A sister and her disturbed twin are implicated in a murder and a police detective must figure out which one's the killer.
Olivia de Havilland
Terry Collins / Ruth Collins
Lew Ayres
Dr. Scott Elliott
Thomas Mitchell
Lt. Stevenson
Richard Long
Rusty
Charles Evans
Dist. Atty. Girard
Garry Owen
Franklin
Lela Bliss
Mrs. Didriksen
Lester Allen
George Benson
Bess Flowers
Nightclub Patron (uncredited)
Ida Moore
Mrs. O'Brien (uncredited)
Jean Andren
District attorney's secretary (uncredited)
Marta Mitrovich
Miss Beade (uncredited)
Jack Gargan
Waiter (uncredited)
Amelita Ward
Photo-double (uncredited)
William Halligan
Sergeant Temple (uncredited)
Charles McAvoy
Janitor O'Brien (uncredited)
Jack Cheatham
Policeman (uncredited)
Ralph Peters
Dumb cop (uncredited)
Ben Erway
Police Lieutenant (uncredited)
Lane Chandler
Intern (uncredited)
Director
Robert Siodmak
Original Story
Vladimir Pozner
Writer
Nunnally Johnson
November 2, 2013
8
Lemon Drops and Dopplegangers.
The Dark Mirror is directed by Robert Siodmak and adapted to screenplay by Nunnally Johnson from a story by Vladimir Pozner. It stars Olivia de Havilland, Lew Ayres, Thomas Mitchell, Richard Long and Charles Evans. Music is by Dimitri Tiomkin and cinematography by Milton Krasner.
A man appears to have been murdered by one of the identical twin Collins sisters, but both of whom have an alibi. The police and the psychiatrist have their work cut out...
Straight out of the corner of postwar Hollywood that began to take fascination with mental illness, The Dark Mirror triumphs more as a technical exercise than as anything resembling thought provoking analysis. The simplistic Freudian elements aside, film is impressively mounted and performed by Siodmak and de Havilland respectively. Story follows the trajectory of a cat-and-mouse game, with the makers nicely putting us the viewers into the same struggle the authorities have in sussing out which sister is the damaged killer.
Siodmak's (The Spiral Staircase) attention to detail and grasp of mood setting really lifts the piece to greater heights. Aided by the considerable photographic skills of Krasner (The Set-Up), Siodmak creates a world of psychological disturbance, a place aligned with suspense and symbolism. Right from the doozy of an opening scene to the denouement, Siodmak manages to keep the contrivances to the rear of the play and let de Havilland and the visual textures be the prime focus.
The effects work is very good, with de Havilland having to quite often play off against herself. Sure in today's age of High Definition et al, you don't have to stretch your viewing experience to see how the effects were done, but why would you? Just enjoy de Havillland's riveting performances in the dual roles (see also her excellence in The Snake Pit two years later), her skillful little subtleties as she deftly plays out the respective psychological traits of sibling rivalry gone astray.
Is it a gimmick movie? Well no not really, it's honest about what it wants to achieve in terms of psychiatric observations and treatments. Yet lesser lights than Siodmak, Krasner and de Havilland would have struggled to make it work, especially as the romance angle in the screenplay nearly derails the requisite mood come the finale. Thankfully, in spite of some obvious negatives, it's still well worthy of viewing investment. 7/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00