Leave Her to Heaven

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Darkness and claustrophobia mark the visual style of many film noirs: the use of black-and-white or gloomy grays, low-key lighting, striking contrasts between light and dark, shadows, nighttime or interior settings and rain-soaked streets. Leave Her to Heaven proves the magnificent exception. Filmed in vibrant, three-strip Technicolor, many pivotal scenes occur in spectacular outdoor locations, shot by famed cinematographer Leon Shamroy in Arizona and California.

A classic femme fatale, Gene Tierney stars as Ellen, whose charisma and stunning visage mask a possessive, sociopathic soul triggered by "loving too much." Anyone who stands between her and those she obsessively loves tend to meet "accidental" deaths, most famously a teen boy who drowns in a chilling scene.

Martin Scorsese has labeled Heaven as among his all-time favorite films and Tierney one of film's most underrated actresses. Leave Her to Heaven makes a supremely compelling case for these sentiments.

Leave Her to Heaven was added to the National Film Registry in 2018.

Tropes used in Leave Her to Heaven include: