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The Spiral Staircase (1946)
In director Robert Siodmak's and RKO's suspenseful
psychological drama with an atmosphere of terror and suspense - it
was a classic, old-fashioned haunted house horror tale with noirish
and Gothic (and Hitchcockian) elements that involved a threatened,
afflicted female and a serial killer in an old mansion (who
specialized in killing imperfect, physically-flawed, handicapped
or "afflicted" women). [Note: The set was the house from Orson Welles' The
Magnificent Ambersons (1942).]
The stylish, suspenseful, and taut thriller - and frightening
psychological drama-mystery occurring during one evening in the
house - and one of the earliest slasher films, was based on crime
writer Ethel Lina White's 1933 novel "Some
Must Watch," and was remade as The Spiral Staircase (1975, UK) with Jacqueline
Bisset, Christopher Plummer, and Mildred Dunnock:
- under the opening title credits, there was a bird's-eye
view of the 'spiral staircase' where, during a frightening storm,
a woman precariously descended the circular passageway
- the main setting of the film at the turn of the
century (1906) was in a small Vermont town where
the Village Hotel was hand-cranking/projecting a silent film (D.W.
Griffith's The Sands of Dee (1912) - released six years
after the year of the film!) for its guests in the darkened parlor;
the motion picture had been advertised as "The Wonder of the Age";
one of the viewers was mute young servant girl Helen (Dorothy
McGuire)
- the camera tilted up from the movie audience toward
a ceiling chandelier and then - after a dissolve - entered into
an upstairs hotel guest room, where an obviously
crippled, lame, paraplegic local girl (Myrna Dell) closed
her window due to an approaching storm
- when the woman opened her clothes closet door, she
was spied upon by a menacing, predatory killer (The Killer's 'Eye'
was the eye of director Siodmak) hiding behind her clothes; there
was a close-up zoom into the man's eyeball (similar to the silent
film iris); as the female raised her arms to put on her nightgown,
she was murdered by the serial killer in her room by strangulation
- a close-up of her hands showed them clenched above her as she
died; it was the third murder committed by a serial killer in the
area; the camera then returned back to the climax of the short
silent melodrama being viewed downstairs - a suicidal girl was
carried dead from the sea
Lame Hotel Resident (Myrna Dell) About to Be Murdered by Strangulation
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Intruder in Female's Clothes Closet
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Close-Up Zoom into The Killer's Staring, Predatory, Menacing Eyeball
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Close-Up of Victim's Clenched Hands During Strangulation
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- at the site of the murder, the town's long-standing
elderly physician Dr. Harvey (Erville Alderson) briefly quarreled
with and challenged his new rival doctor in town - young and handsome
bachelor Dr. Parry (Kent Smith); afterwards, Dr. Parry (one of
Helen's love interests) drove Helen in a horse-drawn carriage back
to her place of employment - she was a live-in caretaker at an
old, large, spooky and dark mansion for the
mansion's wealthy, widowed, crabby, sometimes verbally-abusive,
bed-ridden invalid matron Mrs. Warren (Ethel Barrymore), one of
Dr. Parry's newest patients; during their drive, Dr. Parry expressed
his concern about treating Helen's muteness ailment so that she
could follow her dreams to be a teacher or a nurse; he suggested
taking her to Boston to see some specialists
- as they returned to the mansion,
Helen had to walk part of the way home; during her spooky return
in the midst of an approaching wind and rainstorm through a thick
forest, she was watched, as she dropped her house key, and pursued
by a dark figure in a slick black raincoat next to a tree
- in
the kitchen with house-keeper and cook Mrs. Emma Oates (Elsa Lanchester),
Helen was cautioned about her well-being, since
it was well-known that the recent three murders had all targeted
defenseless and vulnerable young women with disabilities: (Mrs.
