: Instead of fleeing, Myra uses her skills as a playwright to "write" a real-life revenge script, setting a complex trap to outmaneuver her husband and his mistress. Cinematic Style & Technical Mastery
Director David Miller and cinematographer Charles Lang created a visually arresting experience that critics from Film Comment note is marked by its "intensity" and lack of wasted shots. Sudden Fear (1952) - Film Comment Sudden fear (1952)
The story follows Myra Hudson (Crawford), a successful, wealthy Broadway playwright who rejects actor Lester Blaine (Jack Palance) for a romantic lead in her new play because he doesn't "look like a romantic leading man". : Instead of fleeing, Myra uses her skills
Released in 1952, is a high-water mark of film noir, remembered for its tense psychological atmosphere and for being the vehicle that earned Joan Crawford her third and final Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. Plot Overview Released in 1952, is a high-water mark of
: On a train bound for San Francisco, Blaine charms his way into Myra's life to prove her wrong. The two enter a whirlwind romance and quickly marry.