Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use American English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox film
Double Indemnity is a 1944 American film noir directed by Billy Wilder and produced by Buddy DeSylva and Joseph Sistrom. Wilder and Raymond Chandler adapted the screenplay from James M. Cain's novel of the same name, which ran as an eight-part serial in Liberty magazine in 1936.
The film stars an insurance salesman Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray), who plots with a woman (Barbara Stanwyck) to kill her husband in order to claim a life insurance payment, arousing the suspicion of claims manager Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson). The title refers to a "double indemnity" clause which doubles life insurance payouts when death occurs in a statistically rare manner.
The film was nominated for seven Academy Awards. Widely regarded as a classic, Double Indemnity is often cited as having set the standard for film noir and as one of the greatest films of all time.
PlotEdit
Wounded from a gunshot, insurance salesman Walter Neff stumbles late at night into his empty Los Angeles office. He records a dictaphone confession for claims manager Barton Keyes.
One year earlier, Neff flirts with Phyllis Dietrichson during a house call about her husband's automobile insurance. Phyllis asks about getting a policy on Mr. Dietrichson's life without his knowledge. Deducing that she is contemplating murder, Neff wants no part of it but is fascinated with her and struggles with temptation to use his knowledge to outsmart the insurance company. Later, Phyllis visits his apartment, where Neff concocts a plan to have Dietrichson sign a life insurance policy without realizing it, murder him, and frame it as an accident to trigger the policy's double indemnity clause with a higher payout.
Dietrichson signs the policy slipped in as a “copy” of his automotive insurance renewal. Before the murder can take place, Dietrichson unexpectedly breaks his leg, delaying and complicating the scheme. Neff hides in the back seat of Phyllis' car while she drives Dietrichson to a train station. Neff breaks Dietrichson's neck, leaving the dead body in the car with Phyllis, while he boards the train posing as Dietrichson, with a fake plaster cast on his leg. A helpful passenger almost foils the plan, requiring Neff to keep his hat pulled low and face averted; to vacate the observation car, Neff sends him on an errand for cigars. Neff jumps off the train at a pre-arranged spot, where Phyllis helps him stage Dietrichson's body on the tracks.
Neff's boss believes Dietrichson's death a suicide. Keyes, a dogged claims manager proud of his track record in spotting fraud, nevertheless scoffs at the idea he considers statistically implausible. Keyes does find it strange that Dietrichson did not file a claim after breaking his leg. He begins to suspect that Phyllis and an accomplice murdered Dietrichson. Reasoning that Dietrichson was unaware of the policy, Keyes questions Neff, the salesman, who affirms that Dietrichson signed the policy. Based on 11 years of respect and friendship, the ordinarily suspicious Keyes does not question Neff’s account. Meanwhile, Neff befriends Phyllis' stepdaughter, Lola, who has a resentful boyfriend named Nino Zachetti, a medical school dropout for lack of funds. Lola tells Neff that she saw Phyllis trying on mourning clothes several days before Dietrichson's death and that she believes Phyllis, her mother’s nurse during an illness, had killed her mother to marry Dietrichson. Lola now fears that Phyllis plans to kill her next for the money. Neff now begins to see the extent of Phyllis’s manipulations.
Keyes finds the witness from the train’s observation car who says that the man he saw on the train was not the Dietrichson in photos, but fails to recognize Neff, who is present. Neff warns Phyllis that pursuing the insurance claim in court risks exposing the murder, and insists that they should not see each other until the investigation ends. Nino Zachetti has been visiting Phyllis every night since the murder, and Keyes now suspects Nino is her accomplice.
Suspecting that Phyllis is now manipulating Nino to eliminate him and kill Lola, Neff confronts Phyllis and threatens to kill her. Phyllis shoots Neff, but when he comes closer and dares her to shoot again, she does not. She says that she never loved him "until a minute ago, when I couldn't fire that second shot." As they embrace, Neff shoots her twice with her gun. As Neff leaves, he sees Nino walking up to the house. Neff convinces Nino to call Lola and make up with her.
