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Obsession

Hidden love! Hidden hate! Hidden fear!
1949 | 96m | English

(3214 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Director: Edward Dmytryk
Writer: Alec Coppel
Staring:
Details

A British psychiatrist devises a devilish revenge plot against his wife's lover.
Release Date: Aug 03, 1949
Director: Edward Dmytryk
Writer: Alec Coppel
Genres: Drama, Crime, Mystery, Thriller
Keywords perfect crime, scotland yard, jealousy, police, film noir, psychological thriller, psychiatrist, captive, british noir, missing person, insurance policy, police inspector, london bobby, unfaithful wife, poisoned drink, thriller, screenplay adapted by autor
Production Companies Independent Sovereign Films, J. Arthur Rank Organisation
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 02, 2025
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Robert Newton Dr. Clive Riordan
Phil Brown Bill Kronin
Sally Gray Storm Riordan
Naunton Wayne Supt. Finsbury
James Harcourt Aitkin (butler)
Betty Cooper Miss Stevens (receptionist)
Allan Jeayes The Colonel, blustery club member
Ronald Adam Talkative, balding club member
Roddy Hughes Bespectacled third club member, from Whitehall
Olga Lindo Mrs. Humphries
Stanley Baker Policeman at Garage
Russell Waters Detective at Garage
Michael Balfour American Sailor Promoting Book
Sam Kydd Club steward
Ernest Clark
Lyonel Watts Club Member
Name Job
Edward Dmytryk Director
Nino Rota Original Music Composer
Robert Day Camera Operator
Phil Brown Dialogue Coach
Alec Coppel Screenplay, Novel, Dialogue
C.M. Pennington-Richards Director of Photography
Duncan Sutherland Art Direction
Stuart Freeborn Makeup Artist
George Mills Assistant Director
Lito Carruthers Editor
Betty Baugh Hairstylist
Kenneth Horne Production Manager
Jack Locke Sound Recordist
Winston Ryder Sound Editor
Louis Levy Conductor
Gordon K. McCallum Sound Recordist
Barbara Cole Continuity
Ken Adam Assistant Art Director
Name Title
Nat A. Bronstein Producer
Kenneth Horne Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 8 15 3
2024 5 9 15 6
2024 6 11 34 5
2024 7 8 17 4
2024 8 8 13 5
2024 9 5 7 2
2024 10 7 17 3
2024 11 5 10 3
2024 12 6 16 2
2025 1 5 12 3
2025 2 3 6 1
2025 3 2 6 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 2 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 0 1 0
2025 8 0 1 0
2025 9 1 2 0
2025 10 2 2 2

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Reviews

John Chard
9.0

Man's Best Friend. Obsession (AKA: The Hidden Room) is directed by Edward Dmytryk and adapted to screenplay by Alec Coppel from his own book and play. It stars Robert Newton, Phil Brown, Sally Gray and Naunton Wayne. Music is by Nino Rota and cinematography by C.M. Pennington-Richards. Final ... ly having had enough of his wife's affair with a young lover, Dr. Clive Riordan (Newton) plots a devilish scheme of kidnap and murder... The motive that drives the plot of Obsession is simple in the extreme, this is out and out a revenge for infidelity, but the presentation by Dmytryk is superbly crafty in that Hitchcockian way. The doctor is a most elegant and calm man, he has the perfect murder in mind for his wife's lover (Brown) and he, being a purveyor of psychological smarts, is going to enjoy the luxury of methodically taunting his prey over a period of time. With the man ingeniously incarcerated down in a bombed out abode, and subjected to daily visits from the doctor, Dr. Clive is then seen going about his normal routines. Exchanging brandy sips with cultural chatter in the gentleman's club, swatting away the attentions of his increasingly fraught wife (Gray), and of course dealing with the close attentions of Scotland Yard; here in the form of Naunton Wayne's astute Superintendent Finsbury. The "good" doctor even has plenty of time to indulge in his love of model train set construction. The initial plot machinations are slowly paced by the recently blacklisted director, but it's a deliberate ploy since the whole complexion of the movie changes once the kidnap occurs and the police and the press become involved. The atmosphere becomes tense, and this even as captor and captive enjoy some straight backed - prim and proper - verbal exchanges. There's a meticulousness to the murder based thematics that strike a chord, the mention of Crippen and obvious nods to John George Haigh keep the film buzzing with real life serial killer atrocities. There's a case to be made here that this is Dmytryk's best British film? Certainly his ability to build suspense without histrionics or blood letting is a masterclass in Brit thriller staging. While his directing of Newton and Wayne, both of whom are excellent, is also worthy of a pat on the back. Visually it's straight black and white photography, except for the odd time we are out on the wet cobbled streets and the gaslights ooze the ethereal. But although there's some debate about if it deserves film noir status, I personally feel it's the sort of crime/thriller mounted with enough skill to make it worth seeking out by the film noir loving crowd. Some of the support turns are stiff, but mercifully not film harming, while you do have to accept that the locale of the crime is hardly water tight and most likely would have been found with ease. But minor itches be damned, this is cunning, crafty and a British chiller of some worth. 8/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

This is probably the best straight-part effort from Robert Newton I've ever seen. He is super as the doctor "Riorden" who has had just about enough of his wife's infidelities so decides to rid himself of her latest flame "Bill" (Phil Brown). After surprising the couple at their home, he somehow (and ... this is very much the weaker part of the film) manages to get the man chained to the wall of a bombed-out basement where he proceeds to hold him captive for weeks, whilst implementing a particularly grizzly, but untraceable, plan to kill and dispose of him. Wife "Storm" (Sally Gray) suspects that something has gone amiss, and when her beloved dog "Monty" disappears too, she involves the police. Enter the very unassuming character "Insp. Finsbury" (Naunton Wayne) who takes some advantage of "Riorden" and his cocksureness and... well... Might there still be some hope for the doomed prisoner? As I said, the start of the film is poorly constructed and requires us to let the remainder of the 95 minutes forgive that - but it ought to do that OK; the tension builds quite nicely. I can't say that I much cared for the ending, to be honest - but see what you think.

Jul 09, 2022