Secret Beyond the Door
Universal Pictures (1948)
Film Noir, Mystery, Thriller
In Collection
#11371
0*
Seen ItYes
063634009696
IMDB   6.9
1 hr 39 mins USA / English
DVD  Region 1   NR
Robert Barber Altar Boy
Joan Bennett Celia Lamphere
Virginia Brissac Sarah
Paul Cavanagh Rick Barrett
Tom Chatterton Judge
David Cota Small Mexican Knife Fighter
Frank Dae Country Squire
Mark Dennis David
Harry Denny College President
Watson Downs Conductor
Danny Duncan Ferret-Faced Man
Robert Espinoza Altar Boy
Virginia Farmer Levender Falls Wife
Barbara O'Neil Miss Robey
Michael Redgrave Mark Lamphere
Director
Fritz Lang
Producer Fritz Lang
Walter Wanger
Writer Rufus King
Silvia Richards
Cinematography Stanley Cortez
Stanley
Musician Miklós Rózsa
Miklós


Celia Barrett is a New Yorker with a trust fund and one of the city's most eligible single women. On a trip to Mexico she meets and falls for the charming Mark Lamphere, and later the couple marry. Returning to his home and pushing him to let her finance his passion for collecting "rooms", Celia starts to suspect that all might not be right with this perfect man she has landed and indeed the secrets in his house and in his past soon start to mount.

I watched this on the back of positive reviews from a couple of people on this site; perhaps I should have read further though because I didn't find the wonderfully intelligent noir that they claimed to have seen. Perhaps these commentators have not seen the film Rebecca which sort of covers similar themes but does it much, much better than this film does, but for me I found it hard to care about this. Visually I liked it and credit to Lang because his direction and work with his cinematographer does produce some really well set up scenes that do have great atmosphere. However this is not repeated in the material which is not as intelligent as it would like to think itself. Indeed it is terribly overwrought and melodramatic and offers little to counter it.

As a result the cast have to thanklessly play it up the best they can. I thought than Bennett did as good a job as she could have hoped to have done. She isn't brilliant though but she plays detective well. More important but not much cop is Redgrave; OK the blame lies more on the material than in his performance but given how little was conveyed by words at times, his performance was important but not up to the task.

Overall then, a fairly overdone melodrama that doesn't really convince in how it uses psychoanalysis to inform and direct its narrative. It may look great but the substance just isn't there from the start right down to the insultingly simplistic final scene.
Edition Details
No. of Disks/Tapes 1