Finishing recording his confession, Neff looks up to see Keyes, summoned by a janitor who saw blood drippings. When Neff asks how long Keyes has been listening, Keyes responds “Long enough.” Asking for a head start, Neff intends to flee to Mexico, but Keyes says he won’t make it to the elevator. Neff collapses in the doorway as Keyes calls for an ambulance and the police, and the two wait for them to arrive. Chuckling ruefully, Neff says that Keyes couldn’t solve this one because the culprit was too close, right across desk. Keyes responds, “Closer than that, Walter.” Walter responds, “I love you, too.”
CastEdit
Template:Cast listing Uncredited
- Raymond Chandler cameo as a man reading a magazine outside Keyes' office as Neff exits
- Bess Flowers as Norton's secretary
- Betty Farrington as Nettie, Dietrichson's maid
- Teala Loring as Pacific All-Risk Insurance telephone operator
- Sam McDaniel as Charlie, Garage Attendant
- Miriam Nelson as Keyes' secretary
- Douglas Spencer as Lou Schwartz, Neff's office mate
- Norma Varden as the secretary who lets Mrs. Dietrichson into the insurance office
ProductionEdit
BackgroundEdit
James M. Cain based his novella Double Indemnity on a 1927 murder perpetrated by Ruth Snyder, married to Albert Snyder, and her lover Henry Judd Gray,<ref name="dvd2">Template:Cite news</ref> who colluded with an insurance agent to obtain a $45,000 policy with a double-indemnity clause without Albert's knowledge and then have him murdered.
Cain had become a popular crime novelist following the publication of The Postman Always Rings Twice in 1934, and Double Indemnity began making the rounds in Hollywood shortly after it was serialized in Liberty magazine in 1936. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Warner Bros., Paramount, 20th Century-Fox, RKO Radio Pictures, and Columbia competed over the rights to adapt Double Indemnity, but the fervor ended when Hays Office censor Joseph Breen warned in a letter to the studios:
The general low tone and sordid flavor of this story makes it, in our judgment, thoroughly unacceptable for screen presentation before mixed audiences in the theater. I am sure you will agree that it is most important...to avoid what the code calls "the hardening of audiences," especially those who are young and impressionable, to the thought and fact of crime.<ref name="Lally">Template:Cite book</ref>
In 1943, Cain's novella was anthologized with two others in Three of a Kind. Paramount's Joseph Sistrom bought the rights for $15,000, envisioning Billy Wilder as the director of an adaptation.<ref name="Lally"/> Paramount resubmitted the novella to the Hays Office and got an identical response as seven years earlier; Paramount then submitted a partial screenplay to the Hays Office. It was approved with three objections about portraying the disposal of a corpse, the gas chamber execution scene, and the skimpiness of the towel worn by the female lead.<ref name="Lally"/><ref name="Phillips">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
Cain felt Joseph Breen owed him $10,000 for vetoing the purchase of the property for $25,000 in 1936.<ref name="Hoo">Template:Cite book</ref>
WritingEdit
The restrictions imposed by the Hays Code made adapting Double Indemnity a challenge. Wilder's writing partner Charles Brackett helped with the treatment before bowing out.<ref name="Dobbs, Lem 2014">Dobbs, Lem (commentary),Redman, Nick (commentary), Wilder, Billy (director). 2014. "Double Indemnity Feature Commentary". Blu-ray DVD. Universal Studios.</ref> Wilder characterized their time apart: "1944 was 'The Year of Infidelities'...Charlie produced The Uninvited...I don't think he ever forgave me. He always thought I cheated on him with Raymond Chandler."<ref name="sikmain"/>
Cain was Wilder's first choice as a replacement for Brackett; Since Cain was working at 20th Century Fox, he was never asked to work on the film.<ref name="Moffat"/><ref name="mcgmain">McGilligan, Patrick (1986). Backstory: Interviews with Screenwriters of Hollywood's Golden Age. Los Angeles: University of California Press. Template:ISBN. p. 125–8</ref> Sistrom suggested Raymond Chandler, whose 1939 novel The Big Sleep he had admired.<ref name="Dobbs, Lem 2014"/>
