Woman in Hiding (1950) Poster

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8/10
Lupino imperiled, Duff to rescue: Above-average thriller
bmacv16 March 2002
We first hear Ida Lupino's voice, in sepulchral voice-over, as we watch the wreck of a car that has plummeted over a bridge in North Carolina. "That's my body they're looking for..." she informs us. She's having a bad year; her father has died suddenly in an "accident" in the mill he owned and she up and married its general manager (Steven McNally), whom her father loathed (with reason: McNally killed him). On her wedding night she learned the truth about McNally (who seemed to specialize in deranged, controlling husbands, as in Make Haste to Live), and, trying to flee, found herself in a vehicle which he had rendered brakeless.

She's presumed dead, leaving McNally to inherit the mill (his plan all along), but just to be sure he puts out a reward for finding her. And Howard Duff, a newsstand clerk at a bus station in a nearby town, spots her, now blonde and on the lam. They strike a few sparks, but McNally convinces Duff that Lupino is emotionally disturbed, insuring that she'll be institutionalized and under his thumb.

All in all, Woman in Hiding's title says it all: It's a fairly standard woman-in-distress picture, but one with a superior cast. In addition to the tried-and-true team of Lupino and Duff (they were married at te time), Peggy Dow invests her few brief scenes as a ruthless rival for McNally's attention with memorable flair. The film looks good, too, especially in the darkened mill at the conclusion -- a conclusion which anticipates by a couple of years that of Sudden Fear, in which Joan Crawford fends of a homicidal busband who's got a bad girl on the side. Woman in Hiding is no masterpiece, nor is it one of Lupino's best performances, but it's well made, swift and satisfying.
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7/10
Honeymooning with Ida Lupino
wes-connors1 July 2012
As the opening credits roll, newly wedded Ida Lupino (as Deborah Chandler) desperately tries to stop herself from crashing her car. In an attempted murder, the brakes have been disabled. We see the car drive off a North Carolina bridge and listen to Ms. Lupino's ghostly narration. But don't assume she's dead, or that the accident ends the story… After the prologue fails to uncover a dead body, we begin earlier. Inheriting a profitable mill upon the subsequently suspicious death of her father, Lupino marries the plant's general manager Stephen McNally (as Selden Clark). Apparently, they were a long-term couple; the wedding is the first of several implausible story developments. Lupino asks, "Why didn't I see it?" Don't know...

When they arrive at Mr. McNally's mountain cabin for a honeymoon, sexy Peggy Dow (as Patricia Monahan) is waiting. She reveals herself as McNally's "little business trips" lover and is understandably furious with Lupino's presence. After husband and lover smack each other around, Lupino decides she wants the marriage annulled, but McNally refuses. Lupino runs off, changes her name to "Ann Carter" and tries to hide from her homicidal husband. She meets handsome and helpful Howard Duff (as Keith Ramsey), but he isn't sure who is telling the truth. Beautiful black-and-white photography by William Daniels, effective direction from Michael Gordon and engaging performances make "Woman in Hiding" well worth following.

******* Woman in Hiding (12/27/49) Michael Gordon ~ Ida Lupino, Howard Duff, Stephen McNally, Peggy Dow
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7/10
Killer pursuit
TheLittleSongbird23 August 2020
'Woman in Hiding', when hearing of it through a fellow user recommendation, has the sort of concept that immediately had me sold. Being a fan of the genre (a mix of film noir and crime) and that type of film. While not considering Michael Gordon (my first exposure to him being 'Pillow Talk' and 'Move Over Darling') one of my favourite directors, he didn't fare too badly if not exceptionally in the genre. Both Ida Lupino and Steven McNally have been great in other films.

There may be many other films of the genre or with not too dissimiliar stories, both before and since, that are a lot better than 'Woman in Hiding'. It is still a good example of how good Gordon was at directing film noirs when the material was good, which it generally is here despite being imperfect, and how far he had come on from his "B-movie" period in the early 40s. Both Lupino and McNally come over well, though to me both have been better.

Am going to start with what 'Woman in Hiding' didn't do so well. Some of the story is on the ridiculous side and strains credibility, especially towards the end such as Deborah being that trusting of Patricia. Likewise with the rather vague and foolish motivations and decision making that make the characters at times seem idiotic.

Did feel that the hotel convention scene was not as suspenseful as it should have been and came as too busy and silly.

