Film Review
It is hard to know which is the greater attraction in this compelling
noir-style thriller, Marilyn Monroe or Niagara Falls. Both are
potent forces of nature, tempestuous and alluring, and both are
stunningly photographed (in glorious Technicolor) in a way that captures their mystique, beauty
and raw sensuality. A major box office hit, this film pretty well
secured Monroe's place
as a Hollywood A-lister, although it would take a few more films before
her acting skills matched her photogenic appeal and charisma.
Whilst Monroe steals just about every scene she appears in (and who
wouldn't in that spectacular magenta dress?), the film's focus and
dramatic intensity are provided by more experienced, albeit less
glamorous, players, Joseph Cotten and Jean Peters. With its
predictable storyline and slightly clichéd characterisation,
Niagara was never going to be a
masterpiece, but director Henry Hathaway makes the absolute best of the
material he has to work with. The film is stylishly shot,
exciting where it needs to be, and
makes good use of its exotic location. The Niagara Falls setting is not only essential to
the plot but it also provides an apt metaphor for the uncontrollable
deadly passions to which the protagonists fall prey.
© James Travers 2009
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Next Henry Hathaway film:
23 Paces to Baker Street (1956)
Film Synopsis
Ray and Polly Cutler arrive at Niagara Falls, where they hope to spend
their belated honeymoon in peace. The holiday gets off to a bad
start when they learn that their cottage is occupied by another couple,
George and Rose Loomis. While Rose flaunts her obvious feminine
charms to anyone who cares to look, George skulks in the background,
tormented by depression, paranoia and bouts of anger. Unbeknown
to her husband, Rose is having an affair with another man and the two
have concocted a seemingly foolproof plan to put George out of the
way. Sure enough, when George mysteriously disappears, Rose plays
the shocked and anxious wife admirably, until the moment when she is
called upon to identify the body of a recently drowned man. To
her horror, the dead man is not George but her lover...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.