|
Rita Hayworth | Elsa 'Rosalie' Bannister | |
Orson Welles | Michael O'Hara | |
Everett Sloane | Arthur Bannister | |
Glenn Anders | George Grisby | |
Ted de Corsia | Sidney Broome | |
Erskine Sanford | Judge | |
Gus Schilling | 'Goldie' Goldfish | |
Carl Frank | Dist. Atty. Galloway | |
Louis Merrill | Jake | |
Evelyn Ellis | Bessie (Bannister maid) | |
Harry Shannon | Cab Driver |
Director |
|
||
Producer | Orson Welles
|
||
Writer | William Castle
Sherwood King Orson Welles |
||
Cinematography | Charles Lawton Jr.
|
||
Musician | Heinz Roemheld
|
|
Baffling murders, fascinating plot twists and remarkable camera work all contribute to this spellbinding, time-honored film noir written and directed by and starring Orson Welles. Hired to work on a yacht belonging to the disabled husband of femme fatale Rita Hayworth, Welles plays an innocent man drawn into a dangerous web of intrigue and murder. The subject of great controversy and scandal upon its initial release, The Lady From Shanghai shocked 1948 audiences by presenting Hayworth with her flaming red hair cut short and dyed champagne blonde. Fifty years later, The Lady From Shanghai is considered vintage Welles, his famous hall of mirrors climax hailed as one of the greatest scenes in cinematic history. |
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Features
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||