The Velvet Touch

July. 13,1948      NR
Rating:
6.8
Trailer Synopsis Cast

After accidentally killing her lecherous producer, a famous actress tries to hide her guilt.

Rosalind Russell as  Valerie Stanton
Leo Genn as  Michael Morrell
Claire Trevor as  Marian Webster
Sydney Greenstreet as  Capt. Danbury
Leon Ames as  Gordon Dunning
Frank McHugh as  Ernie Boyle
Walter Kingsford as  Peter Gunther
Dan Tobin as  Jeff Trent
Lex Barker as  Paul Banton
Nydia Westman as  Susan Crane

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Reviews

Kattiera Nana
1948/07/13

I think this is a new genre that they're all sort of working their way through it and haven't got all the kinks worked out yet but it's a genre that works for me.

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Listonixio
1948/07/14

Fresh and Exciting

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Limerculer
1948/07/15

A waste of 90 minutes of my life

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Bluebell Alcock
1948/07/16

Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies

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seymourblack-1
1948/07/17

The star of this movie (Rosalind Russell) and its producer (who was also Russell's husband), created "Independent Artists Ltd" and for their first production, selected a story about a murder that was committed because of the conflict that existed between a top actress and her producer!! Fortunately, this wasn't autobiographical and provided the basis for an entertaining melodrama that features a colourful collection of characters, a wonderfully witty script and an on-going sense of tension that's created because of the circumstances of the murder and its unexpected repercussions. Guilt, jealousy and bitterness are just a few of the emotions that fuel the passions of the story's main characters and ensure that what takes place behind the scenes at a Broadway theatre, is every bit as the dramatic as anything that takes place on stage.For the last ten years, top Broadway star Valerie Stanton (Rosalind Russell) and her producer, Gordon Dunning (Leon Ames) have worked together on a series of light comedies that have all been highly successful. Problems arise, however, when their latest hit comes to the end of its run and Valerie decides that she wants to develop her career by taking on more serious roles. In Gordon's office, the two ex-lovers get into a heated argument because he doesn't want to end their relationship (personally or professionally). In his desperation, he also threatens to reveal some unflattering information about her past which would undoubtedly threaten her current relationship with Michael Morrell (Leo Genn) who's a well-respected architect. As their argument starts to become more physical, Valerie picks up a statuette from Gordon's desk and hits him over the head with it and then, recognising that she's killed him, leaves the theatre shortly after.Marian Webster (Claire Trevor), who had regularly been one of Valerie's co-stars during her association with Gordon, discovers the producer's dead body and is heartbroken because she'd been his lover until Valerie came along and had remained in love with him ever since. Her distress is so great that she immediately falls into a deep state of shock and has to be hospitalised. When the police investigation begins, Captain Danbury (Sydney Greenstreet) is assigned to the case and Marian Webster becomes the prime suspect because her fingerprints are the only ones found on the statuette. Unfortunately, because of her condition, Marian isn't well enough to be questioned by the police and so Danbury pursues his investigation by calling the whole theatre group together to discuss what they knew about what had transpired in Gordon's office. Nothing new seems to emerge from this process and so Marian Webster remains under suspicion and it seems that Valerie's going to get away with murder.During the weeks that follow, Valerie becomes increasingly tormented by the guilt she feels about what's happened to Marian (despite the fact that the two women hate each other) and is also fearful about whether the police will discover that she's Gordon's killer. This makes her rehearsals for Ibsen's "Hedda Gabler" extremely challenging and also makes it uncertain whether she'll ever be able to achieve her ultimate ambition and prove herself as a serious actress.Rosalind Russell and Claire Trevor are both superb in their roles with Russell doing a great job of making her character's anguish recognisable whilst still conducting herself with her usual confidence. Leon Ames is brilliantly cast as the shrewd producer who has some cynical attitudes to the whole notion of love and Leo Genn is incredibly smug as the architect who patronises Valerie from the very first time he meets her. The outstanding performance, however, comes from Sydney Greenstreet who illuminates every scene he's in with his offbeat humour and his ability to convey non-verbally that he consistently knows more than he outwardly acknowledges.

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Poseidon-3
1948/07/18

Following the costly failure of "Mourning Becomes Electra," which Russell and her husband Frederick Brisson had produced themselves, this somewhat more commercial enterprise put the star back in the public's good graces. She plays a highly successful Broadway actress, groomed from youth by producer Ames, who longs to branch out from the romantic comedies she's known for and perform in "Hedda Gabler" for a competitor of his. When Ames responds to her wishes with blackmail threats, a fight ensues and he winds up dead. Fortunately for Russell, no one seems to notice that she was even in Ames' office and she is able to slink out, leaving the blame at another person's doorstep. However, guilt begins to eat away at her and she can't seem to elude Greenstreet, the inspector on the case. Despite the bright promise of a relationship with new beau Genn and the ability to fulfill her dreams on stage, she starts to feel the heat of her inadvertent crime. Russell, looking fine in a series of Travis Banton costumes, gives a dedicated and engrossing performance, despite the presence of a few mannerisms, which would eventually become part and parcel of her repertoire. Genn is smooth and even a bit mysterious. The pair had starred in "Electra" and was deemed to have chemistry enough for another teaming despite that film's box office non-performance. Ames is appropriately commanding, demanding and nasty, yet shows a tad of humanity under all his bravado. Trevor, as a rival for both Ames' attention and the theatre audiences', gives an excellent performance. She won an Oscar this same year for "Key Largo." Russell was wise to let her retain her snarky dialogue and let her have a few moments in the sun as it benefits the film nicely to have a costar of her stature. Greenstreet has fun with his probing character (who enjoys bursts of laughter at unexpected times.) Generally, the cast is made up of above-average actors, which aids the quality of the film and makes it interesting to watch today. Comic veteran McHugh has a small role as a stage manager while attractive newcomers Barker and Hyer have little roles as actors in Russell's current play. Tobin appears as an implied-gay gossip columnist. It's an interesting enough mystery story made more palatable by the sheen of some beautiful sets (not the least of which is the opulent theatre itself, one of the largest sets of its kind), costumes and dramatic lighting. It also contains some entertaining dialogue (pre-dating "All About Eve," which would ratchet the chatter up even further, by two years.) Fans of harmonic men's groups will get a kick out of the title tune, crooned by an unknown gaggle of gentlemen.

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theowinthrop
1948/07/19

Sidney Greenstreet rarely played roles where he was on the side of the law. Casper Gutman set the stamp that Greenstreet would be usually the villain of the piece. But occasionally he is a legal (or quasi-legal) authoritarian figure. Superintendent Grodman of Scotland Yard (THE VERDICT), Sheriff Titus Semple (FLAMINGO ROAD), Solicitor Jerome K. Arbutny (THREE STRANGERS) are all involved in the law, but all cross the line (although Grodman's crimes are actually to punish a man who was responsible for two murders - one a judicial murder - and also to rid the British public of Grodman's incompetent, but overly ambitious successor Superintendent Buckley). Greenstreet also, occasionally, played sleuths. In CONFLICT he is a psychiatrist who realizes that Humphrey Bogart is a killer, and uses psychological warfare to force Bogart to reveal his hand. And here, in THE VELVET TOUCH, he is a police detective in New York City. And he is determined to solve the murder of Broadway Producer Leon Ames.Greenstreet's technique here is like a possible model for Peter Falk's "Columbo". He studies the case, zeros in on the likely suspect, and never gets out of that person's face - turning up all over the place. He can act naturally (like Columbo does) because he loves the theater, and is a fan of Rosalind Russell. She is slowly aware that he is a fan of her talent, but that he is equally determined never to lose sight of his job and his case.THE VELVET TOUCH is an interesting film noir that never quite gets as noir as one would have suspected. Probably the reason is that the stage atmosphere, with it's sexual tensions (between Ames and Russell, Ames and Trevor, Genn and Russell) are all as interesting, as is the stage rivalry between star Russell and rising rival Trevor. So the noir atmosphere does not dominate as much as it normally would.Russell is a leading lady who has had a well publicized romance with big time producer Ames. But he has been showing a cooling down towards her, and it is directed towards Trevor. Russell confronts him, and in the confrontation she kills him. She is able to leave, but (ironically enough) Trevor shows up at the theater at the same time, and this will come back to haunt Trevor. Russell, meanwhile, has started recovering with Leo Genn, and Greenstreet, quietly notes all this. While a whispering campaign circulates against Trevor, Greenstreet keeps up a subtle pressure on Russell that slowly affects her working and emotional relationships. This intrudes in her new dramatic production - she is playing Ibsen's HEDDA GABLA. SPOILER COMING UP.Trevor commits suicide due to the suspicions against her. But Greenstreet is not impressed (unlike the others). He promises to tell his favorite actress his solution to the murder after watching the first night performance as Hedda. As he watches from the wings, Russell sends him a message confessing to the crime. He is obviously expecting that confession. And the play is approaching it's end, when Hedda commits suicide. We watch the conclusion - will Russell actually kill herself now or will she be a trooper in the end?It is an interesting variation for Greenstreet, and gives Russell a rare chance to play a villain. Genn is good too, trying to give the emotional support to the woman he loves but finding her coming apart at the seams because of Greenstreet's relentlessness. In the end it just is too much for him too handle. And Trevor's collapse and destruction is startling - she rarely goes so totally to pieces. The sole weakness in the plot is that Russell's villainy is not as ruthless as most noir villains (although she encourages rumors against Trevor). But the setting up of the cat and mouse plot is sufficient to make this weakness less important than it seems at first sight.

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silverscreen888
1948/07/20

Seldom is it possible to find three unusual elements in the same film; these three I claim are a brilliant part for a female lead, an absorbing and tense duel between heroine and pursuer, and an ethically satisfying excuse for murder. I claim that "The Velvet Touch" presents all three elements quite successfully. It is a very well-directed film, set in theaters, interior rooms and apartments; and I suggest it has one of the simplest story lines of any first-rate film. An actress has been groomed by her mentor-agent-Svengali and has become Broadway's leading comedic star. He wants her to do a new comedy, after her most recent triumph; she wants to do a dramatic play. They quarrel; he threatens to run her reputation, her career, her life, and in a moment of fear an loathing she kills him with a blunt instrument. The remainder of the film consists of the actress's preparation for an achievement of the dramatic triumph she had thought but not been certain she could earn to, even while she is being pursued by a portly and wise police inspector who after her opening night success, which he allows her to complete, escorts her to what the viewer knows will be a trial for murder of some sort. Of course there is a new fiancée, and a woman falsely accused connected with the deceased, but essentially that is the entire storyline. What this narrative does not convey however is the skill with which Sydney Greenstreet plays the deferential but brilliant detective; nor does it hint at the possibilities of the main part, played in this film by Rosalind Russell who brings out many of those potentials. Powerful Leo Genn plays the fiancée, Claire Trevor the other woman suspected of murder and Leon Ames the despicable murder victim. Others in the cast include Frank McHugh, Walter Kingsford, Dan Tobin, Nydia Westman, Bill Erwin and Martha Hyer, among others. The director of the film, Jack Gage, handled the entire project very well; his blocking and photographing of interior scenes makes the action flowq dramatically, and never seemed "staged". Then there are other technical contributions and subordinate creations: Travis Banton's gowns; cinematography by Joseph Walker, set decorations by Darrell Silvera and Maurice Yates and music by Leigh Harline. Miss Russell produced this film for herself with her husband, and she comes close to making it work perfectly in my view. The part, in my judgment as a writer, cannot be "played"; it requires charisma, highly-trained Shakespearean ability in comedy and the equal ability to perform drama; perhaps one actor in a hundred could even approach such a combination. The mood of the piece is somber, the lighting subdued, the B/W photography dense and well-lighted at the same time. This is a very interesting and moving work throughout; we know Valerie did not mean to kill the tyrannical business partner who wanted do dominate her; but her desire to prove that she had been right about playing this dramatic part she had chosen becomes the viewer's importance as well. She is willing to confess to save an innocent accusee; but the play's the thing in "The Velvet Touch". And that she succeeds vindicates her judgment doubly--that the man trying to ruin her life had been wrong and that his brutal manners and lack of ethics were not desperation to save her at all but something far more sinister. A stirring ending caps off a memorable motion picture as Valeris and the Captain of detectives walk from the theater like royalty, not like those involved in a murder.

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