Having said all of this, 'Woman in Hiding' is a tightly plotted film and does have a dark and tense atmosphere a lot of the time. Did get creeps and chills a fair few times. Despite it going downhill a bit from the hotel convention scene, it does pick up in the climax. Which was not a predictable one and was genuinely anxiety-inducing. Gordon directs in an assured fashion and the script intrigues and entertains enough. All the cast perform expertly, Howard Duff's role does not sound interesting but actually he is a strong sympathetic presence in it. Peggy Dow does very well as Patricia.

Lupino has the most difficult part and plays it with searing intensity and pathos. McNally is genuinely menacing, the character is obvious but his performance does give the creeps. 'Woman in Hiding' is very atmospherically and stylishly photographed and lit, really enhancing especially the mill setting later on. The music is suitably ominous and the sound did give me the jitters without over-emphasising.

All in all, not great but pretty good despite a few frustrations. 7/10
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Manages Its Share of Chills
dougdoepke5 July 2012
It's hard to go wrong with the great Ida Lupino. This thriller's no exception. Deborah's husband (McNally) is ungallantly trying to kill her so he can get his hands on the mill her dead father left her. But she crashes her car into a river trying to get away, and now everyone except hubby thinks she's dead. Cleverly, he offers big bucks to anyone with info on her whereabouts. So well-meaning Ramsey (Duff) thinks he's doing her a favor by contacting the husband with the info. What's a frightened Debbie to do since hubby is one mean, relentless dude.

The movie may not be anything exceptional, but it's got its share of chills, especially the tangled mill scene. That sequence is very well directed for action, and I really like the unexpected wrinkle with Monahan (Dow). Then too, those boisterous conventioneer scenes add noisy color that also proves lucky for Debbie. The woman-in-danger part is one tailor made for the expert Lupino, and she makes it unusually convincing. McNally too, makes a persuasive menace, especially when he's beating the bushes while she cowers beneath. But I do think the script could have come up with a better angle for Debbie & Ramsey's first meet-up since that newsstand gig seems much too tame for a macho actor like Duff.

Anyway, it's a super-slick production from Universal that gets a real lift from Lupino who would go on to film an even better woman-in-danger film the following year, Beware, My Lovely (1952).
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6/10
Effective "lady in distress" tale with Lupino as woman on the run...
Doylenf1 July 2012
As in almost all of these suspenseful melodramas from the '50s, there are certain lapses in logic throughout WOMAN IN HIDING that had me shaking my head in disbelief. Some of the choices that Lupino makes as the vulnerable heroine are too foolhardy to be believable, but once the plot starts rolling there's no turning away.

A particularly bad choice is the scene where she casually gets into a car with Peggy Dow, a scorned woman who is leading her into a trap which brings her right back to the man (Stephen McNally) she is hiding from at a dark and sinister mill.

But despite such motivational flaws, the film manages to be a better than average melodrama with all three leads--Ida Lupino, Howard Duff and Stephen McNally--giving expert performances.

Most effective aspect is the tight pace of the story and the film noir look of the B&W photography. Ida Lupino gives another one of her tense performances as she gets caught up in the excessive manipulations of McNally who is intent on killing her to inherit her father's mill. Howard Duff tries to help once he understands her fears and from that point on the story leaps forward to a satisfying ending involving a trick later used to good effect in Joan Crawford's "Sudden Fear." Not a great film, but a satisfying "lady in distress" melodrama.
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7/10
Hide and seek
jotix10017 July 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Selden Clark, the ambitious manager of a mill in North Carolina, has an interest in getting the business, something that the owner, John Chandler, would never agree to do. Instead, Selden, who has an affair going on with the pretty Patricia Monahan, decides to get rid of his boss by killing him in what appears to be an industrial accident at the plant. Selden then makes a play for Deborah Chandler, the daughter who never liked him, capitalizing on her vulnerability at a crucial time in her life.

As the two get married, Selden proposes a honeymoon up in the mountains. His sole purpose is to kill her as well, thus getting the business all to himself and restart his affair with Patricia again. To Selden's surprise he, and his new bride, find Patricia waiting for them in the cabin. Patricia tries to kill him without success. Things do not go well with his plan to kill Deborah, as she manages to survive the accident her new husband provoked when he rigged the car brakes. Selden, who senses Deborah survives the accident, and is still alive, when her body never surfaces, decides to offer a reward to anyone that will know her whereabouts.

Deborah ends up in Raleigh trying to find Patricia Monahan, to prove that Selden tried to kill her. In the process, she attracts the attention of Keith Ramsey, a former soldier that is working his way to California. When he sees her photograph in a pictorial magazine, Keith gets interested because he has seen Deborah at the newsstand where he is employed. Thinking he is doing her a favor, he calls Selden, who gets confirmation that she is still alive.

