Movies Similar to Whirlpool (1949)

Whirlpool (1949)
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In this compelling and unusual psychological melodrama Ann Sutton (Gene Tierney), a woman tormented by her secret kleptomania seeks help from a unscrupulous hypnotist David Korvo (Jose Ferrer). Although she is married to a successful psychiatrist (Richard Conte), and has no need to steal the items which she could easily purchase, she finds herself powerless to control her urge. She is finally caught when she attempts to steal a brooch from a department store but she is saved by Korvo who persuades the store not to prosecute. Grateful and desperate for help, Ann allows Korvo to treat her. Korvo, taking advantage of Ann's vulnerability, hypnotizes her and sends her to the home of a former mistress whom he has stolen money from and subsequently murdered when she threatened to turn him in to the police. Ann is charged with the murder. Convinced of his wife's innocence, Richard must crack Korvo's seeming airtight alibi. Richard tricks Korvo into returning to the scene of the crime to find some evidence in the exciting conclusion. This unusual tale of murder and mental illness was written by a blacklisted Ben Hecht under the pseudonym "Lester Barstow" and bears a striking resemblance to another Hecht thriller, Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbound. ~ Linda Rasmussen, Rovi

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Starring:
Gene TierneyRichard Conte, (more)
Director(s):
Otto Preminger
Format(s):
DVD
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    James V.

    Camp of an unusual order is provided by WHIRLPOOL, the Otto Preminger-directed (screenplay co-written by Ben Hecht!), not-quite-noir, semi-thriller that makes the most of the fashionable ideas (circa 1949) about hypnotism and psychotherapy. Gene Tierney always looked great but rarely delivered when any heavy-duty acting skills were called upon (they are here, and she doesn't). The trouble with her playing a hypnosis victim is that, no matter what the role, she ALWAYS seemed spacey. Jose Ferrer provides fun and class as the heavy, and the cinematography is aces. But if you’re not doubled up and howling with glee during the self-hypnosis scene (and elsewhere), I shall be very surprised. Give this one two stars as a movie but maybe three if time-capsule camp is your scene.

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    Jose P.

    A bit dated, rather predictable, but fun to watch at least for Ms .Tierney so gorgeous in every scene. Mystery surrounded by kitchen sink psychology, but fun to sit bach/relax.

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    Dennis T.

    I'd give it three stars simply because Otto Preminger and crew apparently duped the public of the time into believing that hypnotism was the new cure-all for psychological distress, no matter the source. And self-hypnotism was better yet, enabling a patient to hop out of his post-surgical bed, travel undetected to another destination, and commit a murder. Yeah-right. But, hey, Gene Tierney was great eye-candy and the movie was mildly interesting. Also, I can see now why JFK may have had a fling with her - there is some resemblence to Jackie O.

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