Black Angel (Universal Noir Collection) dvd movie.
Home » DVD » Actors/Actresses » C » Other » Chuck Hamilton

Other • Catherine Rouvel
Other • Charles Mckeown
Other • Charles Noland
Other • Courtney Mclean
Other • Charlotte Moore
Other • Cassandra Gava
Other • Clemens Scheitz
Other • Cordelia Richards
Other • Clive Rosengren
Other • Claudio Amendola
Other • Charles Mcgregor
Other • Carol Dodo Cheng

Black Angel (Universal Noir Collection)
buy dvd movies, videos
Black Angel (Universal Noir Collection) List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $12.99
You Save: $1.99

Features
 Black & White
 Closed-captioned
 Color
 Dolby
 DVD-Video
 Full Screen
 Subtitled
 NTSC

In Theaters : 02 August, 1946
DVD Release : 06 July, 2004
[ + Zoom ]   [ Buy Now ] DVD : Usually ships in 24 hours
Black Angel (Universal Noir Collection) Customer Reviews
  1     2     3  
♥♥♥♥♥ A Real Noir Gem
The period immediately following World War Two produced a treasure trove of great film noir efforts. Many of these passed quickly from the scene at the time without making the kind of splash they deserved, enhanced by the fact that so many films were being made as Americans flocked to theaters and spent their money freely in the glittery economic period that followed a tumultuous conflict.

Roy Neill, who directed some of the Sherlock Holmes films starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, turned in a gem of a film with the 1946 noir mystery "Black Angel." Stunning blonde June Vincent demonstrates in this film how wrong Hollywood was not to give her more starring assignments.

When Vincent's husband is arrested for a crime he insists he did not commit, the death of blackmailer-singer Constance Dowling, June turns detective in an effort to prove her husband's innocence before he faces an impending execution at San Quentin Prison's gas chamber.

The basic plot is very much like that of another great noir film of the forties, "Phantom Lady", when secretary Ella Raines seeks to prove that her boss and the man she loves, Allen Curtis, is innocent of the murder charge that leaves him awaiting execution at New York's Sing Sing Prison.

The similarity is not surprising in that each film was adapted from a Cornell Woolrich novel, as was also Alfred Hitchcock's "Rear Window." Roy Chanslor turned in a screenplay containing the admirable story twists and turns that result in great mystery.

When Vincent, in her detective endeavor, seeks help from deceased Dowling's former husband, her former pianist and songwriter, played by Dan Duryea, the plot takes all kinds of interesting plot turns that keep viewers guessing until the film's final scene.

Duryea suspects that nightclub boss Peter Lorre, who was involved with Dowling, might be the guilty party. As a means of obtaining an opportunity for Vincent to gain evidence to use against Lorre, Duryea breaks Vincent in as a singer and gets a job for both of them at Lorre's club.

One moment the onus of suspicion points toward Lorre, and the next in a different direction that astounds Vincent. Meanwhile dogged police investigator Broderick Crawford, a few years from his Oscar winning appearance in "All The King's Men," continues to search and ask questions.

The suspense never lets up and thankfully "The Black Angel" in this new age of film noir appreciation is getting the credit that it so rightfully deserved.
  1     2     3  

[+] SiteMap