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Woman in a Dressing Gown
Woman in a Dressing Gown

Woman in a Dressing Gown (1957)

64% User Rating
1h 33min
Drama
Romance

A married, middle-aged woman is shocked to discover that her husband, who she thought was content in their marriage, has become infatuated with a beautiful younger woman and is planning to leave his family for her.

J. Lee ThompsonDirector

Cast

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Yvonne Mitchell

Yvonne Mitchell

Amy Preston

Anthony Quayle

Anthony Quayle

Jim Preston

Sylvia Syms

Sylvia Syms

Georgie Harlow

Andrew Ray

Andrew Ray

Brian Preston

Carole Lesley

Carole Lesley

Hilda Harper

Michael Ripper

Michael Ripper

Pawnbroker

Nora Gordon

Nora Gordon

Mrs. Williams

Marianne Stone

Marianne Stone

Hair Dresser

Harry Locke

Harry Locke

Wine Merchant

Olga Lindo

Olga Lindo

Manageress

Melvyn Hayes

Melvyn Hayes

Newsboy

The Movie Database

Max Butterfield

Harold

Roberta Woolley

Roberta Woolley

Christine

Reviews (1)

All Reviews
John Chard
John Chard
Rating 90%

April 17, 2015

The rain falls hard on a humdrum town... Woman in a Dressing Gown is directed by J. Lee Thompson and written by Ted Willis. It stars Yvonne Mitchell, Anthony Quayle and Sylvia Syms, music is by Louis Levy and cinematography by Gilbert Taylor. It's something of an inauspicious title, a title hardly conducive to making this piece of film leap out at you, to shout that it's essential British cinema. How wonderful to find that not only is it a title completely befitting the material being played out, but that it is actually essential British cinema. It's little known and very under seen, in fact myself was only introduced to it by a Canadian friend! The story centers on a London family of three, husband is away earning the corn at the office, teenage son is just starting out in life after school, and mother? She's on housewife auto-pilot, but disorganised with it. Her auto-pilot world is shaken to the core when it is revealed that husband is having an affair with his personal secretary, a smart and beautiful younger sort who is demanding that husband divorces wifey or it's all off... It sounds very kitchen sink, but actually it's not, it's a very smartly written picture giving credence to mental illness, to the shattering blows of infidelity, of a crumbling family dynamic, a family that in truth is homespun. Ordinary? Yes, but safe as the red brick built poky flat they dwell in. We are not asked to take sides here, to chastise or judge, Thompson and his superb cast merely ask us to delve into their world, to understand it, the psychological humdrum of 50s Britain, the starkness of marriage does mean growing old together, but that nobody ever said it was going to be easy. Looking at it now it can be viewed as a very important film in the trajectory of British cinema, Mitchell's character is the fulcrum, making the film a must see as regards the evolution of how women have been represented in Brit cinema through the years. Thompson, better known for tough macho fuelled movies on his CV, does a wonderful job in letting us feel the anguish and emotional turbulence. Hazy camera shots couple up with stark framing of the objects in the cramped flat, all marrying up to the fractured nature of Amy & Jim's marriage. There's even humour to be found, very much so, with Louis Levy's musical cue accompaniments deftly shifting from seething passions to Ealing like comedy as the home life of Amy is scattergun in execution. Kitchen sink, social realist, proto realist and etc? No! This has no pigeon hole to be placed in, it's just terrific film making, from the writing, the performances, the direction and its worth to anyone interested in classic British cinema, this demands to be sought out. And for the record, the last 20 minutes of film will move and invigorate the coldest of hearts. 9/10

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