New to Hollywood, Chandler demanded $1,000 and at least one week to complete the screenplay, not realizing he would be paid $750 per week and that it would take fourteen.<ref name="Moffat">Moffat, Irving. "On the Fourth Floor of Paramount", The World of Raymond Chandler. A&W Publishers, 1977. 43–51.</ref> Wilder characterized Chandler's first draft as "useless camera instruction"; to teach Chandler screenwriting, Wilder gave him a copy of his script for Hold Back the Dawn.<ref name="Lally"/> They did not get along during the next four months. Chandler quit once, submitting a long list of grievances about Wilder to Paramount. Chandler did agree to appear in the film, glancing up from a magazine as Neff walks outside Keyes' office; this is the only professional footage of him.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Chandler and Wilder made considerable changes to Cain's story. Because the Hays Code demanded criminals pay onscreen for their transgressions, the double suicide at the end of the novella was not permissible. The solution was to have the two protagonists mortally wound each other.<ref name="Muller">Muller, Eddie (1998). Dark City: The Lost World of Film Noir. New York: St. Martin's Press. Template:ISBN. 56–9.</ref> The character of Barton Keyes was changed from a fairly clueless colleague into a mentor and antagonist to Neff.<ref name="Dobbs, Lem 2014" />
Chandler felt that Cain's dialogue would not play well onscreen, but Wilder disagreed; after he hired contract players to read passages of Cain's text aloud, he conceded to Chandler. Chandler also scouted for locations including Jerry's Market on Melrose Avenue, where Phyllis and Walter discreetly meet to plan and discuss the murder.<ref name="Creatures">Template:Cite book</ref>
Chandler was a recovering alcoholic. Wilder said that "He was in Alcoholics Anonymous...I drove him back into drinking."<ref name="Lally" />Template:Rp An embittered Chandler wrote in The Atlantic Monthly in November 1945 that "The first picture I worked on was nominated for an Academy Award...but I was not even invited to the press review held right in the studio."<ref name="Creatures" />Template:Rp Wilder responded, "How could we? He was under the table drunk..." Wilder's experience with Chandler drew him to adapt Charles R. Jackson's novel The Lost Weekend, about an alcoholic writer, as his next film; Wilder wanted the film "to explain Chandler to himself."<ref name="dvd2" /> Library of America included the Double Indemnity screenplay in its second volume of Chandler's work, Later Novels and Other Writings (1995).
Cain was impressed with the screenplay, calling it "the only picture I ever saw made from my books that had things in it I wish I had thought of. Wilder's ending was much better than my ending, and his device for letting the guy tell the story by taking out the office dictating machine – I would have done it if I had thought of it."<ref name="mcgmain" />
CastingEdit
Sistrom and Wilder wanted Barbara Stanwyck to play Phyllis Dietrichson. She was the highest-paid woman in America.<ref name="dvd2"/> Stanwyck was reluctant to play a femme fatale, fearing it would have an adverse effect on her career. She recalled being "a little afraid after all these years of playing heroines to go into an out-and-out killer." Wilder asked, "Well, are you a mouse or an actress?" She was grateful for his encouragement.<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp
Alan Ladd, James Cagney, Spencer Tracy, Gregory Peck, and Fredric March all passed on the role of Neff.<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp Wilder scraped "the bottom of the barrel" and approached George Raft. Since Raft did not read scripts, Wilder described the plot. Raft interrupted, "Let's get to the lapel bit...when the guy flashes his lapel, you see his badge, you know he's a detective." Since Neff was not a cop, Raft turned the part down.<ref name="zolmain">Zolotow, Maurice (1977). Billy Wilder in Hollywood. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. Template:ISBN.</ref>Template:Rp This was the last in a series of films Raft declined which turned out to be classics.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Wilder realized the part needed someone who could play a cynic and a nice guy simultaneously.<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp
