A Double Life
A Double Life

A Double Life (1947)

6.3 ? Dec 25, 1947 1h 44m

Overview

A Shakespearian actor starring as Othello opposite his wife finds the character's jealous rage taking over his mind off-stage.

Genres

Drama Thriller

Release Date

December 25, 1947

Rating

6.3 /10

Runtime

1h 44m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Ronald Colman

Ronald Colman

Anthony John

Signe Hasso

Signe Hasso

Brita

Edmond O'Brien

Edmond O'Brien

Bill Friend

Shelley Winters

Shelley Winters

Pat Kroll

Ray Collins

Ray Collins

Victor Donlan

Philip Loeb

Philip Loeb

Max Lasker

Millard Mitchell

Millard Mitchell

Al Cooley

Joe Sawyer

Joe Sawyer

Pete Bonner

Charles La Torre

Charles La Torre

Stellini

Whit Bissell

Whit Bissell

Dr. Stauffer

John Drew Colt

Stage Manager

Peter M. Thompson

Peter M. Thompson

Asst. Stage Manager

Elizabeth Dunne

Gladys

Alan Edmiston

Rex

Art Smith

Art Smith

Wigmaker

Sid Tomack

Sid Tomack

Wigmaker

Wilton Graff

Wilton Graff

Dr. Mervin

Harlan Briggs

Harlan Briggs

Oscar Bernard

Claire Carleton

Claire Carleton

Waitress

Betsy Blair

Betsy Blair

Girl in Wig Shop

CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

7.0/10

Jul 07, 2022

Ronald Coleman always did like playing either two parts, or one with a dual-personality - and he does the latter very well indeed here. If you've a basic knowledge of Shakespeare's "Othello" the that helps a bit as he portrays an actor "Tony" who, after many year playing the title role with ex-wife "Brita" (Signe Hasso) - who is also his wife "Desdemona" in the play - is really beginning to become delusional about which existence is real... His distress isn't helped by meeting Shelley Winters "Pat" in a bar, they hook up but it isn't what he really wants. That is happiness with "Trina". When he asks her to re-marry him, she declines sending him into spiral of depression that has tragic consequences as he again descends in to his character - only it is "Pat" who suffers. There is an intensity about Colman here - his eyes, menacing; his almost schizophrenic character genuinely quite scary at times, and his Shakespearian on-stage effort decent - if not exactly Olivier - when required. All of this, coupled with strong contributions from Hasso and his friend "Bill" (Edmond O'Brien), who ends up perilously close to getting of the blame for the worst of his Colman's excesses, make for a compelling, expertly shot, story of split-personality gone, quite literally, mad! George Cukor keeps this tense and focussed, and Miklós Ròsza again provides a score that aides wonderfully with the atmosphere of the piece.

Read full review

Comments

Please login to post comments

FWAnime

Premium Anime Streaming

Watch thousands of anime episodes with premium quality and no ads!

Visit Now
s