, who took
a taxi together to the apartment of a possible suspect: Laura's
upper-crust, spinster aunt named Anne Treadwell (Judith Anderson),
a middle-aged society woman; she was neurotically
in love with her companion, Southern gold-digging, charming playboy
and "kept man" Shelby Carpenter (Vincent Price), whose
marriage to Laura was in question; Anne was decidedly
defensive and jealous of the younger Laura, her engagement, and
her forthcoming marriage to Shelby; Shelby also arrived and was soon
considered a prime suspect; both claimed that they were innocent,
and that Laura had planned to go to her country house to decide
whether or not to marry Carpenter
- McPherson was joined by Lydecker and Shelby to visit
the inside of Laura's upstairs Manhattan apartment;
the murder had occurred at the apartment's front door (the door
opened inward); in the living room was a grandfather clock identical
to the one in Lydecker's place, and a stunning oil portrait of
Laura, the 'murdered' title character; Lydecker and McPherson stared
at Laura's portrait above the fireplace
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Lydecker and McPherson Staring At Laura's
Portrait
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- Lydecker
related a montage-style series of flashbacks of his times
with Laura, who was about 30 years younger; Lydecker
had functioned as Laura's Svengali-like mentor and protective confidant
in a platonic relationship, when he helped her become a successful
advertising executive; Lydecker was highly jealous of Laura's many
suitors, including noted painter Jacoby, the man who had painted
her portrait; he had written a scathing column to assassinate the
man's character out of spite - to keep another of Laura's suitors
at bay; he was also faced with the romantic advances of Shelby upon
Laura
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First Flashback of Laura As an Aspiring Career Woman
(Ad Designer) with Ascerbic Columnist and Mentor Lydecker: ("I
don't use a pen. I write with a goose quill dipped in venom..")
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- during his second visit to the apartment, McPherson
questioned Laura's loyal "domestic" maid Bessie Clary
(Dorothy Adams) who castigated him for reading Laura's private
letters and diary: ("You've
been readin' 'em, pawin' over them. It's a shame in the face of
the dead. That's what it is. It's a shame!"). She also stated
her adoration for Laura: ("She was a real, fine lady...")
- and later during McPherson's third visit, while
alone in Laura's apartment, the obsessed McPherson read her love
letters and diary, rummaged through Laura's bedroom drawers and
lingerie, inhaled her perfume, and peered into her mirrored closets
and then stared at the haunting, domineering oil portrait of Laura
-- and fell in love with the dead woman in the portrait
Laura's Haunting Portrait
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Rummaging Through Bedroom Drawers
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Peering into Mirrored Closet Door
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- while in the apartment, columnist
Waldo Lydecker arrived and objected to McPherson "prying into
Laura's letters," especially those from him, and he opposed
McPherson's growing attraction to his protegé; he
incisively described McPherson's obsession over the murdered bewitching
woman: ("...It's
a wonder you don't come here like a suitor with roses and a box
of candy...Have you ever
dreamed of Laura as your wife?...You better watch out, McPherson,
or you'll end up in a psychiatric ward. I don't think I ever had
a patient who ever fell in love with a corpse")
- in
a surprising and memorable scene (at about the 48 minute mark in
the 88 minute film), Laura Hunt suddenly walked into her own apartment
- a murdered woman who mysteriously appeared over half way into the
film - there were double-stunned looks; NY detective McPherson was
uncomfortably shocked when Laura was 'reincarnated' and walked in
to her own apartment, awakening him from dozing; Laura was surprised
to find a stranger in her apartment. She turned on the light and
found him half-sleeping in her armchair next to her portrait.
When stirred from sleep as the "dead" Laura
appeared, he did a double-take and wiped his
eyes, wondering if he was dreaming.
At first, he thought she was a ghost or figment of
his imagination. He had already dreamed of what she was like from
her portrait, her perfume, her clothes, her letters, her apartment's
decor, and the recollections of others. He probably wondered if
he had willed her into existence
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Laura's Sudden Appearance to Detective McPherson
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- she threatened
to call the police:
"What are you doing here?" - unaware
of the news of her own slaying - she had been in her country apartment
for three days (from Friday evening to Monday night); Laura
was horrified to realize that she was caught in the middle of a murder
case - and that she was the victim! She was unaware of the news of
her own slaying, that she had been shot in the face in her apartment
doorway - she didn't read the newspapers and radio broadcasts were
unavailable to her while she was out in the country; when Laura found
a dress belonging to young model Diane Redfern in her closet, it was
thought possible that the murder victim (in a negligee) was actually
one of Laura's design models in a case
of mistaken identity; McPherson
considered that it was possible that Laura killed Diane Redfern out
of jealousy for her association with Shelby, her ex-fiancee; however,
he also learned that Laura had decided AGAINST marrying Shelby during
her getaway weekend
The Mistaken Victim: Diane Redfern, One of Laura's Designer Models
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Laura's Explanation to McPherson of Her Weekend
in the Country
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- after tailing Shelby to Laura's
country home, McPherson caught Shelby with a recently-fired
shotgun in his hands; after being grilled, Shelby confessed he
had been in love with Diane; he had snuck Diane Redfern (who thought
she was in love with him) into Laura's flat, presumably to talk
to her and break off their affair; when the doorbell rang, Shelby
remained in the bedroom and asked Diane to answer the door; after
she was gun-blasted, he fled the scene and remained quiet; Shelby
claimed that he didn't know the murderer's identity, but didn't
suspect Laura