Oates: "For a while I thought it might have been you....First,
there was the girl with a scar on her face. Then that poor simple-minded
creature, and now this cripple"); Mrs. Oates was known to be a
frequent drinker, as she admitted later how it improved her abilities:
"I see better, I hear better, and I feel much better"
Killer's Eyeball Staring at Helen on Upper Staircase
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Closeup and Zoom Into Killer's Eyeball
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Killer's Subjective View of Helen - Without a
Mouth
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Inside the Mansion, Helen Spied Upon By The Eyeball
From Top of the Upper Staircase
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- once inside the house, Helen was again observed
by a disembodied eyeball (from the second floor at the top of the staircase) after ascending part of the way up
the staircase to Mrs. Warren's bedroom while she was viewing her
reflection in a mirror; it was implied that the intruder had entered
the house through a side window; the camera zoomed with a close-up
into the blackness of the killer's eye - who imagined Helen without
a mouth
- in Mrs. Warren's bedroom, the awakened matron boasted
to Helen about the tiger-skin rug on the floor - revealing a crucial
plot point for later that she used to be a crack shot as a big-game
hunter: ("I got him before he got me, the tiger I mean. I was as
good as any man"); the matron reprimanded Helen for being late,
but then warned
Helen about being endangered, and encouraged her to run away: "Leave
this house tonight if you know what's good for you"
- the local Constable
(James Bell) also arrived to speak to Mrs. Warren's anti-social
stepson - scholarly biologist Professor Albert Warren (George Brent)
who lived in the house, about the vicinity's murders; he also spoke
about Helen's predicament since she also suffered from an 'affliction': "I'm
especially worried about that girl who works for you....You see,
every one of those girls murdered had something the matter with her,
something wrong"; Professor
Warren promised to protect Helen's safety
- shortly later the Professor
personally cautioned Helen: "Helen, I don't want to frighten you
but because of what happened in town, we have to be especially
careful for the next few days"; as Helen climbed the stairs, the
Professor added: "Don't trust anyone"; upon
Helen's return to Mrs. Warren's bedroom, she received another recommendation
due to the matron's premonitions: "Pack your things, leave this
house tonight...Go away, my dear....You're not safe, my dear";
Mrs. Warren admitted that she had psychic abilities and knew about
the recent murder without being informed: ("I always know everything")
The Mansion's Cook-Housekeeper Mrs. Emma Oates (Elsa Lanchester)
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Stepson Professor Albert Warren (George Brent)
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Stephen Warren (Gordon Oliver)
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Secretary Blanche (Rhonda Fleming)
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Nurse Barker (Sara Allgood)
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Groundskeeper Mr. Oates (Rhys Williams)
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- the house was populated by Mrs. Warren's real
younger son Stephen Warren (Gordon Oliver) - an irresponsible,
impudent womanizing playboy who recently returned from living abroad
in Europe (Paris); he was currently having an affair
with Albert's live-in, pretty assistant-secretary Blanche
(Rhonda Fleming), the Professor's former lover; other members of
the household help included stern, verbally-abused Nurse Barker
(Sara Allgood), and handyman-groundskeeper Mr. Oates (Rhys Williams);
both Stephen and Albert were rival suitors for Blanche's romantic
attentions
- when Mrs. Warren took a turn for the worse, Stephen
administered a dose of ether to revive her; comments were made
about Stephen's character by Mrs. Warren: ("There's always trouble
when you come, Stephen, always trouble. Why didn't you stay away?"),
and from her stepson the Professor who disliked Stephen and criticized
him for his philandering: (Professor: "I
don't like you. I never have. I have never trusted you")
- there were many frightening elements - a raging
storm outside, high contrast or light and dark shadows, the house
(with many secret doors and heavy draperies), two levels of staircases
(one up to Mrs. Warren's chamber, and another dark spiraling staircase
into the pantry-kitchen and basement), an ominous eye watching
from the shadows, a view of feet hiding behind obstacles, gusts
of wind, flickering candlelights, and creaking doors - all tormenting
to the victimized caretaker Helen and creating suspense