Michael Gordon directed "Woman in Hiding", which is based on a novel by James Webb. The material was adapted by Oscar Saul and Roy Higgins. The result is a satisfying film that is seldom seen these days. We were lucky in watching a pristine print recently shown on a cable channel, a DVD transfer, probably. This satisfying drama relies on the strength of the cast that makes it worth a look by serious fans of the genre. Ida Lupino, always delivered, as it is the case here. Her Deborah proves to be a likable heroine because the viewer identifies with her plight. Stephen McNally does a fine job with his Selden, a bad guy that does not get any sympathy. Howard Duff appears as Keith and Peggy Dow as Patricia Monahan.

Veteran cinematographer William Daniels captures in vivid images the work of Michael Gordon. "Woman in Hiding" will not disappoint.
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7/10
There's trouble at mill.
hitchcockthelegend27 September 2017
Woman in Hiding is directed by Michael Gordon and adapted to screenplay by Oscar Saul and Roy Huggins from a story by James Webb. It stars Ida Lupino, Stephen McNally, Howard Duff and Peggy Dow. Music is by Milton Schwarzwald and cinematography by William H. Daniels.

After the mysterious death of her father, a quickfire marriage to a hugely suspicious man, and an attempt on her life, Deborah Chandler Clark (Lupino) is forced to assume a new identity and go into hiding...

No great shakes as regards the plot line, it's a standard woman in peril piece, where we the viewers know what's going on and only really await for what we hope is a punchy resolution to it all. However, overcoming the simplicity of formula, it's a film nicely constructed and performed, with plenty of suspense, tightly wound anticipation and some very pleasing visual accompaniments.

Opening with a guarded voice over from Lupino''s character, mood is nicely set at noir influenced. From here we quickly get to know the principle players and are quickly on Deborah's side. Peril and emotional pain is never far away with Gordon (The Web) and ace photographer Daniels (The Naked City) complicit in mood enhancements. Cue a cabin at nighttime bathed in oppressive moonlight, shadowed window bars striking facial menace - and as Deborah's peril grows greater - an imposing staircase ripe for a dastardly deed, Then we hit the last quarter of film and the quality really shines through. A steam train at night is grand, a splendid setting, but that is just a precursor to the exciting denouement at the deserted mill of Deborah's birthright. Daniels excels, his photography straight out of a noir fever dream, all while the industrial churning of the mill machinery adds impetus to the thrilling conclusion.

It needed more of a black heart as per outcome to be a definitive noir pic, but it comes safely recommended to noir enthusiasts regardless. 7/10
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7/10
melodramatic potboiler
SnoopyStyle28 January 2024
Deborah Chandler (Ida Lupino) assures her mill owner father that she is not marrying dubious plant manager Selden Clark IV (Stephen McNally). Then her father dies in a plant accident. On the day of the funeral, Selden asks her to marry him. She eventually accepts, but suspicion soon arises when distraught Patricia Monahan (Peggy Dow) shows up on their honeymoon.

There are so many red flags. It is probably for the best that the audience doesn't always see him sweet-talk her to ignore those flags. I don't think that I would believe those scenes. I can always ignore what I don't see. This is a nice little melodramatic potboiler. It helps to have Ida Lupino selling the material.
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7/10
Lupino in hiding
blanche-222 February 2021
"Woman in Hiding" from 1950 stars Ida Lupino, Stephen McNally, and Howard Duff.

The film begins with a narration by Lupino, over a scene where police are trying to find her dead body after a car crash.

After her father (John Litel) dies from a fall, Deborah Chandler inherits the successful mill the family owns. She marries the general manager Selden (McNally). On her wedding night, they go to a cottage and find a girlfriend (Peggy Dow) of Selden's who has let herself in with a key.

Deborah then finds out that Selden killed her father. She flees from the cottage, only to find out that Selden, knowing she would do this, has cut the brakes of the car. Deborah jumps out before the car hits the water.

Selden isn't sure she's dead because no body was found; he wants to know for sure so he can inherit the mill free and clear. So he offers a $5000 reward for anyone who can find her. Deborah sees the ad while working in a restaurant and takes off. Passing a beauty salon, she hatches the idea to change her appearance.

Well, this is a not too great part of the story. She reappears with her hair maybe two shades lighter - she keeps calling herself a blonde, but she isn't - no sunglasses, hat, nothing. A man, Keith Ramsey (Duff) running the newspaper counter at the bus station remembers meeting her. When he sees her again, he takes off in pursuit.

Keith manages to earn Deborah's trust. His motives are a little ambiguous. He calls Selden and says he's not totally sure it's his wife, and he seems concerned about her. As Deborah attempts to keep running, things get rough.

Very exciting film with good performances. Lupino gives a strong performance as frightened and vulnerable woman; McNally is good at playing evil; and a young Howard Duff is handsome and charming. As Selden's girlfriend, Peggy Dow is terrific. The screen lost a real beauty as well as a fine actress when she married and retired.

The last ten minutes or so are nerve-wracking. Enjoy.
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10/10
I believe that I have the only copy of this film on tape...
yardbirdsraveup21 July 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This is a little known classic from the film noir era of the '40's and early '50's. I had the privilege of seeing this movie listed in the TV guide only once and that was in the summer of 1984 on one of the local cable stations. Luckily, we had just purchased our first VCR and recorded it for posterity. I can watch this one over and over again without getting tired of it.

It's a simple plot with the usual sex-crime-greed ingredients that were common in these film noirs. And the cast is super! Howard Duff, Ida Lupino, Stephen McNally, John Litel, Peggy Dow and Taylor Holmes round off the principals featured in this movie. Also, look closely for Jerry Paris (of Dick Van Dyke fame)standing by the magazine counter!

Steve McNally plays Selden Clark, manager of a local mill owned by John Litel. McNally has a tryst with Peggy Dow and conspires to get control of the mill by pushing Litel off a catwalk inside the mill, then marrying the owner's daughter (Lupino), bumping her off and living happily ever after with Dow. Being the case with film noir, this doesn't pan out exactly as Selden Clark anticipates! Sure, he marrys the daughter, but she finds out (too late) that this guy is a psychotic bum. She manages to get away from him by stealing away in her 1946 Ford convertible (nice car!), but her brakes don't work due to some mechanical failure caused by her neer-do-well new husband. She manages to leap from the car before it crashes into the river. Everyone thinks that she's dead, but the body can't be found.

Selden is convinced that she's still alive somewhere and puts up a $5,000 reward for anyone who can produce her. Enter Howard Duff. Duff plays the catalyst in this film; at first thinking that she is a victim of amnesia, cheerfully (and alas) returning her to Selden. He then comes to his senses and manages to rescue her from Selden's clutches. It has a happy ending with Duff and Lupino getting married, as they actually did in real life.

It is amazing that this movie continues to be ignored. Many think that Ida Lupino was great in the early '40's in such films as They Drive By Night and High Sierra, but she was actually better by the late '40's and early 50's (The Man I Love, Road House, On Dangerous Ground, Private Hell 36) and was about to earn the distinction of being Hollywood's first female director (The Hitchhiker, The Bigamist, Not Wanted, Outrage). She was an incredible lady.

This chestnut is practically impossible to find even in bootleg form. Like many of the film noirs of this time period, Woman in Hiding continues to be neglected. This film certainly deserves to be recognized and marketed to the unsuspecting public. It seems that I have the only copy in captivity and it's not going to leave my collection any soon! Seriously folks, if you notice this one listed in the TV Guide, make a copy for your own personal collection. You won't be disappointed.
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7/10
Beautiful Ida Lupino
robfollower28 January 2024
It's a well-done "woman in peril" film with a crackerjack opening, as Lupino drives a wildly careening car underneath the opening credits, culminating in the car flying off the road into a river.

The viewer soon learns that Deborah Chandler Clark (Lupino) survived the crash but is hiding from her homicidal hubby Selden Clark (Stephen McNally) Selden had previously pushed Deborah's father (John Litel) off a catwalk at the Chandlers' company , then married Deborah so he could own the business. Deborah learns all this when she and Selden arrive at their honeymoon destination only to find Selden's mistress Patricia Peggy Dow (in her second film which she actually made first but was released later), waiting there, very unhappy that Selden married someone else and ready to let Deborah know just what a mess she's walked into.

Lily James likeness to Peggy Dow is uncanny.

Hostage taking, woman on the run,homme fatale "fatal man" or "deadly man". What more could a Noir fan ask for. A thriller from start to finish. I was always enamored with Ida Luppino . She was an amazing actress, producer and director. Films like this will allow her to live forever. 7/10.

Trivia Collecting an early paycheck on the production was Hollywood newcomer Tony Curtis,
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8/10
It happened one fright
AlsExGal11 February 2024
Where has this movie been all of my life? It's a great noir. Deborah Chandler (Ida Lupino) is planning a long term trip to New York. Her dad (John Litel) owns the mill in Clarksville - A huge source of employment for the town. Seldon Clark IV (Steve McNally) is the general manager of the mill and has matrimonial aspirations towards Deborah, but Deborah's dad holds him in low esteem. He sees him as the same as the previous Seldon Clarks - headstrong dreamers with a flair for the melodramatic.

Just before Deborah can leave for New York, her father dies in an accident at the mill. This causes her to get closer to Seldon and they marry a few months later. On their honeymoon an angry past paramour of Seldon's shows up at their honeymoon cabin - she's obviously been there before with Seldon - and pretty much sows tons of doubt into Deborah's mind about Seldon's motives. A car accident with Deborah as the driver and lone passenger follows, and she believes it was a murder attempt by Seldon, so she decides to stay "dead".

Seldon has choreographed this entire thing out carefully, but the authorities not being able to find the body makes him wonder if Deborah isn't still alive. He puts out an ad in papers across the nation offering a five-thousand-dollar reward if she is found. His clever plan has been to claim Deborah was not in her right mind when she dashed off on their wedding night in their car, that her death was a suicide, and that if she is alive, she is still mentally unstable - Just so nobody would believe her and so that he can commit her and get control of her estate and thus the mill.

Enter stage left Howard Duff as a semi employed drifter who sees Deborah, sees the reward offer, and from her strange behavior genuinely believes she is a danger to herself and that Seldon has only her interest at heart - at first.

This was a great noir with a good use of score and cinematography to build tension. It casts against type in that Peggy Dow is not playing a good girl here and Howard Duff plays a well meaning character for once. I have to credit the film for taking place in the south without having the entire cast sound and act like they are something out of a Tennessee Williams play. Highly recommended and hard to find.
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7/10
Last Train To Clarksville
boblipton30 January 2024
Mill owner John Litel dies in an accident. Or was it? After the manager, Stephen McNally, marries Litel's daughter, Ida Lupino, he tries to kill her. At first he thinks he has succeeded, but when counter clerk Howard Duff spots the terrified picture in a magazine story and at the bus station where he works, he follows her, and informs McNally.

Miss Lupino is excellent in the role as she was in almost everything she played. She was not terribly interested in making this picture; she was already more interested in working behind the camera than in front of it. Still, she offered her usual professional performance, despite being cast against Duff, whom she did not like. Soon enough, they were married. With Peggy Dow and the ubiquitous Irving Bacon.
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4/10
There's trouble at the old mill.
bombersflyup14 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Woman in Hiding is a bit too much daytime drama level and doesn't really hold water, it's watchable.

The biggest problem's Stephen McNally's character Selden Clark, he's one-note and overdone. Yet both these ladies fall in love with him, when he's the same throughout. Ida Lupino's fine, nothing moving. The characterization of Keith and the acting chops of Howard Duff are the highlight, but the character's one stupid action ruins it. She said she was attacked the day after he made the phone call and he didn't put two and two together and sets her up, it's just luck for that guy to run into him and say those things. It's also silly for her to go to Patricia Monahan for help. The ending's odd too.. why's this Monahan girl even going up there and Clark reacting like that.
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Last train to Clarksville?
dbdumonteil12 April 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Excellent movie full of suspense ,action-packed story with first-class actress Ida Lupino -who directed herself an excellent film noir:"the hitch hiker" 1953.

In the first minutes ,you do think that it's a corpse that is speaking and that the movie will be a long flashback ,à la "Sunset Blvd" .The flashback is actually relatively short and then begins a long chase .This is really an absorbing tale which involves stairs where you jump or where you're pushed ,trains running in the night to put you away,people you try to trust and who betray you,people who try to help you but might ruin you.All that makes a thriller exciting.Recommended
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6/10
The movie is a little better second time around but it stilll kind of dragss
jordondave-2808530 January 2024
(1950) Woman in Hiding THRILLER/ PSYCHOLOGICAL

