Double Indemnity: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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[[File:Double Indemnity (1944 poster).jpg|thumb|400px]]
{{quote|''I killed him for money, and for a woman. I didn't get the money, and I didn't get the woman. Pretty, isn't it?''|'''Walter Neff'''}}
{{quote|''I killed him for money, and for a woman. I didn't get the money, and I didn't get the woman. Pretty, isn't it?''|'''Walter Neff'''}}


A 1944 [[Film Noir]], directed by [[Billy Wilder]], written by him and [[Raymond Chandler]], adapted from [[James M. Cain]]'s earlier novel of the same title. Considered by many to be ''the'' definitive [[Film Noir]], and popularizer of many of its tropes.
A 1944 [[Film Noir]], directed by [[Billy Wilder]], written by him and [[Raymond Chandler]], and adapted from [[James M. Cain]]'s earlier novel of the same title, '''''Double Indemnity''''' is considered by many to be ''the'' definitive [[Film Noir]] and the popularizer of many of its tropes.


Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) is a successful but bored insurance salesman who encounters Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) when he comes to her house to discuss automobile insurance. After the two have traded some innuendo-laden banter, Phyllis reveals that her marriage is not a particularly happy one and the pair end up conspiring to trick her husband into taking out an accident insurance policy -- and ensure that he then meets a tragic "accidental" end.
Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) is a successful but bored insurance salesman who encounters Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) when he comes to her house to discuss automobile insurance. After the two have traded some innuendo-laden banter, Phyllis reveals that her marriage is not a particularly happy one and the pair end up conspiring to trick her husband into taking out an accident insurance policy -- and ensure that he then meets a tragic "accidental" end.
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The story is told in flashback and narrated by Neff, who is [[Foregone Conclusion|making a confession into his office Dictaphone]].
The story is told in flashback and narrated by Neff, who is [[Foregone Conclusion|making a confession into his office Dictaphone]].


{{tropelist}}
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=== Provides examples of: ===
* [[Adaptation Distillation]]: Arguably. The film hews very close to the book for the most part, but the ending (though it eliminates some revelations about Phyllis) is both spatially and temporally more compact. Its main differences are in the dialogue (Chandler believed Cain's dialogue wouldn't translate well to the screen) and the use of the [[Framing Device]] of Neff recounting the story into the Dictaphone.
* [[Adaptation Distillation]]: Arguably. The film hews very close to the book for the most part, but the ending (though it eliminates some revelations about Phyllis) is both spatially and temporally more compact. Its main differences are in the dialogue (Chandler believed Cain's dialogue wouldn't translate well to the screen) and the use of the [[Framing Device]] of Neff recounting the story into the Dictaphone.
* [[Adaptation Name Change]]: The novel's Walter Huff becomes Walter Neff in the film, for some reason. Mr. and Mrs. Dietrichson were Mr. and Mrs. Nirdlinger in the novel; the latter choice was specifically because Chandler and Wilder thought that [[Inherently Funny Word|Nirdlinger]] was too silly a name for such a serious story.
* [[Adaptation Name Change]]: The novel's Walter Huff becomes Walter Neff in the film, for some reason. Mr. and Mrs. Dietrichson were Mr. and Mrs. Nirdlinger in the novel; the latter choice was specifically because Chandler and Wilder thought that [[Inherently Funny Word|Nirdlinger]] was too silly a name for such a serious story.
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* [[Battleaxe Nurse]]: Three guesses on who was the nurse taking care of the late first Mrs. Dietrichson.
* [[Battleaxe Nurse]]: Three guesses on who was the nurse taking care of the late first Mrs. Dietrichson.
* [[Better to Die Than Be Killed]]: Walter and Phyllis commit suicide at the end of the book, rather than face prison and execution for their crime.
* [[Better to Die Than Be Killed]]: Walter and Phyllis commit suicide at the end of the book, rather than face prison and execution for their crime.
* [[Black and Grey Morality]]: The one pure character (Dietrichson's daughter) seems to be the story's [[The Woobie]].
* [[Black and Grey Morality]]: The one pure character (Dietrichson's daughter) seems to be the story's [[The Woobie|Woobie]].
* [[Black Widow]]: Phyllis, a poster girl.
* [[Black Widow]]: Phyllis, a poster girl.
* [[Blondes Are Evil]]: Phyllis.
* [[Blondes Are Evil]]: Phyllis.
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{{AFI's 100 Years 100 Heroes and Villains}}
[[Category:Roger Ebert Great Movies List]]
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[[Category:The Forties]]
[[Category:Double Indemnity]]
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[[Category:Roger Ebert Great Movies List]]

Latest revision as of 16:37, 25 August 2021

I killed him for money, and for a woman. I didn't get the money, and I didn't get the woman. Pretty, isn't it?
Walter Neff

A 1944 Film Noir, directed by Billy Wilder, written by him and Raymond Chandler, and adapted from James M. Cain's earlier novel of the same title, Double Indemnity is considered by many to be the definitive Film Noir and the popularizer of many of its tropes.

Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) is a successful but bored insurance salesman who encounters Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) when he comes to her house to discuss automobile insurance. After the two have traded some innuendo-laden banter, Phyllis reveals that her marriage is not a particularly happy one and the pair end up conspiring to trick her husband into taking out an accident insurance policy -- and ensure that he then meets a tragic "accidental" end.

Neff, who has eleven years' experience in the insurance business, believes that he has the brains to pull off The Perfect Crime. The only obstacle is his colleague and friend Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson), the brilliant claims manager who can spot a phony insurance claim a mile away.

The story is told in flashback and narrated by Neff, who is making a confession into his office Dictaphone.

Tropes used in Double Indemnity include:

Phyllis: Because you don't want the money anymore even though you could have it because she's made you feel like a heel all of a sudden?

Phyllis: We're not the same anymore. We did it so we could be together but instead of that it's pulling us apart, isn't it, Walter?
Walter: What are you talking about?
Phyllis: You don't really care whether we see each other or not!
Walter: Shut up, baby. [kisses her]