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Lady in the Lake (1947)

Lady in the Lake
Do you fall in love with all of your clients?
—Adrienne Fromsett
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A stream of mellifluous holiday cheer is subverted to open Director/Actor Robert Montgomery's one-of-a-kind film noir, Lady in the Lake.

Audio commentary excerpt by film historians James Ursini and Alain Silver (from the 2006 DVD):

Ursini: We're here to talk about one of the most unusual film noirs and maybe one of the most unusual films in mainstream Hollywood history called Lady in the Lake. When I first saw this movie years ago, I remember seeing the credits and thinking I was in the wrong movie. This cannot be Lady in the Lake. This is a Christmas movie. Is this a Capra movie, or a Leo McCary movie? ...[This] is a very sarcastic, ironic, even nasty movie. It's an anti-Christmas movie disguised as a Christmas movie. These titles set the tone, along with the Christmas carols which carry over through the movie and use of the chorus which [also] carries over – there is no instrumental music at all.

Silver: [The titles] are unusual and are immediately ironic as we go from these Christmas graphics with the holly, the ivy, the candles, the deer, and the Christmas star to a gun [which is] not very Christmas-y... the first indication of film noir.

Title sequence

  • Category

    Film
  • Styles

    black and white, copyright line, live action, main title
Lady in the Lake
  • Film Director

    Robert Montgomery
  • Release Date

    April 14, 1947
  • Aspect Ratio

    1.33:1
  • Studio

    Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • Country

    USA
  • Language

    English
  • Reviews

    Reviews on Letterboxd
  • IMDb has full details

Article

  • Writer

    Alexander Ulloa
  • Published

    December 23, 2010

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