| The Other Woman | |
|---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster  | |
| Directed by | Hugo Haas | 
| Screenplay by | Hugo Haas | 
| Produced by | Hugo Haas | 
| Starring | Hugo Haas Cleo Moore John Qualen Jan Arvan Lance Fuller  | 
| Cinematography | Eddie Fitzgerald | 
| Edited by | Robert S. Eisen | 
| Music by | Ernest Gold | 
Production company  | Hugo Haas Productions  | 
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox | 
Release date  | 
  | 
Running time  | 81 minutes | 
| Country | United States | 
| Language | English | 
The Other Woman is a 1954 American film noir written, directed and produced by Hugo Haas. Haas, Cleo Moore and John Qualen starred in the film.[1]
Plot
After aspiring actress Sherry Stewart auditions for director Walter Darman but doesn't get the part, she decides to blackmail him.
Sherry and her boyfriend Ronnie cook up a scheme, drugging Darman's drink, lying to him later that he and Sherry had become intimate, then threatening to tell his wife unless Darman comes up with $50,000.
Darman decides to confront Sherry directly, but tempers flare and he strangles her to death. His wife Lucille chooses an inopportune time to confront the actress herself, finding the body. A police inspector suspects the truth and Darman's guilty conscience eventually forces him to confess.
Cast
- Hugo Haas as Walter Darman
 - Cleo Moore as Sherry Stewart
 - Lance Fuller as Ronnie
 - Lucille Barkley as Mrs. Lucille Darman
 - Jack Macy as Charles Lester
 - John Qualen as Papasha
 - Jan Arvan as Police Inspector Collins
 - Karolee Kelly as Marion
 
Reception
Critical response
Film critic Dennis Schwartz dismissed the film as "...a dull film noir, suffering from an unconvincing plot, and dry acting."[2] Cinema scholar Milan Hain is much more sympathetic to the film. "The Other Woman is Haas' most ambitious film, with many themes and motifs mirroring his own career: life in exile characterized by disillusionment and entrapment, loss of one's identity and social status, hopeless struggle with the Hollywood machinery, and the impossibility of fully realizing one's artistic visions."[3]
References
- ↑ The Other Woman at IMDb .
 - ↑ Schwartz, Dennis, film review, Ozus' World Movie Reviews. March 28, 2013.
 - ↑ Hain, Milan, "Hugo Haas. Forgotten Émigré", Noir City, Winter 2012. November 22, 2016
 
External links
- The Other Woman at IMDb
 - The Other Woman at AllMovie
 - The Other Woman at the TCM Movie Database
 - The Other Woman informational site and essay by Mark Fertig
 - The Other Woman film scene on YouTube
 