Adapted from Saturday Evening Post Serial "Fugitive from Terror" by James Webb, that opens with a young lady driving, narrating to herself before going over the bridge into the rushing river. As she is narrating her story when authorities are searching for her body that was supposed to be in the car, as it the movie backtracks how it all came about. Centers on the daughter, Deborah Chandler Clark (Ida Lupino) as she comes to visit her father of the owner of a wood mill, John. Standing by noticing her is also the general manager of the mill, Seldon Clark IV (Stephen McNally) as he continues to profess his love for her. And he follows her as she is heading toward her dad's office to inform him of her plans to move to New York. And Seldom becomes upset when he wasn't notified about her intended departure. And it was obvious from the get-go that Deborah's dad, John does not approve about the relationship between his daughter and Seldom. And upon the next day/ morning, just as she is leaving the household with her luggage, Deborah wanted to say goodbye to her dad first but is unable to reach her dad upon attempting to call him. Both Lucius (Taylor Holmes) the executor of her dad's estate and Seldon Clark then show up at her doorstep to inform her that her dad had an unfortunate accident that resulted to his death. Seldom then manages to convince her to marry him so that she would be named "Mrs" Seldom Clark. And it is not long before she realizes he married her for false pretenses, upon meeting one of his former flames, Patricia Monahan (Peggy Dow) from the small town of Raleigh, waiting for them at the supposedly abandoned lodge cabin owned by Selden. And after Deborah had some words with Patricia, is when she begins to realize that the death of her dad may not be an accident but that it was cold blooded murder, that in order to take full control of the mill was the reason he married her in the first place and not because he was in love with her. And after locking herself in her room, she manages to sneak out of the lodge to drive away, except that it was part of Seldom's plan for her to do that, which while Deborah was driving she begins to realize that her brakes do not work at all, forcing her to open the door and jump out, before the car went over the bridge into the river. We then see Deborah looking overhead as authorities and volunteers are searching for her body as it is nowhere to be found. That their could be a slim chance she could be alive. We find out Deborah had made the decision she does not want to be found-hence the title "Woman in Hiding" as she decided she wants to meet the scorned lady she met earlier with the only thing she knows of her is her name Patricia and that she is from a town name Raleigh.

The next thing we know, in order to prevent her from getting caught, she would then need to change her name to Annie Carter she eventually meets and strike up a relationship with the son of an owner of a small news stand, Keith Ramsey (Howard Duff). While Seldon Clark puts out ads since she believes she is still alive as the executor made him realize he does not have full control of the mill unless her body has been found.

I did not like it so much after my first viewing but it could be the result of watching bits and pieces whenever it was on TCM. But after seeing it again on Noir Alley and listening to Eddie Muller that the movie is not half as bad as I made it to be. After the interesting set up, the movie kind of drags a little after that when Keith Ramsey refused to believe her, there were many things she could have done such as see a lawyer if she does not trust the police to believe her the husband wants her dead. . Keep the ring and then pawn it as her husband would not care anyway. She also could have call the executor of her dad's estate, Lucius and take her husband's name off the will and as general manager.
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7/10
Love that Ida Lupino
moviemik-314 April 2024
#265moviwreview

Terrific blend of melodrama and noir, this film doesn't have any surprises but the sturdy direction by Michael Gordon and terrific performances by the always great Ida Lupino good Stephen McNally, good Howard Duff and the terrific Peggy Dow make this worth a watch.

The ending is a bit lazy and during a climactic fight scene, it's kind of a mistake in showing the stunt men's faces in closeup.

But, seeing Joe Besser 7 years before Stoogedom saying "stop crowding me" is worth a watch.

Fun fact: Lupino and Duff got off to a rocky start. She thought he was obnoxious. Obviously their time on screen made their relationship blossom since they got married in 1951.

WATCH IT

3.5/5.
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9/10
Don't Hide from "Woman in Hiding" ***1/2
edwagreen7 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Ida Lupino again proved what a competent actress she was in this taut 1949 thriller. She was always at her best when she played emotionally wrought women, and as always, she delivered quite well here.

The problem here was with the performance of Stephen McNally. He just wasn't menacing enough. He did have that evil eye, but there was little force by him to back up the nature of his character.

So much can happen in one day-Lupino leaving for N.Y. only to be interrupted by her father's sudden death. McNally proposing to her on that very day and when they do wed, the appearance of another woman at his cottage-nicely played by Peggy Dow-lets the plot unravels regarding whether or not Lupino's father, who let McNally manage the firm, despite disliking him died accidentally or was pushed.

Meeting up with Howard Duff during her attempt to flee is interesting as Duff unwittingly plays into the hands of McNally's character.

The ending scene is exciting and the picture is basically Lupino's performance as a victimized woman who will have to get people to believe what is actually happening.
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9/10
Ida's Intense Performance Raises This Above Average Thriller!!!
kidboots23 August 2012
Warning: Spoilers
In 1949 Ida Lupino had collaborated on an original story "Not Wanted" but things didn't go to plan, the director became sick and Ida stepped in to finish it herself. After that she was happy to go over to Universal-International for the suspenser "Woman in Hiding" taken from a Saturday Evening Post serial "Fugitive From Terror" by James R. Webb. She also met Howard Duff, a radio ("Sam Spade") and stage actor who had been in movies since 1946. He had replaced Ronald Reagan who had fractured his thigh and he also became Ida's new husband.

