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Gaslight
(1944)
In 'women's' director George Cukor's lavish, glossy
and dramatic MGM mystery-thriller (known as The Murder in Thornton
Square in the UK) - it was a superb, definitive psychological suspense-thriller
based on Patrick Hamilton's long-running London staged
play-melodrama Gas Light (premiering in late 1938). It was a remake of director
Thorold Dickinson's shorter and more faithful Gaslight (1940,
UK), with Anton Walbrook and Diana Wynyard, which MGM unsuccessfully tried
to destroy to avoid competition. [Note: It was called Angel
Street when it played on Broadway beginning in late 1941, with
Vincent Price in the villainous role.] It
was considered a film noir due to its ominous plot and impressive
photography (expressionistic, shadowy, and menacing). On a budget of
$2 million, it made $4.6 million.
From its total of seven Academy
Awards nominations, it scored two wins: Best Actress (Ingrid Bergman),
and Best B/W Art Direction (for the superb set of the recreated Victorian
town house). Bergman's role was of the vulnerable
young socialite wife who became helpless as she experienced a debilitating
nervous breakdown and near insanity while living with her mysterious
ne'er-do-well, urbane, worldly husband in the home where her beloved
aunt was murdered. The film's plot was similar to Alfred Hitchcock's
Under Capricorn (1949) - also starring Ingrid Bergman.
The film's plot, mostly faithfully adapted by its screenwriters,
was about a diabolical, Victorian criminal husband who systematically
and methodically attempted to torment, menace, domestically abuse,
and drive his bedeviled, fragile, vulnerably-innocent wife mad. Its
title was derived from the frequent dimming and flickering of the
gaslights in a Victorian-era home. The phrase "to gaslight" someone
(to deliberately drive someone insane by psychologically manipulating
their environment and tricking someone into believing that they are
insane), was derived from the film. Its tagline described the plot of
marital abuse: "Strange drama of a captive sweetheart."
- the opening title credits played over
a flickering gaslight, typical of the Victorian-era; notice that behind
the gaslight is the static shadow of a man strangling a woman
1875 - Thornton Square Strangulation Murder
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14 Year-Old Paula Alquist (Terry Moore) - Niece of Deceased
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- the first sequence or prologue presented, through
a London newspaper article, news of a mysterious strangulation
murder committed in a Victorian mansion at 9 Thornton Square; in
1875, the victim was Alice Alquist, a famed prima donna opera
singer; Alquist's grieving and distraught young 14 year-old niece
Paula Alquist (Terry Moore as teenager, Ingrid Bergman as adult)
[orphaned at birth] was living there at the time and had found the
body; the murder (and the case of her missing valuable jewels, a
gift from the Czar to Alice - the film's MacGuffin) remained unsolved
- while the house was left abandoned, the young and
aspiring opera singer was sent away to spend time in Italy with
her Aunt's best friend - her new guardian Maestro Mario Guardi
(Emil Rameau), a teacher of singing; her musical accompanist during
lessons was provided by older French pianist Gregory Anton (Charles
Boyer)
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Singing Lessons in Italy with Maestro Mario Guardi (Emil Rameau)
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- ten years after her Aunt's death in 1885, although
Paula had extensive training as a voice student, she felt that
she wasn't ever going to be able to sing like her deceased aunt,
and was released from her tutelage; she also confessed that profound
happiness had come to her from her love for an unnamed suitor;
however, after a courtship of only two weeks with the suave, outwardly
charming, amorous musician Gregory Anton, he was already urging
marriage and she was uncertain and hesitant
- during a holiday week to gather her thoughts, Paula
went on a train journey to Lake Como; in her compartment, she
conversed with a garrulous Englishwoman named Miss Thwaites (Dame
May Whitty); nicknamed "Bloodthirsty Bessie" by her friends,
the older lady loved murder mysteries, and due to her residence at
16 Thornton Square, she was reminded of the 'real, live murder" that
occurred in Paula's murdered aunt's London home ten years earlier: "It
was a most mysterious case. They never found out who killed her.
