The Woman in the Window: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{tropelist}}
=== This movie contains examples of: ===
* {{spoiler|[[All Just a Dream]]: A textbook version. The whole plot is a dream of Richard's. Yes, even the many scenes he's not in. This was tacked on by Fritz Lang to conform with the [[Hays Code]].}}
* {{spoiler|[[All Just a Dream]]: A textbook version. The whole plot is a dream of Richard's. Yes, even the many scenes he's not in. This was tacked on by Fritz Lang to conform with the [[Hays Code]].}}
* [[A Tragedy of Impulsiveness]]: The adultery and the killing are regrettable, but it's {{spoiler|the suicide}} that makes it a true tragedy; if Richard had just waited a little longer, he would have discovered it to be unnecessary.
* [[A Tragedy of Impulsiveness]]: The adultery and the killing are regrettable, but it's {{spoiler|the suicide}} that makes it a true tragedy; if Richard had just waited a little longer, he would have discovered it to be unnecessary.
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[[Category:The Woman in the Window]]
[[Category:The Woman in the Window]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Film]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Woman in the Window, The}}

Latest revision as of 20:54, 26 October 2017

"Men of our years have no business playing around with any adventure that they can avoid."

Fritz Lang's 1944 Film Noir, one of the first films to be so called. Married, middle-aged psychology professor Richard Wanley falls in lust with a provocative portrait of a young woman. When the portrait's model, a budding Femme Fatale, catches him ogling it, she invites him up to her apartment. The two are interrupted by her boyfriend, who tries to strangle Richard, and Richard kills him in self defense. Now the two must try to quietly dispose of the body to avoid scandal, but are hampered by their lack of trust for each other. Complications include Richard's friend, a district attorney who investigates the man's disappearance, and a third party scheming to blackmail them both.

While relatively unsophisticated by today's standards, and hampered by the Hays Code, the film was moderately well-regarded in its day for its convincing portrayal of an ordinary man driven to heinous crime by one bad decision.


Tropes used in The Woman in the Window include: