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House by the River (1950)

Posted By: Notsaint
House by the River (1950)

House by the River (1950)
DVD9+DVD5 | VIDEO_TS | PAL | 4:3 | 720x576 | 7300 kbps | 9.4Gb
Audio: English AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subtitles: French optional
01:28:00 | USA | Crime, Drama, Film-Noir, Horror, Thriller

A deranged writer murders a maid after she resists his advances. The writer engages his brother's help in hiding the body, and then watches as the brother becomes the prime suspect.

Director: Fritz Lang
Cast: Louis Hayward, Lee Bowman, Jane Wyatt, Dorothy Patrick, Ann Shoemaker, Jody Gilbert, Peter Brocco, Howland Chamberlain, Margaret Seddon, Sarah Padden, Kathleen Freeman, Will Wright, Leslie Kimmell, Effie Laird, Edgar Caldwell, Edward Clark, Frank Dae, Watson Downs, Edythe Elliott, William Fawcett, Alex Gerry, Ethel Greenwood, Frank Jaquet, Candy McDowell, Judy Sochor, Carl 'Alfalfa' Switzer, George Taylor

House by the River (1950)

House by the River (1950)


Extras: (Disc 1)
- Filmography
- 2 Image Galleries
- Internet Links

Extras: (Disc 2)
- Fritz Lang interviewed by William Friedkin (English with optional French subtitles, 47 min.)
- Interview with Pierre Rissient (French only, 25 min.)
- Interview with Patrick Brion (French only, 26 min.)

House by the River (1950)


IMDb

A straight up Gothic murder scenario with echoes of the 1945 "Spiral Staircase." A family with two brothers at odds with each other is living in a house and one of them is a murderer. And at first only the audience knows who. Their relative isolation on the banks of a wide river means only that they will have little help when danger occurs. The neighbors and police and few and far.

Louis Hayward plays the main character, Stephen Byrne, a writer and a bit of a self-important cad. Hayward has an odd style on film during this era, attractive and likable at first, but with an acerbic humor and some kind of unworkable stiffness, as if you know he's always performing. But he's clever about it, and when you realize he isn't meant to be exactly lovable, he's pretty well cast. Byrne's brother, wife, and maid all come through with solid if uninspired performances, and you wonder exactly what held everyone back. Fritz Lang has many more successful melodramas than this one.

I think the weakness is largely the raw material, the story itself, which is a bit straight forward. One brother commits a murder, the other is drawn into helping cover it up, and then the tensions build between them as an inquest raises questions. It has moments, but there are no further twists that work. The ending is out of character, almost comical in its false (and unlikely) horror.

Along the way, though, are a series of nice scenes, inside the house at night, along the river at night, at a party meant to hide the killer's guilt, and so on. The music is especially helpful in jabbing the audience at key moments. American Georges Antheil was a composer famous for his avant-garde pieces in the 1920s in Europe before settling into a Hollywood routine. You can detect, and appreciate, the edge he brings to the score. The photography by contrast is good without rising up to the possibilities of these kinds of settings–the house, the river, the dock, all have more dramatic potential that we just don't see.

~ secondtake

House by the River (1950)

House by the River (1950)