Fred MacMurray was accustomed to playing "happy-go-lucky good guys" in light comedies. In 1943, he was the highest-paid actor in Hollywood.<ref>Flint, Peter B. "Fred MacMurray Is Dead at 83; Versatile Film and Television Star." The New York Times, November 6, 1991.</ref> When Wilder approached him about the role, MacMurray said, "You're making the mistake of your life!" He felt he lacked the skill for a serious part,<ref name="Phillips"/>Template:Rp but Wilder pestered the actor until he relented. MacMurray felt Paramount would never let him play a "wrong" role, because the studio carefully crafted his image. Paramount let him take the unsavory role, hoping to teach him a lesson during negotiations for his contract renewal.<ref name="sikmain"/>Template:Rp MacMurray's success in the role came as a surprise to both him and Paramount; he later recalled that he "never dreamed it would be the best picture [he] ever made."<ref name="zolmain"/>Template:Rp
Edward G. Robinson was reluctant to step down to third billing as Barton Keyes, reflecting that "At my age, it was time to begin thinking of character roles, to slide into middle and old age with the same grace as that marvelous actor Lewis Stone". Robinson agreed to take the role in part because he would receive the same salary as the two leads for fewer shooting days.<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp
For Jean Heather as Lola it was her credited first film role, for Byron Barr as Nino it was his first film role ever, and for Tom Powers as Mr. Dietrichson it was his first film role since 1917.Template:Citation needed
FilmingEdit
Filming ran from September 27 to November 24, 1943.<ref>Schickel, Richard. Double Indemnity, BFI Publishing, 1992. 60.</ref> John F. Seitz was the premier director of photography at Paramount, having worked since the silent era. Seitz was nominated for an Academy Award for Wilder's Five Graves to Cairo (1943). The director praised Seitz's willingness to experiment. They gave the film a look reminiscent of German expressionist cinema, with dramatic deployment of light and shadows.<ref name="Lally"/> Wilder recalled, "Sometimes the rushes were so dark that you couldn't see anything. He went to the limits of what could be done."<ref name="sikmain"/>Template:Rp Bright Southern California exteriors contrasted with gloomy interiors to suggest what lurked beneath the facade.<ref name="dvd2"/> The effect was heightened by dirtying up the set with overturned ashtrays and blowing aluminum particles into the air to simulate dust.<ref name="Phillips"/>Template:Rp
Seitz used "Venetian blind" lighting to simulate prison bars trapping the characters.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Barbara Stanwyck reflected that "the way those sets were lit, the house, Walter's apartment, those dark shadows, those slices of harsh light at strange angles – all that helped my performance. The way Billy staged it and John Seitz lit it, it was all one sensational mood."<ref name="Muller"/>
For Neff's office at Pacific All Risk, Wilder and set designer Hal Pereira copied the Paramount headquarters in New York City as an inside joke at the studio's expense.<ref name="sikmain"/>Template:Rp
Stanwyck wears a blonde wig "to complement her anklet...and to make her look as sleazy as possible." Paramount production head Buddy DeSylva did not approve of the wig, remarking that "We hired Barbara Stanwyck, and here we get George Washington."<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp In response, Wilder insisted that the wig was "meant to show that she's a phony character and that all of her emotions are fraudulent". A week into filming, Wilder came to consider the wig a mistake, but too much of the film had been shot to remove it; he later referred to the use of the wig as the biggest mistake of his career.<ref name="dvd2"/><ref name="Phillips"/>Template:Rp
Edith Head designed Barbara Stanwyck's costumes.<ref name="Colpaert">Template:Cite journal</ref>Template:Rp Her designs focus on bias-cut gowns, blouses with wide sleeves, and the waistline. Shoulder pads were the style of the 1940s, but they also accentuated the femme fatale's power. In Stanwyck's death scene, her wig and white jumpsuit contrast with Neff's dark suit, creating a chiaroscuro effect.<ref name="Colpaert"/>Template:Rp
When Phyllis and Walter dump the corpse on the tracks, they were supposed to get in their car and drive away. The crew shot the scene as written. As Wilder left the exterior location, however, his car would not start. He ordered the crew back and reshot the scene with Phyllis struggling to start her car. Wilder insisted MacMurray turn the ignition so slowly that the actor protested.<ref name="Creatures"/>Template:Rp<ref name="zolmain"/>Template:Rp
