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Saturday, June 29, 2019
Noir Watch: The Shadow on the Wall (1950)
Watched: 06/27/2019
Format: Noir Alley TCM on DVR
Viewing: First
Decade: 1950's
The core idea of this movie is so... evil... I almost think it'd make for a swell comedy.
Ann Sothern - a sort of "America's sweetheart" of the era - plays a woman who murders her own sister but can pin it on her brother-in-law. BUT! Her niece saw the whole thing, so she won't go to the gas chamber, she's in a race to kill the little girl before Nancy Davis (read: Nancy Reagan) helps the the little girl recover her memory.
I mean, you can imagine the Looney Tunes quality of repeated murder set-up after murder set-up to kill a bright-eyed little girl who is working through her cloudy memories by playing dolls with Nancy Reagan.
This movie plays it straight, is a lesser entry in everyone's resume but that of child actor Gigi Perreau (still living, people!), and is good enough as yet another entry in the "psychology is a an alchemical force toward unlocking the mind" films of the era. It does co-star a pre-Ronald-betrothed Nancy Davis, who is better than I figured she'd be, but still very much Nancy Reagan.* It does not feature nearly enough Zachary Scott, whom I always like.
My favorite scene is one where Sothern poisoned the little girl's chocolate milk and it seems like anything can happen in this particular set-up, shot from the kids' eye level as her friend wanders in to see why she isn't drinking her milk. Just great stuff.
*I'm sorry - the lady just seemed like a scold all the time when I was a kid, and she feels that way here, too
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