They never even found a motive"; the tragic recollection of
the unsolved murder case where her Aunt Alquist was murdered (and
her jewels were missing) was un-nerving to the meek and disconcerted Paula
- as she disembarked from the train at Lake Como,
she was relieved that Gregory had preceded her there - and they kissed;
in the next scene, they had already becoming married, and were
spending an Italian honeymoon at the Hotel Del Lago; they discussed
whether they should return to London and live in her Aunt's ancestral
childhood London townhome at 9 Thornton Square - that she had inherited
from her dead aunt a decade earlier
- ironically, Paula admitted that ever since she had
fallen in love with Anton, she hadn't been afraid any more of the
3-story claustrophobic house: "That house comes into my dreams
sometimes - a house of horror. Strange - I haven't dreamed of it
since I've known you. I haven't been afraid since I've known you....You've
cast out fear for me...I've found peace in loving you. I could
even face that house with you...Yes, yes, you shall have your dream.
You shall have your house in the square"
Ominous Entry into House - The Scene of a Murder
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Paula Discussing Her Aunt's Glass Cabinet with Her "Treasures"
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One Glove - From a Performance (Her Aunt Had Given
the 2nd One Away to a Young Admirer)
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- upon their return, Paula ominously entered the home;
in the second floor bedroom (where the murder had occurred), she
remarked: ""It's all dead in here. The whole place seems
to smell of death"; she became thoughtful when she recalled her
Aunt's "treasures" from all over the world that she had collected,
held in a glass cabinet; the glass in the case was broken
the night of the murder, and things inside were in disarray, but
nothing was missing; Paula recalled one glove from
her performance in Romeo and Juliet: ("I never knew what happened
to the other glove. I used to ask her sometimes, but she'd only laugh
and say she'd given it away. A very great admirer. She would never
tell me who")
- Paula pulled the dusty drape covering her aunt's
regal portrait (wearing a jewel-covered gown) to reveal her beautiful
aunt: "That's as the Empress Theodora. That was her greatest role. When she sang
it in St. Petersburg, the Czar used to come to every performance" -
important clues for later
- and then Paula momentarily
became upset after she recalled finding her aunt's murdered-strangled
body in front of the fireplace: "No,
I can't stay here." To calm her haunting memories, Gregory insisted that all her aunt's
possessions be stored, boarded up and shut away out of view in
the third floor attic; he also ominously suggested that they close
themselves off from the outside world by postponing plans for parties
until a later time
- as they opened the piano in the bedroom, Paula
discovered an incriminating piece of evidence - one of her Aunt's
old letters inside her score for Theodora, written by her aunt's
murderer (Sergis Bauer, alias for Anton) two days before the homicide;
Gregory violently snatched the letter from her hands
- it was the beginning of the slow domination and
destruction of her sanity by a manipulative and greed-obsessed
husband during his surreptitious search for her Aunt's missing
valuable jewels; Anton was, in reality, a single-minded jewel thief,
diabolical and manipulative husband, and a murderer, who married
Paula to live in the house in fog-bound Thornton Square where he
had murdered her aunt years earlier
- Gregory hired and often flirted with teenaged, slutty
Cockney house-maid Nancy Oliver (Angela Lansbury in her
film debut); he instructed her about how Paula (the "mistress")
was "high-strung" and told her to never bother
her about anything, causing Paula to imagine animosity or distance
between them; Anton's objective was to slowly, menacingly, and
seductively drive his innocent young wife mad; the home's elderly,
slightly-deaf cook, Elizabeth Tompkins (Barbara Everest), noticed
that the "master" frequently kept telling the "mistress" that she was ill,
although she didn't appear to have anything wrong with her
- the beginning of Gregory's destructive ploys to
make Paula go crazy occurred just before they took an excursion
outside their residence to the Tower of London; he presented her
with a family heirloom brooch owned by his mother, and reminded
her of how frequently she often lost things or was forgetful; he
then conspicuously placed the brooch in Paula's purse; during their
tour while viewing the dazzling Crown Jewels, Gregory became unusually
wide-eyed and hypnotized by their beauty
- but then Paula admitted that the brooch was missing;
it was fairly obvious that Gregory was responsible for its absence,
not Paula (he had cleverly palmed the brooch), although he was persuasive