This thriller gets off to a top gear start over the credits when Ida Lupino as Deborah Clarke, attempts to drive down a steep mountain road in a car whose brakes have been disabled. When the car plunges into the river and all seems lost Deborah's voice over begins a flashback as she accuses the seemingly grieving husband, Seldon Clark (Stephen McNally) of murder!!!

Deborah is going to New York as she is fed up with Seldon's inattentiveness and her father has no time for him either, he says he comes from a long line of people he has no reason to be proud of. But Seldon has a determined mania to build up his once prosperous family name and make it great again. On the morning of her departure word comes that her father has had a fatal fall from the factory and, not surprisingly, Seldon is there to pick up the pieces.

When the couple arrive at their honeymoon cabin they are met by Patricia (Peggy Dow), Seldon's cast off mistress and the way he attacks her should make Deborah have second thoughts. It is a highly dramatic scene as she tells Deborah a few home truths about her upstanding husband, like why he had been inattentive to her early on and even raising suspicions about her father's death. Deborah manages to run to the car but almost too late she realises she is soon to become Seldon's second victim.

Ida Lupino's intense displays of fright and fear really carry this movie off. There is a splendid scene in a stairwell. Deborah has met Keith Ramsey (Duff), a college man working at a magazine counter, and really begins to trust again. Unfortunately Keith has seen an ad in the paper where her husband is begging for information about his "poor deranged wife" and Deborah's erratic behaviour has Keith believing in Seldon's story. He telephones Seldon giving him Deborah's location and suddenly Seldon is there, in the middle of a salesmen's convention, cornering her in a lonely stairwell. It is really a thrilling scene as McNally proved in "Johnny Belinda" he could be an unspeakable villain and he really lets all stops out when he is trying to throw Deborah down the stairs. Another great scene involves the climax which takes place at night in her father's factory. Deborah is fleeing an ambulance which has been ordered to take her to the local mental hospital. She hopes that with Patricia's help (after all she did witness Seldon's treatment of her in the cabin) she will have enough evidence to put Seldon in prison, but Patricia is still not over her infatuation of him.

Although Ida puts both McNally and Duff in the shade, beautiful Peggy Dow makes the most of her scenes as the deluded Patricia. Dow could have been a major star, she was beautiful and sultry and proved in this movie, only her second, that she could handle dramatic scenes with verve but within a year she had retired for married life.
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5/10
One Note Onslaught of Jangled Nerves and Jitters
LeonLouisRicci10 August 2012
This film is wound a bit too tight for its own good. Mostly because of the incredibly intense performance from Ida Lupino who manages to almost melt the screen. It is a relentless one-note onslaught of jangled nerves and jitters.

What's needed here is a contrasting scene or two to let things settle a little. There are some good moments but the anxious anxiety quickly destroys the drama and we are off to the races once again. The hotel convention scene is almost unbearable in its loud and ridiculous rendering of a confrontational setup that is suppose to be suspenseful and claustrophobic.

The ending looks ominous enough and the factory setting has a film-noir feel that is missing in most of the film and the subtlety of shadows would have been a welcome relief from the persistent, pulsating, and predictable performances.
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8/10
Forgotten gem
jamesjustice-9222 August 2019
To begin with I never liked noir genre and thankfully this movie has only got a small portion of it - all the rest consists of a gorgeous drama, chilling thriller and a romance that happened unintentionally and all the three genres perfectly blend together making it one of the best movies in its genre which is unfairly forgotten now. Ida Lupino is an absolute master and her stunning performance has been playing the first fiddle throughout the whole movie, not allowing us to leave it in peace. "Woman in hiding" keeps you guessing until the very end, it hints, gives clues to what might happen but you can never really be sure what exactly and this is the best thing about movies in general as an art. For me, unfortunately, this is a one-time movie as I don't really like paperthin storylines and no subtext but it was a brilliant ride anyway.
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9/10
Film Noir at its best!
JohnHowardReid1 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Ida Lupino (Deborah Chandler Clark), Howard Duff (Keith Ramsey), Stephen McNally (Seldon Clark), Peggy Dow (Patricia Monahan), John Litel (John Chandler), Taylor Holmes (Lucius Maury), Peggy Castle (waitress), Michael Gordon (man with locker key), Irving Bacon (Pop), Don Beddoe, Joe Besser (salesmen), Stanford Jolley.

Director: MICHAEL GORDON. Screenplay: Oscar Saul. Adapted by Roy Huggins from a magazine serial by James R. Webb. Photography: William Daniels. Film editor: Milton Carruth. Music: Frank Skinner. Art directors: Bernie Herzbrun, Robert Clatworthy. Producer: Michel Kraike.