- after reappearing, Lydecker was shocked that Laura
was alive, and fell faint to the floor; Laura was one of many prime
suspects in the murder case, and a love-hate quadrangle of sorts
had developed between Shelby, Laura, Anne, and McPherson (plus
Lydecker who was also circling around); at a party celebrating
Laura's return, McPherson arrested Laura for the murder of Redfern
- during
a tough interrogation scene in a bare room in police HQs, McPherson
grilled Laura about what she had been holding back: ("Let's
have it"); after questioning, he began to realize that Laura
was innocent of any crime, and had strong ambivalent feelings about
Shelby (she had become re-engaged to him); McPherson didn't even
book or charge Laura - he brought her there only to erase the last
of his doubts about her innocence
- while searching Lydecker's vacant apartment, McPherson
noticed a secret compartment in the base of his grandfather clock,
identical to the one in Laura's apartment; McPherson proceeded
to Laura's apartment, where he witnessed Lydecker's possessive
jealousy over his interest in Laura (in Laura's presence); Lydecker
was peeved and embittered by McPherson's masculinity, earthiness,
and easy sexuality; as a result of Lydecker's order to stay away
from McPherson, Laura brusquely broke off her long-standing relationship
with Lydecker, who then congratulated the pair on "what promises
to be a disgustingly earthy relationship"
Lydecker's Jealous Disgust After Laura Broke Up
With Him
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Lydecker's Murder Weapon (Shotgun) Found Hidden
in Laura's Clock
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McPherson's Explanation of the Accidental Murder
of Diane by Lydecker
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- Lydecker stormed out but hesitated in the stairwell,
as McPherson searched in the base of Laura's identical grandfather
clock; he located the murder weapon - the shotgun in a secret compartment
in its base, and removed its bullets; it was now very clear that
Lydecker was the actual murderer, who in a jealous rage mistakenly
shot the wrong woman (in the face) with a shotgun blast at Laura's
apartment door, thinking Diane was Laura; before leaving, McPherson
returned the shotgun to its hiding place
- when Laura was left alone (McPherson went to arrest
Waldo), in
the drama's climactic scene, the possessively-jealous 'Laura Hunt'
murderer Waldo Lydecker, in a passionate rage,
snuck back into her apartment through the separate side-kitchen entrance,
past her identical grandfather clock; Lydecker
removed the shotgun from the clock's base, reloaded the murder weapon,
and became startled when he heard his own mellifluous voice on a
pre-recorded radio broadcast that Laura was playing within her bedroom
- Lydecker's sick fantasy was echoed in his own poetic
broadcast about how Love lasted beyond death:
"And thus, as history has proved, Love is Eternal. It has been
the strongest motivation for human actions throughout centuries.
Love is stronger than Life. It reaches beyond the dark shadow of
Death. I close this evening's broadcast with some favorite lines...Brief
Life - They are not long, the weeping and the laughter, love and
desire and hate. I think they have no portion in us after we pass
the gate...They are not long, the days of wine and roses. Out of
a misty dream, our path emerges for a while, then closes within a
dream"
- in her bedroom as Laura prepared to retire, Lydecker
broke her out of her reverie and shocked her with his appearance; he
threatened to mortally wound the real Laura in her bedroom with a blast
from a shotgun rather than lose her to McPherson: ("The
best part of myself - that's what you are. Do you think I'm going
to leave it to the vulgar pawing of a second-rate detective who thinks
you're a dame? Do you think I could bear the thought of him holding
you in his arms, kissing you, loving you?");
he was about to murder Laura (for the second time! during a murder/suicide)
because she had fallen in love with Detective McPherson and was
not returning his love
- he
raised his shotgun as McPherson, who had returned with a police force,
broke down the locked front door; Lydecker noted: "There he
is now. He'll find us together, Laura, as we always have been and
we always should be, as we always will be." His words strongly
implied that he intended a murder/suicide; Laura deflected the aim
of the shotgun upward as it went off
- McPherson broke through the side kitchen door and
entered just in time to save her and have her run and fall into
his arms; Waldo was mortally wounded in an exchange of gunfire
with the police; his shotgun blast went wild and shattered the
face of the grandfather clock
Lydecker Shot Dead by Police
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Lydecker Mortally Wounded: "Goodbye, Laura.
Goodbye, my love."
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The Shotgun-Damaged Grandfather Clock Where the
Murder Weapon Had Been Hidden
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- as
Waldo was dying and uttered her name ("Goodbye,
Laura"), she rushed to his side; the camera rested on the
image of the shotgun-damaged grandfather clock as Lydecker's final
words were delivered off-screen to Laura with a theatrical flourish: "Good-bye,
my love"
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The Interior of Columnist Waldo Lydecker's (Clifton Webb) NYC Penthouse
Detective Mark McPherson (Dana Andrews) Viewing
Lydecker's Grandfather Clock
Detective Mark McPherson
Lydecker in Bathtub, Questioned
by the Detective
Laura's Aunt, Socialite Anne Treadwell (Judith Anderson)
Laura's Fiancee and "Kept Man" Shelby Carpenter (Vincent Price)
Threesome Inside Laura's Apartment
Another Flashback: Laura's Growing Romantic Relationship
with Shelby
Lydecker's Jealousy Over Laura's Association with Shelby
McPherson's Questioning of Laura's Maid "Bessie"
Staring at Laura's Haunting Portrait
Lydecker Questioning McPherson's Weird Necrophiliac Obsession
McPherson Falling Asleep Next to the Portrait
McPherson Grilling Shelby at Laura's Country Home
Lydecker Collapsing After Seeing Laura Hunt Alive in Her Apartment
McPherson's Official "Arrest" of Laura at Party
Laura Being Harshly Interrogated by Detective McPherson
in a Bare Room in Police HQs
Hidden Compartment Discovered in Base of Lydecker's Grandfather Clock
Lydecker Hiding Outside Laura's Apartment
Lydecker Removing the Gun From Laura's Clock
Threatening Laura With the Shotgun in Her Apartment's
Bedroom
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