in convincing her of her culpability - for her frequent transgressions
of forgetfulness, losing things, absent-mindedness and suspiciousness;
she melodramatically admitted that she was responsible for its
disappearance and that she might be disintegrating and going crazy:
("Suddenly,
I'm beginning not to trust my memory at all")
Gregory Placing Gift of Brooch Into Paula's Purse Before Trip to Tower of London
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Gregory Hypnotized by Crown Jewels in the Tower of London Tour
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Paula Distraught After Losing Brooch
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- while Gregory was away and talking a walk - presumably
to practice the piano and compose in a rented apartment nearby,
two other issues arose - the gaslights
mysteriously dimmed for no reason in Paula's bedroom, and she heard
strange footsteps at night from the third floor attic above
- over a period of 4-5 months since moving in, it appeared
that Gregory's intention was to convince Paula that she was sick,
in order - for some reason - to isolate her, keep her distant from
others, and cause paranoia
- one day in the Thornton Square park, the elderly,
gossipy, pigeon-feeding busybody Miss Thwaites remarked
to inquisitve and savvy Scotland Yard Police Constable Brian Cameron
(Joseph Cotten) about her odd neighbor couple: "They never have
visitors. Never go out anywhere, at least she doesn't"
- before this, Cameron - who had become intrigued
by Paula's uncanny resemblance to her opera-singer aunt, looked
into the files of Alice Alquist's long-ago, unsolved murder case;
he was a long-time admirer of Paula's aunt: ("I once met Alice
Alquist. I was taken to hear her in a command performance when I
was twelve years old, then afterwards to meet her in the artist's
room...I still think she was the most beautiful woman I ever saw
and I've never forgotten her") - he revealed that he was the
secret recipient of Alice's 2nd glove
- Cameron learned about the murder victim's stolen
crown jewels (from another country's royal head, the Czar given
as a present to the opera singer) that were unaccounted for; he
unofficially reopened the 'cold case' and gave an under-cover surveillance
task to a policeman named Williams (Tom Stevenson) - to work the
beat around the Thornton Square area; Williams soon became the object
of Nancy's seductive desires
- Anton chided Nancy about
her flirtations with the new beat-policeman ("Is his heart going
to be added to the list of those you've broken?") and suggested
that the cheeky young girl help restore his wife's youthfulness
- although actually he wanted her to show contempt toward his wife: "I
was wondering whether you might not care to pass some of your secrets
on to your mistress and help her get rid of her pallor"; Paula
complained about the despicable treatment she received from the maid-servant:
"Her whole manner. The way she talks
to me, the way she looks at me"; Anton accused his self-doubting
wife of becoming delusionary and imagining things again; he also
forbid Paula to see their visiting neighbors ("I do not want people
all over this house!")
- after inviting her to go out to the theatre, as
part of his continued plans of sabotage,
he accused his fearful, paranoid wife of stealing a framed picture
from a wall by pointing to a bright, square rectangle left behind;
Paula feared that she was a kleptomaniac; then when she found the
missing picture behind a statue on the landing of the stairs, explaining
"I only looked there because that's where it was found twice before,"
but she couldn't recall how it got there; Anton declared that she
was further mentally disabled and sent her to her room, cancelling
their evening plans for the theatre
Paula Also Accused of Stealing Framed Picture - Missing From the Wall
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Paula Found Picture Behind Statue on the Stairs
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- when she was left by herself,
in a panic, Paula admitted that she was horrified and 'frightened
of the house': "I hear noises and footsteps. I imagine things,
that there are people over the house. I'm frightened, and of myself
too"; she begged for him to assure her: "Gregory, please! Please
don't leave me. Stay with me. Gregory, take me in your arms, please!"
but he walked off
- as he often did, Gregory disappeared into the
foggy night, walked around the block, and hid in the shadows. Later,
imprisoned within her own house and bedroom, Paula again heard ominous
footsteps above her, and saw the flickering gaslights dim. [Note:
He was determinedly trying to find the location of the precious
jewels stashed in the house during secretive, nightly searches
of the third-floor attic where he ransacked her aunt's stored possessions.
He would use the vacant house # 5 next door to reach the rooftop
and slip in and out of Paula’s
attic through its skylight unnoticed.]