- Dr. Parry, who had become Helen's love interest,
arrived for a brief bedside visit with Mrs. Warren, who urged him
to insure Helen's safety by taking her away immediately: ("Get
Helen out of this house.... Because I know you love her. Take her
away"); the ether used to treat Mrs. Warren an hour earlier
had strangely disappeared; Mrs. Oates led the Professor into the
mansion's basement cellar's locked wine closet to retrieve a bottle
of brandy as a substitute; she took the opportunity to cleverly
snatch an additional bottle for herself and then bragged to Helen: "Anything
can happen in the dark"
- in the downstairs den, Dr. Parry told Helen that
he planned to leave with her that evening, after Mrs. Warren's
obsessed and urgent request to take her away; he would take her
that evening to his mother's place, and then to Boston the next
morning for an examination, to help her work through her psychological
issues; he believed that Helen's inability to speak had been trauma-induced
and was possibly reversible
- in the film's most dramatic scene, Dr. Parry revealed
Helen's childhood history, when she shockingly witnessed her
own house fire that lethally burned her parents: ("She wanted to
scream herself, but somehow she couldn't...So without being able
to do one thing to help, she saw her mother and father burn to
death"); he urged her to cure herself through mental therapy, although
he knew it would cause her further distress: "Have the courage
to see it all again. And by not blocking it out of your mind, you
may find your voice again"; he grabbed her and tried to forcefully
get her to talk: "Remember how wonderful it was when you had a
voice?...You look at me as though you don't believe it, but I know
I'm right. Try to talk! TRY IT! TRY IT!"; she silently collapsed into his arms
- the cynical Stephen objected
to Dr. Parry's concern about Helen's welfare and called him a "hick
doctor"; a fist-fight was imminent between them, with additional
tensions growing when the Professor also questioned Dr. Parry's
intentions to personally care for Helen and take her away;
Stephen insinuated similar motivations when he asked: "Are your
humanitarian instincts restricted only to people with serious afflictions?";
fortunately, the Doctor was interrupted with an emergency call
to the Wilson's residence; before leaving, he handed Helen the
Wilson's phone number (189) on a piece of paper, instructed her
to begin packing, and then kissed her during their goodbye at the
front door
- Helen fantasized that she and Dr. Parry were to
be married; they danced together in the abundantly flower-decorated
foyer of the mansion, but during the marital ceremony itself, she
was dumbstruck and unable to respond "I do" for the marriage vows;
she felt stern judgment from the attendees - and the fantasy dissolved
and went out-of-focus
- unhappy and upset with Stephen's harsh, chauvinistic
treatment of her and his attitude, Blanche told him that she was
leaving with Helen and Dr. Parry on their trip to Boston; she
informed Helen of her decision: ("I've got to leave this house.
It hasn't been good for anyone here")
- in a classically-filmed frightful sequence, with
a single flickering candle, as Blanche took the spiral staircase
down to enter the dark basement to retrieve her suitcase, she fearfully
heard footsteps, and was clearly relieved when she recognized someone: "Oh,
it's you. You scared the life out of me" - but then after
the appearance of the eyeball and a zoom into its darkness, a figure
approached toward her, extinguished her candle, and suddenly attacked
and murdered her by strangulation
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Blanche's Strangulation Murder in the Basement
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- after Blanche's death, the spiteful Nurse announced
to Mrs. Warren in her upstairs bedroom that she was quitting her
detested job to escape all of the matron's verbal abuses: ("I'm
tired of being a target for an evil old woman"); the young and
tormented mute Helen soon came to believe, after being told a premonition
of her death by Mrs. Warren, that she would be the killer's next
victim, and that she must leave immediately ("You must go away.
Leave this house")
- in the tense conclusion, the Professor asked for
Helen to find Blanche; she found the body of Blanche in the cellar;
she turned to find Stephen standing behind her after he entered
through an open basement door to the outside; after he told her:
"Helen, you must forget everything you've seen here, let me handle
this," she suspected that Stephen had murdered Blanche, and locked
him up in the basement
- after running upstairs into the pantry-kitchen
and unable to rouse the drunken Mrs. Oates, she frantically raced
around and then phoned for help but was unable to communicate Dr.
