I Wake Up Screaming (1941) Reviews

I Wake Up Screaming (1941)
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Well-known New York sports promoter Frankie Christopher (Victor Mature) is the prime suspect in the murder of Vicky Lynn (Carole Landis), a successful model and would-be actress. Questioned relentlessly by the police, and particularly by hulking detective squad commander Ed Cornell (Laird Cregar), he maintains his innocence. Meanwhile, Vicky's sister Jill (Betty Grable) is also being questioned. Their answers, given in adjoining interrogation rooms, become the basis for brief, neatly constructed interlocking flashbacks at the opening of the movie that explain a ton of plot in very little time. Both are released after admitting nothing, and the police begin working on other suspects, including journalist Larry Evans (Allyn Joslyn), aging actor Robin Ray (Alan Mowbray), and hotel clerk William Harrison (Elisha Cook Jr.) Jill had little use for Frankie, the man who had been promoting her sister's career, but the two are drawn together in the course of trying to sort out their lives and the murder of her sister, and her realization that Frankie is capable of truly loving a woman, and not just exploiting her. Meanwhile, Cornell makes it his business to pressure and torment Frankie, illegally entering his apartment and promising him an arrest and a death sentence. Eventually, the noose seems to tighten around Frankie as the circumstantial evidence piles up, until Frankie, trying to clear himself, uncovers a clue leading back to the real killer -- who was known to Cornell all along. Confronting the detective in his apartment, Frankie discovers a veritable shrine to Vicky -- copies of her magazine covers and photos filling the walls of his apartment -- and learns that the man had his own dark reasons for wanting to kill him. His psychosis finally catching up with him, his career and reputation in ruins, Cornell reveals the truth to Frankie as he proceeds to take his own life. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

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Starring:
Betty GrableVictor Mature, (more)
Director(s):
H. Bruce Humberstone
Format(s):
DVD
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Average Ratings

(2 member reviews)  


Member Reviews


James V.

If you think the studios didn’t do remakes decades ago (or that the media's PR machine is something recent), take a gander at "Vicki," Fox's redo of its 1941 melo-noir I WAKE UP SCREAMING. Both films are fun--if mixed bags, due to, in the first case, a less than stellar performance from female star Jeanne Crain, and in the second, a problem of waffling tone that turns a noir into a near-comedy much too often. Neither fault is fatal, however, as both movies offer clever scripts, choice dialog, generally good performances & direction, and an interesting idea of Manhattan life in the 40s & 50s. Watching one after the other provides an object lesson in noir tropes & how to handle same. (The commentary on "Screaming" is lots of fun, as opposed to that on "Vicki," which was stolid and tiresome enough to click off rather quickly.) Both movies offer their plum role to the police investigator: Laird Cregar in "Screaming" & Richard Boone in "Vicki" make the most of this creepy, sad character.

Yes   |   No


Allan W.

This was okay.

Yes   |   No


 
 
 

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    James V.

    If you think the studios didn’t do remakes decades ago (or that the media's PR machine is something recent), take a gander at "Vicki," Fox's redo of its 1941 melo-noir I WAKE UP SCREAMING. Both films are fun--if mixed bags, due to, in the first case, a less than stellar performance from female star Jeanne Crain, and in the second, a problem of waffling tone that turns a noir into a near-comedy much too often. Neither fault is fatal, however, as both movies offer clever scripts, choice dialog, generally good performances & direction, and an interesting idea of Manhattan life in the 40s & 50s. Watching one after the other provides an object lesson in noir tropes & how to handle same. (The commentary on "Screaming" is lots of fun, as opposed to that on "Vicki," which was stolid and tiresome enough to click off rather quickly.) Both movies offer their plum role to the police investigator: Laird Cregar in "Screaming" & Richard Boone in "Vicki" make the most of this creepy, sad character.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Allan W.

    This was okay.

    Yes   |   No

     
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