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In A Lonely Place on DVD (1950)

In A Lonely Place cover art
Average rating: 75%
1111381020511
3.5
from 396 members
 
Starring: Humphrey Bogart, Gloria Grahame, Frank Lovejoy, Robert Warwick, Morris Ankrum, Art Smith, Martha Stewart, Jeff Donnell, Carl Benton Reid
Director: Nicholas Ray
Studio: SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 89 mins
Certificate: PG
User collections: Welcome to the Monkey House, marvellous movie moments, My Top 20, Cinema Fatale
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Released: 27/01/2003

Brief synopsis of In A Lonely Place

A hotheaded Hollywood screenwriter who'd sooner use his fists than his reason and his neighbor who has had her troubles in love and life, are drawn together when he is questioned for murder and she confirms his alibi. But, his volatile nature threatens to destroy their last chance at real love.

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Critics Reviews

Rating of 5 stars out of 5 Radio Times

This dark, gripping film noir is one of the best dramas ever made about the movie industry. Humphrey Bogart stars as the jaded, heavy-drinking Hollywood screenwriter who becomes the prime suspect in the murder of hat-check girl Martha Stewart. In one of the roles of his career, Bogart is both sympathetic and sinister at the same time, a complex character teetering on the brink of destruction. His co-star and soulmate here is Gloria Grahame, then director Nicholas Ray's wife, though the part was specifically written for Bogart's wife, Lauren Bacall, whom Warner Bros refused to loan out.

Time Out

The place is Hollywood, lonely for scriptwriter Dixon Steele (Bogart), who is suspected of murdering a young woman,... Read more on www.timeout.com

Rating of 1 
	  stars out of 4 Halliwell's Film Guide

Curious character melodrama which intrigues without satisfying.

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Members Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsIt goes up to six stars.

A customer from South, London , 05/03/2004

Bogart plays Dix Steel, a jaded Hollywood screenwriter with a mean temper, who gets caught up in a moider. Director Nicholas Ray said of his protagonist 'Every man has within him the seed of his own destruction' and it is classic Noir. Beautifully shot and tragic, it is an existential thriller about a man who can only control his life by sabotaging it. Plus crackling dialogue and great 50's Hollywood characters. Does it get any better?

  8 out of 8 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 4 starsBogart at his very best

Zamy from London [Highly rated reviewer] , 24/05/2005

This film has a very high reputation today as one of the best Hollywood films of the 1950's and one of the best 'noir' films of all time. It was not always so regarded and if you look up the entry in Halliwells you will find that one star is the only acolade it achieves. So who is right? Well, for my money this is certainly the best Bogart performance that I have seen, portraying a complex and flawed figure liable to fits of violence and inner turmoil. And, for the most part, he is well served by Gloria Grahame and the supporting cast. The script is excellent (as far as it goes), the black and white photography compelling and the direction from Nicholas Ray behind the camera is quite wonderful, particularly at illiciting a great performance from his star. For 90 minutes we are held spellbound in the ribbon of dreams (and nightmares) that speed by before us. But, and oh yes there is a but, this is not the incisive dissection of the Hollywood movie machine that some commentators suggest. For a start, and fully in keeping with the spirit of 'film noir', the cast of characters is not large enough. We get little sense of a wider world of Hollywood beyond the concerns of a murder and its aftermath. We get no insight into the movie 'pitch' or the real place of a screenwriter like Bogart's Dixon Steele in the movie machine. We come across one director, one agent and a few actors, one of them a rather stereotyped British alcoholic has-been probably based on John Barrymore. These rather cardboard cut-out characters move the story along with bright, brittle dialogue and little else. So what, you may say, it's still a great movie. And so it is, great 'film noir', not a great film about the world of Hollywood film-making.

  4 out of 5 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsBogie at his best.

john evans from cardiff,wales. , 25/05/2004

A writer with a violent temper and a record of assaulting friend or foe is suspected of murder by everybody.Except his new found love but even she starts geting scared when she sees how nasty he can be.Well written,brilliantly acted fantastic movie.

  2 out of 3 people found this review helpful
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Rated - 3 starsNicely noir

barbi [Highly rated reviewer] , 17/10/2007

Not maybe one of the best known Bogart movies, but a very good one for all that. As hard-boiled screenwriter Dix Steele, his aggression makes us perhaps dislike him, feel a little bit afraid but when his neighbour Laurel Gray – a good strong performance from Gloria Grahame – sees beyond that and falls in love with him, we start to have some sympathy for him. Is he the murderer that the police captain believes him to be, or is he an innocent caught up in someone else’s crime? It does keep you guessing till close to the end but by that time the murder isn’t the most important thing. That’s the relationship between Dix and Laurel and the director handles it very well.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsNicely noir

barbi [Highly rated reviewer] , 17/10/2007

Not maybe one of the best known Bogart movies, but a very good one for all that. As hard-boiled screenwriter Dix Steele, his aggression makes us perhaps dislike him, feel a little bit afraid but when his neighbour Laurel Gray – a good strong performance from Gloria Grahame – sees beyond that and falls in love with him, we start to have some sympathy for him. Is he the murderer that the police captain believes him to be, or is he an innocent caught up in someone else’s crime? It does keep you guessing till close to the end but by that time the murder isn’t the most important thing. That’s the relationship between Dix and Laurel and the director handles it very well.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful
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Rated - 5 starsIt goes up to six stars.

A customer from South, London , 05/03/2004

Bogart plays Dix Steel, a jaded Hollywood screenwriter with a mean temper, who gets caught up in a moider. Director Nicholas Ray said of his protagonist 'Every man has within him the seed of his own destruction' and it is classic Noir. Beautifully shot and tragic, it is an existential thriller about a man who can only control his life by sabotaging it. Plus crackling dialogue and great 50's Hollywood characters. Does it get any better?

  8 out of 8 people found this review helpful
Report offending content.

Read all highest rated reviews