In Victorian era London, the inhabitants of a family home with rented rooms upstairs fear the new lodger is Jack the Ripper.
Merle Oberon
Kitty Langley
Laird Cregar
Mr. Slade
George Sanders
Inspector John Warwick
Cedric Hardwicke
Robert Bonting
Sara Allgood
Ellen Bonting
Aubrey Mather
Superintendent Sutherland
Queenie Leonard
Daisy the Maid
Doris Lloyd
Jennie
David Clyde
Det. Sgt. Bates
Helena Pickard
Annie Rowley
Ruth Clifford
Hairdresser (uncredited)
Thora Hird
First Murder Victim Katie (uncredited)
Anita Sharp-Bolster
Wiggy (uncredited)
C. Montague Shaw
Stage Manager (uncredited)
Skelton Knaggs
Man with Cart
Charlie Hall
Comedian
Bess Flowers
Woman in Audience
Olaf Hytten
Harris, the Haberdasher
Heather Wilde
Fred Aldrich
Harry Allen
Jimmy Aubrey
Wilson Benge
Billy Bevan
Ted Billings
Edmund Breon
Mae Bruce
Colin Campbell
Herbert Clifton
Grace Davies
Harold De Becker
Cyril Delevanti
Frank Elliott
Herbert Evans
Douglas Gerrard
Gibson Gowland
Kit Guard
Frank Hagney
Gerald Hamer
Lumsden Hare
Alec Harford
Forrester Harvey
Stuart Holmes
Kenneth Hunter
Boyd Irwin
Edna Mae Jones
Colin Kenny
Crauford Kent
Charles Knight
Connie Leon
George Magrill
Kermit Maynard
Mathew McCue
Philo McCullough
Clive Morgan
Edmund Mortimer
John Rice
John Rogers
Raymond Severn
Yorke Sherwood
Leslie Sketchley
Will Stanton
Jane Starr
Robert R. Stephenson
Donald Stuart
Walter Tetley
David Thursby
Frederick Worlock
Director
John Brahm
Novel
Marie Belloc Lowndes
Screenplay
Barré Lyndon
July 19, 2019
9
Your beauty is exquisite.
Victorian London, Whitechapple, and some maniac is slaughtering women with stage backgrounds. Could it be that the mysterious Mr. Slade who has rented the upstairs rooms from Mrs Burton, is the man known as Jack the Ripper? This part of London is cloaked in fog, the cobbled streets damp and bearing witness to unspeakable crimes, the gas lights dimly flicker as the British Bobby searches in vain for Bloody Jack.
The scene is set for what is to me the finest adaptation to deal with the notorious murderer, Jack the Ripper. A remake of the Alfred Hitchcock silent from 1927, this adaptation of the Marie Belloc Lowndes novel not only looks great (Lucien Ballard's photography creating fluid eeriness and film noir fatalism) but also chills the blood without ever actually spilling any. It's a testament to John Brahm's direction that the film constantly feels like a coiled spring waiting to explode, a spring that is realised in the form of Laird Cregar's incredibly unnerving portrayal of Mr Slade.
Laird Cregar, as evidenced here, was a fine actor in the making. Sadly troubled by his weight and yearning to become a true matinée idol, he crashed dieted to such a degree his poor 28 year old heart couldn't cope with the shock. After just 16 films, of which this was his second to last, the movie world was robbed of a truly fine performer, a sad story in a long line of sad incidents that taint the Hollywood story.
George Sanders and Merle Oberon (as police inspector and Slade's infatuation respectively) engage in a less than fully realised romantic strand, and Cedric Hardwicke dominates all the scenes that don't feature the might of Cregar, but really it's the big man's show all the way. Creepily enhanced by Hugo Friedhofer's score, The Lodger is a lesson in how to utilise technical atmospherics.
The moody atmosphere here hangs heavy and the sense of doom is palpable in the extreme, it comes as something of a relief when the ending finally comes, for then it's time to reflect and exhale a sigh of relief. Deviating from the novel, something which has over the years annoyed purists, The Lodger shows its hand very much from the off, yet this in no way hurts the picture. In fact if anything the exasperation at the supporting characters induces dry humour, The kind that comes in the form of nervous giggles out there in the dark, but rest assured, this is no comedy, it's a creepy classic from a wonderful era of film making. 9/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$800,000.00
Revenue:
$0.00