Copyright 17 March 1950 by Universal. New York opening at Criterion: 22 February. U.K. release: 27 February. Aust.: 27 October. 92 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Bride flees her murderous husband.

COMMENT: Photographed by master illusionist William Daniels in true film noir style (reflected even in the movie's still photos), Woman in Hiding is an oddly neglected little masterpiece. True, director Michael Gordon does not rate highly with current cineastes, but his thrillers are all worthy of attention and this one rates as his best. Action highs are staged in a most imaginative manner, and all the players come across brilliantly.
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5/10
Lame, implausible flick
nomad47200230 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This review is replete with spoilers. The plot-line of this movie is ridiculous. It begins with the car going into the drink, and the voice-over saying something like, "They think I'm dead. I'll have to stay 'dead'". Why? Why not come forward and tell everyone what has happened? She thinks they won't believe her? A quick examination of the car will reveal that it's been tampered with.

Another major plot hole is where she flees to another town and then acts like Richard Kimble. She hasn't committed any crime, so why is she so afraid of everyone, especially the police? Then, the husband manages to convince the fellow who's been dogging her that she is "ill". Why is Duff so ready to believe that she is "ill"? I suppose it's understandable, since no one has ever murdered a spouse for gain.

Then, when the husband finally gets his clutches on her, he informs her that he is going to put her in an institution, because she is "ill". It can't be that easy to put someone in an institution just because it is to someone else's benefit.

The whole thing is a crock.
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What a pack of idiots!
ivegonemod8 July 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This movie was going really good, and I do love Ida Lupino, but after Deborah flees her her husband on their honeymoon; it is a down hill mess. Everybody besides the husband thinks that she's dead, he goes to search for her to make sure that she actually is dead shortly after the "accident", he wants to make sure that she never tells about him having possibly murdered her father in order to marry her and get control of the mill. This is something that she learns from his supposedly ex-girlfriend on their honeymoon. What bugs me is that while he is searching the woods for her with his flashlight, she keeps getting up from her hiding spot and moving around and making noise. Can't she just wait until she's sure he's gone? Every time she steps on a branch he comes back to look again, but she keeps making noise! Obviously if Deborah had an ounce of sense she would go straight to the police when she's able, but it's just as obvious that she can't do that because then there would be no movie. Deborah is an idiot. She meets a man who works at a newspaper stand who is even stupider than she is. This guy eventually thinks he recognizes her from the newspaper articles that the husband had written up offering a big cash reward for her return; since they didn't find a body he can't rest until he's sure she won't be trouble.

The newspaper guy follows Deborah around getting to know her, or at least the fake her otherwise known as Ann Carter. She's going to hide out until she can find the ex-girlfriend to corroborate her story about the husband being a murderer instead of going to the police! The nice newspaper guy thinks that he's helping by calling the reward number and telling the husband that Deborah is indeed alive and is mixed up and confused and needs help. What business is this of his? Why would you do that? It wasn't about the reward. So the husband finds Deborah and tries to kill her but fails. Finally Deborah tells newspaper guy that she's on the run from crazy husband and needs his help. What does he do? He calls the husband again and sets Deborah up! She thinks they are getting on a train to escape but the husband is waiting for her on the train, she has been hand delivered by the helpful newspaper guy; otherwise known as meddling idiot. Of course not shortly after newspaper guy realizes his mistake and tries to fix things. More nonsense ensues. The ex-girlfriend is now back with the husband and sets Deborah up to be killed at the mill. The ex-girlfriend is accidentally killed by boyfriend who thinks he's killing his wife. Then he kills his on self by accident. Every main character in this stupid movie deserved to die! How Deborah could take up with the newspaper guy in the end is beyond me, but Deborah is slow and stupid so I should not be surprised.
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9/10
Film Noir Par Excellence
pgeary60019 March 2024
As the film begins, the viewer will feel he is one step ahead of the plot. But this notion is quickly dispelled as a number of twists and turns keep things fresh in the excellently plotted screenplay (based on a serial in the Saturday Evening Post).

Ida Lupino is her usual excellent self and Howard Duff exudes a casual charm that is thoroughly winsome. But what really sets this project head and shoulders above many similar efforts is the fantastically moody lighting in the extended action sequence at its conclusion. A whole series of beautifully framed and lit shots are so expertly rendered it almost became a distraction for me from the unfolding action.

Secondary performances are uniformly excellent and by the time of the end credits I was completely won over. Great fun, expertly crafted.
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