Wilder managed to bring the whole production in under budget at $927,262 despite $370,000 in salaries for just four people: $100,000 each for MacMurray, Stanwyck, and Robinson; $44,000 for Wilder's writing plus $26,000 for his directing.<ref name="sikmain">Sikov, Ed (1998). On Sunset Boulevard: The Life and Times of Billy Wilder. New York: Hyperion. Template:ISBN. 197–213.</ref>Template:Rp Wilder considered Double Indemnity his best film because it had so few scripting and shooting errors.<ref>"One Head Is Better Than Two," Films and Filming. (London), February 1957.</ref> He marked Cain's praise for Double Indemnity and Agatha Christie's praise for his adaptation of Witness for the Prosecution as two high points in his career.<ref name="Hoo"/>
Original endingEdit
The screenplay ends with Keyes watching Neff's execution in the gas chamber. Wilder shot the scene from Neff's perspective, looking out of the gas chamber at Keyes.<ref name="Naremore">Naremore, James. More than Night: Film Noir in Its Contexts. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2008.
- See page 94 for two still photos of the execution scene.</ref> Wilder shot for five days and spent $150,000 on the scene, which he felt was one of the best he ever directed.<ref name="Moffat"/><ref>Hartack, Don. Cinematexas Program Notes, 20 no. 1 (1981): 18-19.</ref> Production stills of this scene exist, and the footage may still be in Paramount's vaults.<ref name="Naremore"/>
However, the director ultimately decided to end the film with Keyes and Neff in their office, because "You couldn't have a more meaningful scene between two men...The story was between the two guys."<ref name="Creatures"/>Template:Rp Chandler objected to the change.<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp Joseph Breen felt the execution was "unduly gruesome",<ref>Production Code Administration report, December 1, 1943, Margaret Herrick Library of the Motion Picture Academy, Los Angeles.</ref> and its removal settled his office's last issue with the film.<ref name="zolmain"/>Template:Rp
SoundtrackEdit
{{#invoke:Listen|main}} Wilder liked Miklós Rózsa's work on Five Graves to Cairo and hired him to score Double Indemnity. Wilder suggested a restless string figure to reflect the conspiratorial activities of Walter and Phyllis. He had in mind the opening of Franz Schubert's Unfinished Symphony, which is heard onscreen in the scene at the Hollywood Bowl. Rózsa liked the idea, and Wilder was enthusiastic about the score as it took shape.<ref name="sikmain"/>Template:Rp<ref name="rozmain">Rózsa, Miklós (1982). Double Life: The Autobiography of Miklós Rózsa. New York: Hippocrene Books. Template:ISBN.</ref>Template:Rp
Paramount's music director Louis Lipstone reprimanded Rózsa for writing "Carnegie Hall music"; Rózsa mistook this as a compliment. Lipstone suggested he watch Madame Curie to learn how to properly score a film. He felt Rózsa's music was more appropriate for The Battle of Russia.<ref name="sikmain"/>Template:Rp<ref name="rozmain"/>Template:Rp He expected Paramount's artistic director Buddy DeSylva to agree, but when DeSylva heard the music, his only note was that there should be more of it.<ref name="rozmain"/>Template:Rp The score was nominated for an Academy Award, and the success brought Rózsa more studio work.<ref name="rozmain"/>Template:Rp
LocationsEdit
Exterior shots of the Dietrichson house in the film were shot at a Spanish Colonial Revival house on 6301 Quebec Drive in Beachwood Canyon. The production team copied the interior of the house, including the spiral staircase, on a Paramount soundstage.<ref>Prinzing, Debra. "Mae Brunken's Beachwood Canyon Home in the Hollywood Hills." Los Angeles Times. September 4, 2009.</ref>
The Southern Pacific Railroad station in Burbank was used in the film with a prop sign for Glendale; the site now hosts the Burbank Metrolink station.<ref>Silver, Alain and James Ursini (2024). From the Moment They Met It Was Murder: Double Indemnity and the Rise of Film Noir. Philadelphia: Running Press. Template:ISBN. p. 118</ref> Walter Neff's apartment building was located at 1825 North Kingsley Drive in Hollywood, and the Hollywood & Western Building also appears in the film.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
