Niagara (1953) Photos, Movie Still, Photos, Monroe

Niagara (1953) Movie Poster
- Director:
Henry
Hathaway
- Genre: Thriller
- Movie Type:
Film Noir, Psychological Thriller
- Themes: Treacherous
Spouses, Crumbling Marriages, Infidelity
- Main Cast:
Marilyn Monroe, Joseph Cotten, Jean Peters, Casey Adams, Denis O'Dea
- Release
Year: 1952
- Country: US
- Run
Time: 89 minutes
-

Plot
Belated honeymooners Polly (Jean
Peters) and Ray Cutler (Casey
Adams) arrive at their Niagara Falls cottage only to find that Rose
(Marilyn
Monroe) and George Loomis (Joseph
Cotten) have not yet checked out. Though the Cutlers temporarily
take another cabin, the lives of the two couples are bound together for
the next two days. Polly discovers that Rose is having an affair and
that George, though emotionally unstable, has good reason for his
jealous rage. George accurately suspects that Rose openly flaunts her
sexuality to make him act crazy in front of witnesses. This is part of
Rose's plan: her lover Patrick (Richard Allan) will kill George and make
it look like suicide or a disappearance. Instead, George kills Patrick,
and he returns to kill Rose, but finds Polly instead. As she had been
sympathetic to him, he asks her not to tell anyone that he is alive so
he can simply disappear. But, realizing that he wants to kill Rose,
Polly informs the police. What follows is escalating terror, with George
stalking Rose, Rose desperately trying to leave town, the police
searching for both of them, and finally George and Polly adrift in a
boat heading for the precipice. In Henry
Hathaway's Technicolor film noir, Niagara Falls serves as an apt
metaphor for the destructive power of out-of-control carnal and
murderous obsessions. ~ Steve Press, All Movie Guide
Review
Launched with a memorable ad campaign featuring water cascading over Marilyn
Monroe's curvaceous body, Niagara helped to cement Monroe's status
as a box office draw. It also afforded her the chance to play a
change-of-pace part. While the character still uses sexuality in an
overt manner, she's no dumb blonde. Conniving and cold-blooded, the role
calls for Monroe to sacrifice her famous vulnerability, using it only
to manipulate the others around her rather than the audience, and she
comes through in spades. While her performance lacks a great deal of
variety, that's essentially due to flaws in the script and character. Joseph
Cotten turns in another of his intense, dark and disturbed
portrayals, and while he too is hampered by the script, it's an
effective performance. The lack of dimension in the characters is
regrettable but not overly damaging, as director Henry
Hathaway keeps the tension high, even during some moments when the
credibility of the situation is in question. Most memorable are the
stalking sequence in the clock tower and the finale, both of which are
exciting and very well handled. Most importantly, the film makes great
use of the falls themselves, both in a "travelogue" sense and in terms
of using the location to create and maintain atmosphere. Too flawed to
be the kind of Hitchcockian thriller it aspires to be, Niagara
nevertheless provides solid chills and entertainment. ~ Craig Butler,
All Movie Guide
Richard Allan - Patrick; Don
Wilson - Mr. Kettering; Lurene
Tuttle - Mrs. Kettering; Russell Collins
- Mr. Qua; Will
Wright - Boatman; Lester
Matthews - Doctor; Carleton
Young - Policeman; Sean
McClory - Sam; Minerva
Urecal - Landlady; Nina Varela - Wife;
Tom Reynolds - Husband; Neil
Fitzgerald - Customs Officer; Norman McKay
- Morris; George
Ives - Carillon Tower Guide; Pat
O'Moore - Detective; Henry
Beckman - Motorcycle Cop; Harry
Carey, Jr. - Taxi Driver; Gloria
Gordon - Dancer; Arch
Johnson - Taxi Driver; Marjorie
Rambeau - Bit; Willard
Sage - Motorcycle Cop; Robert Ellis - Young
Man; Bill Foster - Young Man; Gene
Wesson - Guide
Credit
Maurice
Ransford - Art Director,
Lyle
Wheeler - Art Director,
Dorothy
Jeakins - Costume Designer, Gerd
Oswald - First Assistant Director, Henry
Hathaway - Director, Barbara
McLean - Editor, Sol
Kaplan - Composer (Music Score), Lionel
Newman - Musical Direction/Supervision, Haven Gillespie - Songwriter, Ben
Nye, Sr. - Makeup, Joe
MacDonald - Cinematographer, Charles
Brackett - Producer, Stuart
A. Reiss - Set Designer, Ray Kellogg - Special Effects, W.D. Flick - Sound/Sound
Designer, Roger
Heman - Sound/Sound Designer, Charles
Brackett - Screenwriter,
Richard
L. Breen - Screenwriter,
Walter Reisch - Screenwriter




