Home | Movies By Year | Movies from 1947


Cry Wolf (1947 film)

Buy Cry Wolf (1947 film) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the movie. And once you've experienced the movie, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




'Cry Wolf' is a 1947 American mystery film directed by Peter Godfrey and featuring Errol Flynn and Barbara Stanwyck, based on the novel of the same name by Marjorie Carleton..

Plot



Hearing that her husband is dead, Sandra Marshall arrives at his prominent family's remote estate to claim her inheritance. She receives a cold reception, especially from the husband's uncle, research scientist Mark Caldwell, who had not known about her or any marriage. He even accuses her of being a schemer. But he allows her to stay in the mansion while details of her legal rights are worked out, and as the two become better acquainted, they develop a less contentious relationship.

Caldwell's teenage niece, Julie, welcomes Sandra. But what the girl says is troubling. She claims her uncle is holding her prisoner on the estate, that strange things are going on in a sealed-off area of the mansion, and that the older family members and their servants may not be telling the truth about the recent death. Though Caldwell insists that Julie simply has an overactive imagination, Sandra wonders what to believe and whom to trust. Increasingly convinced that something is not right at the secluded property, she's willing to take risks to uncover what it is.

Cast



* Errol Flynn as Mark Caldwell

* Barbara Stanwyck as Sandra Marshall

* Geraldine Brooks as Julie Demarest

* Richard Basehart as James Caldwell Demarest

* Jerome Cowan as Senator Charles Caldwell

* John Ridgely as Jackson Laidell

* Patricia Barry as Angela

* Rory Mallinson as Becket

* Helene Thimig as Marta

* Paul Stanton as Davenport

* Barry Bernard as Roberts

* Lisa Golm as Mrs. Laidell

Production



Original novel

The novel was published in January 1945. The 'New York Times' said "the plot has pace; the manse is traditionally eerie, the heroine is charming. Situations and dialogue, however, are often clumsily handled." The 'Chicago Tribune' called it "a spicy piece".

Development

In April 1945 Warner Bros bought the film rights as a vehicle for Barbara Stanwyck. Catherine Turney was assigned to do the script and Dennis Morgan announced as co star.

The film took a while to be made. In March 1946, Errol Flynn was announced as co star and Peter Godfrey as director. The movie was a "Thomson Production", i.e. made through Flynn's company at Warner Bros.

Two of the supporting cast were from the New York stage, Geraldine Brooks and Richard Basehart, and had just been put under contract by Warner Bros. (Basehart had given an acclaimed stage performance in 'The Hasty Heart'.)

Shooting

Filming started in May 1946 and took place to August 1946.

Reception



The film was not released until July 1947.

Critical

The 'Wall Street Journal' said the film was "often as dull as it is frightening because its melodramatic story is full of cliches... without tommy gun or sword, Mr Flynn seems unhappily wooden." The 'Christian Science Monitor' said it "grips the attention and holds it right through...the result is something well above average."

"Its melodramatic antics are rather fun", said the 'Washington Post'.

The Los Angeles Times called the film "murky" and "fairly opaque" although it felt audiences "are likely to be impressed by the performance of Flynn."

The 'New York Times' said "its final explanation of the mystery is ridiculous and banal."

'Filmink' magazine wrote "a weaker/younger/more clearly neurotic actor" than Stanwyck "may have added to the tension...because Stanwyck can clearly handle herself even poking around a locked lab at one in the morning you dont feel too worried for her" adding that "Errol is very effective in an atypical role slightly aloof, cold, sinister I cant help imagine that maybe he was channeling his father, or some other patriarchal family member."

Box Office

The film was moderately successful at the box office, 'Variety' estimating its rentals in the US and Canada at $2 million.

According to Warner Bros records, the film earned $1,842,000 domestically and $848,000 foreign.

References



Other references

# Tony Thomas, Rudy Behlmer * Clifford McCarty, 'The Films of Errol Flynn', Citadel Press, 1969 p 147.


Buy Cry Wolf (1947 film) now from Amazon

<-- Return to movies from 1947



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1106337041.