ReleaseEdit
Double IndemnityTemplate:'s first theatrical engagement was at the Keith's in Baltimore on July 3, 1944;<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> the film opened nationwide three days later.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was an immediate hit with audiences despite a campaign against the film by singer Kate Smith.<ref name="sikmain"/>Template:Rp James M. Cain recalled that "there was a little trouble caused by this fat girl, Kate Smith, who carried on a propaganda asking people to stay away from the picture. Her advertisement probably put a million dollars on its gross."<ref name="mcgmain"/>
When Double Indemnity was released, David O. Selznick was promoting Since You Went Away with trade magazine ads that claimed its title had become "the four most important words uttered in motion picture history since Gone with the Wind." Wilder riposted with an ad of his own claiming that "Double Indemnity" were the two most important words uttered in motion picture history since Broken Blossoms. Selznick was not amused, and threatened to stop advertising in any of the trades if they continued to run Wilder's ads.<ref name="sikmain"/>Template:Rp
ReceptionEdit
ReviewsEdit
Contemporary reviews of the film were largely positive, though its content made some uncomfortable. While some critics found the story implausible and disturbing, others praised it as an original thriller. In The New York Times, Bosley Crowther called the picture "Steadily diverting, despite its monotonous pace and length." He complained that the two lead characters "lack the attractiveness to render their fate of emotional consequence", but also felt the movie possessed a "realism reminiscent of the bite of past French films".<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp
Film critic and author James Agee reviewed it in 1944: "In many ways Double Indemnity is really quite a gratifying and even a good movie, essentially cheap I will grant, but smart and crisp and cruelTemplate:Nbsp... " <ref>Agee, James - Agee on Film Vol. 1 © 1958 by The James Agee Trust.</ref> New York Herald TribuneTemplate:'s Howard Barnes wrote it was "one of the most vital and arresting films of the year", praising Wilder's "magnificent direction and a whale of a script". Variety felt it "sets a new standard for screen treatment in its category".<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp
Radio host and Hearst paper columnist Louella Parsons said, "Double Indemnity is the finest picture of its kind ever made, and I make that flat statement without any fear of getting indigestion later from eating my words."<ref name="Hoo"/>
The Brooklyn Eagle was highly complimentary, "Besides MacMurray, who shows up as a top flight dramatic actor in a role that is a new type for him, and Miss Stanwyck, who has never given a more striking performance, 'Double Indemnity' has a third standout star, Edward G. Robinson, in his best role in many a film....By the way, there's no need to warn the teenagers away from this one; they wouldn't skip it in any case, and besides, 'Double Indemnity' makes it beautifully clear that murder doesn't pay—and certainly the insurance company doesn't, without sharp investigation."<ref>Corby, Jane. "Screen: Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray Teamed in 'Double Indemnity' at N.Y. Paramount." Brooklyn Eagle, 7 September 1944, 16</ref>
In the Los Angeles Times, Philip K. Scheur ranked it with The Human Comedy, The Maltese Falcon, and Citizen Kane as Hollywood trailblazers. Alfred Hitchcock wrote to Wilder saying, "Since Double Indemnity, the two most important words in motion pictures are 'Billy' and 'Wilder'."<ref name="Hoo"/>
The film's critical reputation has only grown over the years. In 1977, Leslie Halliwell raved, "Brilliantly filmed and incisively written, perfectly capturing the decayed Los Angeles atmosphere of a Chandler novel, but using a simpler story and more substantial characters."<ref>Walker, John (ed.) Halliwell's Film Guide, New York: HarperPerennial, 1994, p. 344 Template:ISBN</ref> In a 1998 review for his "Great Films" series, Roger Ebert wrote, "The photography by John F. Seitz helped develop the noir style of sharp-edged shadows and shots, strange angles and lonely Edward Hopper settings."<ref>Roger Ebert "Double Indemnity (1944)", Chicago Sun-Times, December 20, 1998. Last accessed: October 7, 2022</ref> Film critic Pauline Kael: "...this shrewd, smoothly tawdry thriller is one of the high points of 40s films."<ref>5001 Nights at the Movies ISBN 0-8050-1366-0</ref>