- Anton and Paula attended a dignified musical concert
at a party held at the home of Lord (Lawrence Grossmith) and
Lady Dalroy (Heather Thatcher), after Paula insisted she had to get
out of the house: ("I must get out of this house, meet
people and see a little of what's going on in the world. I'm going
to this reception")
- during the performance, Gregory psychologically
rebuked his young bride, causing her to break down and become hysterical
when he proved that she had stolen his pocket watch, when he searched
and found it hidden in her handbag; (Brian Cameron witnessed
her erratic behavior seated behind them in the concert audience);
when she couldn't control herself and broke down, convinced that
she was mad, they left the party immediately and returned home
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Gregory's Next Scam - His Missing Pocket Watch at Concert
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- once they had returned home and were in their bedroom,
Paula accused Gregory of regarding her as insane, when she asked: "Gregory,
are you trying to tell me I'm insane?...But that's what you think,
isn't it? That's what you've been hinting and suggesting for months
now, ever since the day I lost your brooch. That's when it all began.
No, no, no, it began before that. The first day here when I found
that letter" - but he said she was delusional; he denied that
the letter even existed! ("You had nothing in your hand")
- Gregory then insinuated that Paula had inherited
insanity through her family - Paula's mother (Alice Alquist's
sister), before her death a year after Paula's birth, was
committed to an insane asylum ("Your mother was mad"), with alarming
symptoms that paralleled Paula's mad behavior ("In the end, she
died in an asylum with no brain at all"); he threatened to institutionalize
her as well [Note: Gregory twisted the truth to benefit his story.
Paula's mother died during her birth.]; the paranoidly-jealous
Gregory was most concerned about the suspicious man sitting behind
them - ("You only went because you knew he would be there....Who
is he, someone from the past? Someone you refused, perhaps?")
- that same evening, Scotland Yard
detective Brian Cameron and beat-cop Williams watched as Anton left
his house, but then mysteriously seemed to have returned to his own house
("Where did he go?")
- simultaneously; Paula was tormented again
by footsteps above her, and flickering and dimming gaslights, but
her slightly-deaf maid Elizabeth was no help ("You just imagine
things"); later that night about 3 am, Williams reported that the
dirt-covered Anton returned home ("as
though he'd been digging in a cellar or something"); fearful
of what might happen to Paula, if she suffered a nervous breakdown
and was sent away, Cameron vowed the next night to get into the house
when the ever-watchful husband was gone
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Paula Asking Maid Elizabeth About
Flickering Gaslights and Footsteps (Elizabeth: "You just imagine things")
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- in the film's turning point, wary
detective Cameron - after Gregory departed in the evening - entered
the home and introduced himself to Paula; he showed her the second
glove given to him by her Aunt, to confirm his trustworthiness
and sincerity; he assured her that he had proof that she wasn't "going
out of (her) mind"; he also quickly
explained that she was hearing Gregory's footsteps as he spent his
nights methodically hunting and searching through her aunt's possessions
in the third-floor attic, in search of her missing jewelry; Gregory's
excuse was that he had rented a studio for peace and quiet so that
he could work on his composing; the dimming gas lights were further
evidence that he had turned on the gaslights in the attic above the
house; disembodied hands tossed aside the aunt's gown (seen earlier
in the portrait above the fireplace) - the shadowy figure was revealed
to be Anton
- Cameron also searched through Gregory's locked desk with Paula, where she
discovered the letter from Sergis Bauer ten years earlier was hidden
away: "I was right. There was a letter...I found this. But my husband said
I dreamed. And now it's here. It's been here the whole time";
it clearly revealed that Gregory (aka Sergis Bauer), who was a young
pianist who had played for her in Prague and had a wife there, had
sent the letter (with his matching hand-writing) two days before
her murder, and had in fact murdered Paula's aunt in her 9 Thornton
Square home in London
- Cameron assured the nerve-wracked,
long-suffering Paula: "You're not going out of your mind. You're
slowly and systematically being driven out of your mind"
Disembodied Hands Discarding Aunt's Gown with the Jewels Sewn Into the Bodice
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Four Sparkling Valuable Jewels Amongst Cheap Imitation
Jewelry
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Anton's Discovery of the Four Valuable Jewels
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Anton Holding Up the Gown Next to the Portrait Painting
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- at the same time, in the attic as Gregory was about to leave, he spied
the long-lost, glittering four crown jewels sewn in plain sight,
mixed into the bodice of one of Alice Alquist's gowns (the one
seen in the portrait) with other cheap costume jewelry imitations;
when the gas lights grew stronger, Cameron realized that Gregory was returning, and he rushed
outside to avoid being seen
- Gregory pried out the four valuable jewels, then
returned home (not via the outside but by the boarded-up
3rd floor attic door), and in his bedroom, he noticed that his
desk had been tampered with; he accused Paula of opening the desk,
but she used her alleged insanity to appear delusional: ("My mind
is going. It was a dream...")
