Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Bluebeard

 
Movies:

Bluebeard

  • Director: Edgar G. Ulmer
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Crime
  • Movie Type: Crime Thriller
  • Themes: Serial Killers, Woman In Jeopardy
  • Main Cast: John Carradine, Jean Parker, Nils Asther, Ludwig Stossel, George Pembroke
  • Release Year: 1944
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 73 minutes

Plot

Bluebeard casts the saturnine John Carradine as Gaston, a popular painter in 19th century Paris. Unbeknownst to the authorities, Gaston is also the serial killer of beautiful young women that they have been seeking for several months. Whenever a girl fails to come up to Gaston's standards of perfection, she is summarily strangled and tossed into the streets. Gaston's latest model is the gorgeous Lucille (Jean Parker), who once she learns her employer's horrible secret courageously vows to bring him to justice. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Teala Loring - Francine; Sonia Sorel - Renee; Iris Adrian - Mimi; Henry Kolker - Deschamps; Emmett Lynn - Le Soldat; Patti McCarty - Bebette; Anne Sterling - Jeanette

Credit

Paul Palmentola - Art Director, Edgar G. Ulmer - Director, Carl Pierson - Editor, Leo Erdody - Composer (Music Score), Leo Erdody - Musical Direction/Supervision, Eugen Schüfftan - Production Designer, Jockey A. Feindel - Cinematographer, Leon Fromkess - Producer, Glenn Thompson - Set Designer, Arnold Phillips - Screen Story, Pierre Gendron - Screenwriter, Werner H. Furst - Short Story Author

Similar Movies

The Lodger; Bluebeard's Castle; Blackmail
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Bluebeard (1944 film)
Top
Bluebeard

A promotional poster, with John Carradine (top left), Ludwig Stössel (middle), and Nils Asther (bottom left)
Directed by Edgar G. Ulmer
Produced by Leon Fromkess
Martin Mooney
Written by Arnold Phillips
Werner H. Furst
Pierre Gendron
Starring John Carradine
Jean Parker
Music by Leo Erdody
Charles Gounod
Cinematography Jockey Arthur Feindel
Eugen Schüfftan
Editing by Carl Pierson
Distributed by Producers Releasing Corporation
Release date(s) 11 November 1944
Running time 72 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Bluebeard is a 1944 film directed by Edgar G. Ulmer. A strangler of women eludes the police.

Contents

Plot

All Paris is frightened by the murders attributed to "Bluebeard". Modiste Lucille (Jean Parker) is introduced to Gaston Morrell (John Carradine), a puppeteer and painter, by her friend. They are attracted to each other, and she accepts a commission to design some costumes for his puppets.

At home, Morrell is confronted by a jealous Renee (Sonia Sorel), who performs in Morrell's puppet show and is his lover. When she wonders what became of the models who had posed for him, he strangles her, then dumps her body in the Seine River.

Art dealer Jean Lamarte (Ludwig Stössel) is aware of Morrell's homicidal tendencies, but keeps his secret, as Morrell's paintings fetch high prices. However, the normally discreet Lamarte makes a mistake in selling Morrell's last work to a duke. When the duke exhibits his collection, a policeman on guard recognizes the portrait as being that of one of Bluebeard's victims.

Inspector Lefevre (Nils Asther) of the Sûreté calls in one of his best undercover agents, Francine (Teala Loring), who happens to be Lucille's sister. She and her "father" go to Lamarte to have her portrait done. Lamarte is on his guard, but her father is willing to pay a very large commission to find the man responsible for the duke's painting, and Lamarte's greed overcomes his caution.

Morrell has decided to give up painting (which triggers his murderous compulsion) out of love for Lucille, but Lamarte pressures him into one last picture to make him financially independent. However, Francine recognizes him, having met him briefly earlier at her sister's apartment, and Morrell has no choice but to dispose of her. Certain that Francine and her father were working for the police, Lamarte tries to flee, but Morrell catches him and kills him too, before escaping. The only clue he leaves behind is the cravat he used to strangle Francine.

At Francine's funeral, Inspector Lefevre shows Lucille the cravat. She knows it belongs to Morrell, as she had mended it for him. When she confronts Morrell, he tells her the story behind his crimes. As a starving art student, he had nursed back to health a woman who had fainted, fallen in love with her, and painted her portrait. She left without warning. When his painting was chosen to hang in the Louvre, he searched for her to tell her the news, only to discover that she was a prostitute. Enraged by her contemptuous response, he strangled her. But ever since then, every model he painted turned into her in his mind, and he was compelled to kill her again and again. When Lucille tells him she is going to the authorities, he starts strangling her too, but the police break in. Lefevre saw that Lucille recognized the cravat and had her followed. After a chase across the rooftops, Morrell falls to his death into the Seine.

Cast

See also

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bluebeard (1944 film)" Read more