In Empire, Rob Fraser enthused, "Film noir at its finest, a template of the genre, etc. Billy Wilder in full swing, Barbara Stanwyck's finest hour, and Fred MacMurray makes a great chump."<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The film holds a 97% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 105 reviews.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It scores 95/100 based on 18 reviews on Metacritic.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
AccoladesEdit
Award | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Academy Awards | Best Motion Picture | Paramount Pictures | Template:Nom | <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Best Director | Billy Wilder | Template:Nom | |||
Best Actress | Barbara Stanwyck | Template:Nom | |||
Best Screenplay | Billy Wilder and Raymond Chandler | Template:Nom | |||
Best Cinematography – Black and White | John F. Seitz | Template:Nom | |||
Best Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture | Miklós Rózsa | Template:Nom | |||
Best Sound Recording | Loren Ryder | Template:Nom | |||
National Film Preservation Board | National Film Registry | Template:Won | <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> | |
New York Film Critics Circle Awards | Best Director | Billy Wilder | Template:Nom | <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Best Actress | Barbara Stanwyck | Template:Nom | |||
Online Film & Television Association Awards | Film Hall of Fame: Productions | Template:Won | <ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation | CitationClass=web
}}</ref> |
Filmed and released during the dark days of World War II, the film was not popular with the Academy. Wilder went to the awards ceremony expecting to win. The studio had been backing its other big hit of the year, Leo McCarey's Going My Way, and their employees were expected to vote for the studio favorite. As Double Indemnity kept losing during the awards show, it became evident that there would be a Going My Way sweep. When McCarey was named Best Director, a bitter Wilder tripped him on his way to accept the award.<ref name="Lally"/>Template:Rp After the ceremony, Wilder yelled so everyone could hear him, "What the hell does the Academy Award mean, for God's sake? After all – Luise Rainer won it two times. Luise Rainer!"<ref name="zolmain"/>Template:Rp
LegacyEdit
In 1992, the U.S. Library of Congress selected Double Indemnity for preservation in the National Film Registry as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
American Film Institute included the film on several lists:
- 1998: AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Movies, #38<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- 2001: AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Thrills, #24
- 2002: AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Passions, #84
- 2003: AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Heroes and Villains, #8 Phyllis Dietrichson
- 2007: AFI's 100 Years ... 100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition), #29
Double Indemnity is often referenced as one of the greatest films of all time:
- Time Out: Top 100 films of all time, #43 (1998).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Entertainment Weekly: 100 Greatest Movies of All Time, #50 (1999).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- National Society of Film Critics: "Top 100 Essential Films of All Time" (2002).<ref name=Carr81>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Time: All-Time 100 best movies (2005).<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
- Writers Guild of America: Greatest Screenplays, #26.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- BBC: "100 Greatest American Films", #35 (2015).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Variety: "The 100 Greatest Movies of All Time" (2022).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Time Out: "100 Best Movies of All Time That You Should Watch Immediately" (2023).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The February 2020 issue of New York Magazine lists Double Indemnity as among "The Best Movies That Lost Best Picture at the Oscars."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Film noirEdit