- Cameron, who had followed
Anton's pathway down from the attic's 3rd floor door, had retrieved
the gown left behind, and confronted Gregory with it in his bedroom;
during a struggle for Anton's handgun, he was chased back into
the attic where they fought and he was joined by Williams who was
summoned from across the street
- when things quieted down, Paula found her husband
tied him to a chair in the attic; Cameron allowed Paula
a few moments to speak to him "alone"
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Paula's Vengeful Accusations Against Her Deceitful, Cruel Husband
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- during her final scene of psychological retribution, she vengefully and scornfully raged
at her tied-up husband; she wielded a sharp knife as she bitterly
taunted, denounced and regaled her trapped husband with his own abusive
tactics - by acting mad, and claiming that she was incapable of helping him:
"How can a mad woman help her husband to escape?...Yes, I am mad as my
mother was mad....If I were not mad, I could have helped you. Whatever you had done, I
could have pitied and protected you. But because I am mad, I hate
you. Because I am mad, I have betrayed you. And because I'm mad,
I'm rejoicing in my heart, without a shred of pity, without a shred
of regret, watching you go with glory in my heart!"
- in the conclusion, Williams led the malevolent Gregory
away with his hands bound, while on the rooftop beneath a cloudy
night sky, the vindicated Paula was consoled by the stalwart Brian
after her ordeal; Miss Thwaites caught them and remarked: "Well!"
Paula On the Rooftop With Cameron
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Miss Thwaites: "Well!"
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Paula's (Ingrid Bergman) Secret Lover - Her Amorous Pianist
Gregory Anton (Charles Boyer)
Paula On the Train to Lake Como with
Busybody Miss Thwaites (Dame May Whitty) Who Loved Murder Mysteries
Gregory Greeting Paula With a Kiss at Lake Como
Gregory's Suggestion to Move Back to London and Live in Her Aunt's House
("You shall have your dream, you shall have your house")
Arrival at 9 Thornton Square - Meeting Up Again with Miss Thwaites
Portrait Above Fireplace of Paula's Aunt - Wearing Jewel-Covered Gown
as Empress Theodora
Paula's Haunted Memories of the Night of Her Aunt's Murder
Paula: "No, I can't stay here!"
Paula's Discovery of an Incriminating Letter From Sergis
Bauer (aka Gregory Anton) - Snatched Away by Anton
Newly-Hired Cockney Housemaid Nancy (Angela Lansbury)
Slightly-Deaf Cook Elizabeth (Barbara Everest)
Paula With Housemaid Nancy
Curious Scotland Yard Police Constable Brian Cameron (Joseph Cotten)
with Miss Thwaites
Brian Cameron Still Intrigued by the Unsolved Alquist Murder Case
Policeman Williams (Tom Stevenson) Hired to Work the Thornton Square
Area
Gregory's Flirtations with Saucy Housemaid Nancy
Paula's Reaction to Husband's Command: ("I do not want people all over this house!")
Paula Hearing Footsteps and Noticing Flickering Gaslights
Paula Insisting on Going to the Dalroy Musical Concert
At the Concert - Cameron Seated Behind Them
Paula's Crazed Distress After Returning Home In Middle of Concert
"You had nothing in your hand...Your mother was mad!"
Fearing She Was Growing Insane
Cameron and Williams Following Disappearing Anton Outside on Foggy Night
("Where did he go?")
Paula On the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown
Cameron Revealing the Aunt's Second Glove to Paula
Cameron Hearing the Footsteps and Seeing the Gaslights Dim For Himself
The Figure in the Attic Revealed to be Paula's Husband
Scotland Yard Detective Cameron to Paula: "You're not going out
of your mind"
Paula Accused by Her Husband of Tampering With Anton's Desk
Cameron Entering Anton's Bedroom (from the Attic) to Confirm That He
Had Tampered With the Desk
Anton's Handgun Behind His Back - A Struggle Ensued with Cameron
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