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Cast a Dark Shadow Poster

Cast a Dark Shadow

No woman could resist his sinister charm!
1955 | 83m | English

(3604 votes)

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Popularity: 0.3 (history)

Details

Edward "Teddy" Bare is a ruthless schemer who thinks he's hit the big time when he kills his older wife, believing he will inherit a fortune. When things don't go according to plan, Teddy sets his sights on a new victim: wealthy widow Freda Jeffries. Unfortunately for the unscrupulous criminal, Freda is much more guarded and sassy than his last wife, making separating her from her money considerably more challenging.
Release Date: Sep 20, 1955
Director: Lewis Gilbert
Writer: Janet Green, John Cresswell
Genres: Thriller
Keywords film noir, based on play or musical, british noir, gold digger, wealthy widow, wife murder
Production Companies Angel Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Dirk Bogarde Edward "Teddy" Bare
Margaret Lockwood Freda Jeffries
Kay Walsh Charlotte Young
Kathleen Harrison Emmie
Robert Flemyng Phillip Mortimer
Mona Washbourne Monica Bare
Philip Stainton Charlie Mann
Walter Hudd Coroner
Lita Roza Singer
Myrtle Reed Waitress (Uncredited)
Joe Wadham Ballroom Dancer (Uncredited)
Guy Standeven Brighton Tea Shop Customer (Uncredited)
Aileen Lewis Brighton Tea Shop Customer (Uncredited)
Victor Harrington Brighton Tea Shop Customer (Uncredited)
Name Job
Lewis Gilbert Director
Janet Green Theatre Play, Story
Julie Harris Costume Designer
Tommy Fletcher Loader
Humphrey Cull Clapper Loader
Harry Gillam Camera Operator
Fred Turtle Sound Supervisor
George Paternoster Boom Operator
Denis Johnson Assistant Director
Antony Hopkins Orchestrator, Original Music Composer
Jean Osborne Publicist
Shirley Barnes Continuity
Norman Savage First Assistant Editor
Cyril Stanborough Still Photographer
Dennis C. Lewiston Focus Puller
Dave Howells Sound Recordist
Don Mingaye Draughtsman
Ted Sturgis Second Assistant Director
Max Kemp Third Assistant Director
Victor Lyndon Production Manager
Doris Pollard Hairstylist
Gerry Fairbank Makeup Artist
John Stoll Art Direction
Gordon Pilkington Editor
Jack Asher Director of Photography
John Cresswell Screenplay
Name Title
Herbert Mason Producer
Daniel M. Angel Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 6 10 3
2024 5 8 12 5
2024 6 6 12 3
2024 7 7 18 3
2024 8 6 11 3
2024 9 4 7 2
2024 10 9 26 3
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2024 12 4 6 2
2025 1 4 7 2
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2025 8 1 1 0
2025 9 2 3 0
2025 10 0 0 0

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Anyone would think it was Bluebeard's chamber! Cast a Dark Shadow is directed by Kewis Gilbert and adapted to screenplay by John Cresswell from the play Murder Mistaken written by Janet Green. It stars Dirk Bogarde, Margaret Lockwood, Kay Walsh, Kathleen Harrison and Robert Flemyng. Music is by A ... ntony Hopkins and cinematography by Jack Asher. Edward Bare (Bogarde) marries an older woman for money, murders her and finds that inheritance is not forthcoming. Setting his sights on another lady target, he gets more than he bargained for when he homes in on Freda Jeffries (Lockwood)... You! Whatever you do, leave me alone! Splendid slice of Brit noir that takes the Bluebeard route and lets the actors indulge themselves with glee. There's a bubbling broth of class distinction and simmering sexual tensions on the stove here, with Gilbert (The Good Die Young) and Asher (The Curse of Frankenstein) dressing it up nicely in moody visuals. From a Ghost Train opening, where the eyes have it, to the consistent symbolic use of a rocking chair, there's a sinister edge to the piece that tickles the spine and tantalises the conscious. We are pretty sure what is about to unfold in the plotting, but the getting there through the shadows and low lights is where the rewards are. The cast are uniformly impressive. Bogarde by this time in his career was revelling in playing sleazy or emotionally corrupt characters, and he turns in another memorable performance here. Walsh and Flemyng are playing peripheral characters but strike the right narrative notes, and Harrison is heart achingly doltish as bewildered housekeeper Emmie. But it's Lockwood who shines brightest, here at the end of her film career, she delivers a spitfire turn. Freda is tough, has a waspish tongue (the script affords her some great moments) and uses humour as a mechanism for staving off potential peril. She also has a sexy glint in her eye that matches her ferocious laugh! It sometimes veers towards the over theatrical, and director Gilbert at times misses a chance to really tighten the suspense, but this without doubt is deserving of a bigger fan-base. 7.5/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

This is a smashing piece of cinema with Kay Walsh ("Charlotte"); Margaret Lockwood ("Freda Jeffries") and Kathleen Harrison ("Emmie") all on great form as the women involved in the machinations of the manipulative, murderous Dirk Bogarde "Edward Bare". When his elderly, wealthy, wife (Mona Washbourn ... e) unexpectedly dies, he is disappointed to learn from her rather sceptical lawyer "Philip Mortimer" (Robert Flemyng) that the will doesn't provide quite as well for him as he had hoped - so he sets about finding a successor - and he alights on the streetwise "Freda" who makes it quite clear that what's her's is, well, staying her's - even after they marry... Not quite content with that arrangement, he decides that she might just have to have an accident, too. At this point, a stranger - "Charlotte" - arrives on the scene, ostensibly looking to buy a house and our mystery starts to unfold. Bogarde is on top form, and Lewis Gilbert manages to cleverly intertwine the characters whilst building a gentle sense of menace that runs pretty much to the end (though I found that a little bit flawed). Good stuff.

Nov 14, 2022