Double Indemnity is a seminal example of film noir. It is often compared with Wilder's other acclaimed film noir Sunset Boulevard (1950). Film scholar Robert Sklar explains, "[T]he unusual juxtaposition of temporalities gives the spectator a premonition of what will occur/has occurred in the flashback story...Besides Double Indemnity and Detour, voice-over is a key aspect of Mildred Pierce, Gilda, The Lady from Shanghai, and Out of the Past...as well as many others."<ref>Sklar, Robert. Film: An International History of the Medium. London: Thames and Hudson, 1990. p. 309</ref> Critic and writer Wendy Lesser notes that the narrator of Sunset Boulevard is dead before he begins narrating, but in Double Indemnity, "the voice-over has a different meaning. It is not the voice of a dead man...it is...the voice of an already doomed man."<ref>Lesser, Wendy. His Other Half: Men Looking at Women Through Art. Harvard University Press, 1992. 245.</ref>
Wilder claimed that "I never heard that expression film noir when I made Double Indemnity...I just made pictures I would have liked to see. When I was lucky, it coincided with the taste of the audience. With Double Indemnity, I was lucky."<ref>Chandler, Charlotte, (2002). Nobody's Perfect: Billy Wilder, A Personal Biography. New York: Simon & Schuster. Template:ISBN. p. 114</ref>
AdaptationsEdit
The Screen Guild Theater twice adapted Double Indemnity as a radio drama. Fred MacMurray and Barbara Stanwyck reprised their roles in the first broadcast on March 5, 1945. Stanwyck appeared again on the February 16, 1950 version, this time opposite Robert Taylor.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
On October 15, 1948, Ford Theatre produced another radio adaptation with Burt Lancaster and Joan Bennett.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Lux Radio Theater broadcast one with MacMurray and Stanwyck on October 30, 1950.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
The movie was remade as a television film, with direction by Jack Smight and a teleplay adapted by Steven Bochco. It aired on ABC on October 13, 1973.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Double Indemnity is parodied in 1993's Fatal Instinct. The hero's wife conspires to have him shot on a moving train and fall into a lake so that she can collect on his insurance, which has a "triple indemnity" rider. Carol Burnett parodied the film as "Double Calamity" on The Carol Burnett Show.
ImitatorsEdit
After the success of Double Indemnity, imitators were rampant. In 1945, Producers Releasing Corporation, one of the B movie studios of Hollywood's Poverty Row, financed Single Indemnity starring Ann Savage and Hugh Beaumont. Marketed as Apology for Murder, Paramount was not fooled by the title change and obtained an injunction against the film's release that still remains in effect.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
So many imitations flooded the market that Cain believed he deserved credit and remuneration. Cain was also disaffected about the extortionate practices of the film studios which could pay writers thousands of dollars for a copyright and earn millions from the resulting movie. He led a movement within the Screen Writers Guild to create the American Author's Authority, a union that would own its members' works, negotiate better subsidiary deals, and protect against copyright infringement. The AAA never got off the ground, partially due to the growing momentum of the Red Scare.<ref>Fine, Richard. James M. Cain and the American Authors' Authority. University of Texas Press, 1992. 53, 140–53.</ref>
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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- Double Indemnity essay by Matt Zoller Seitz at National Film Registry
- The Black Heart of Double Indemnity an essay by Angelica Jade Bastién at The Criterion Collection
- [https://www.imdb.com/{{#if: 0036775
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- Double Indemnity at AllMovie
- Template:TCMDb title
- Template:AFI film
- Double Indemnity film script at the Internet Movie Script Database
- Double Indemnity: The Complete File story analysis
- Film locations now and then
Streaming audioEdit
- Double Indemnity on Screen Guild Theater: March 5, 1945
- Double Indemnity on Lux Radio Theater: October 30, 1950
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