Parry's number to the operator; she scribbed a note to Professor
Warren that Blanche had been murdered by Stephen; as he led her
up the ascending staircase to his step-mother's bedroom, he calmly
revealed that he was glad she couldn't complete her phone call
- Helen intuitively realized the shocking truth that the Professor
was the serial killer
- the Professor forced her to stop in front of the
mirror halfway up to look at her reflection (without a mouth): ("You
looked in this mirror once before today. I watched you. You had no
mouth then. Just as you have none now. Look at yourself. Look");
he calmly confessed to Helen that he was the serial killer
of the others - targeting the weak and imperfect of the world that
he felt needed to be eliminated: "And there's no room in the
whole world for imperfection"
- the Professor donned black gloves and threatened
to grab Helen as he explained his premeditated plan about how he
had orchestrated everything to empty the house; he reasoned
that he had jealously killed Blanche because she didn't love him,
and had settled his score with Stephen who was also weak and imperfect
and deserved to be eliminated, to please his demanding father who
detested imperfection: ("To see me dispose of the weak
and imperfects of the world, whom he detested. He would have admired
me for what I'm going to do"); Helen fled
upstairs into Mrs. Warren's locked bedroom, but was unable to awaken
her as she frantically searched for Mrs. Warren's gun; although the
Constable came to the door with a message from Dr. Parry about how
his return would be delayed, Helen was unable to alert him from the
upper-story window
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Professor: "And there's no room in the whole world
for imperfection"
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- in the suspenseful climax, Helen made an attempt to return to the
basement to free Stephen, but fearing an attack (when she saw the
Professor's leg hiding in the shadows), she decided to ascend the
spiral staircase; she was chased and attacked by Professor
Warren, and both were met by the dowager at the top of the stairs; she had emerged
from her bed, staggered out with a gun, and shot her step-son five
times in the chest as she yelled at the attacking killer: "Murderer...You
killed them. You killed them all. The servant girl in the well. The
others in the town. Today, the cripple in the hotel. You killed them
all. Tonight, it would have been Helen. I heard you"; the Professor
died at the foot of the staircase
Helen on Spiral Staircase Attempting to Descend to Basement
and Free Stephen
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Armed Mrs. Warren At Top of the Spiral Staircase
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Helen's Ear-Shattering Scream at Gunshots
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- Helen's lost voice returned
after the second gunblast when she screamed at the moment
of her greatest peril; after the killing, Mrs. Warren ordered Helen
to get Stephen - she retrieved him from the basement closet, and
as he raced upstairs on the staircase to his mother, she asked
for his forgiveness for blaming him for ten years, and then the
elderly matron collapsed; Stephen rushed to her as she fainted
(or died?) in his arms
- now with restored speech, Helen uttered her
first words since childhood with a phone call to an operator, asking
for her bachelor-suitor Dr. Parry - Mrs. Warren's physician: ("1-8-9...Dr.
Parry...Come...It's I, Helen") - the film's final line of dialogue
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Mute Servant Helen (Dorothy McGuire) Watching Silent
Film in Hotel Parlor
(l to r): Dr. Parry Sparring with Elderly Dr. Harvey
Dr. Parry - With Love Interest Helen - Interested In Getting Her Treated
For Her Muteness in Boston
Helen's Spooky Walk Home in the Dark
Helen Spied Upon by Dark Figure While Returning to
Mansion
Helen Looking at Her Reflection in Mirror Halfway Up the Upper Staircase
Invalid Matron of Mansion Mrs. Warren (Ethel Barrymore)
Helen Increasingly Worried About The Recent Murders and All the Concerned Individuals
Warning About Her Safety
Dr. Parry Describing To Helen Her Childhood Trauma That Caused Her Mute Condition,
Causing Helen Further Distress ("Try it! Try it!")
Dr. Parry Kissing Helen at the Door as He Left the Mansion
Helen's Fantasy Of Marriage with Dr. Parry
Helen's Inability to Say "I Do" During Marital Ceremony Vows - Causing Extreme
Embarrassment
Blanche's Fateful Trip Into the Basement to Retrieve Her Suitcase
Mrs. Warren's Premonition of Death to Helen
Helen's Discovery of Blanche's Corpse in Basement
Stephen with Helen in Basement
Helen's Scribbled Note to the Professor About Stephen Being the Murderer
The Mad Serial Killer's Confessions to Helen on the Upper Staircase
Professor Shot Dead by Mrs. Warren on Spiral Staircase
Film's Ending: Helen's Phone Call to Operator
to Seek Her Doctor Friend
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