
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
| 3:00 p.m. | The Woman in the Window Fritz Lang (U.S., 1944) |
Lecture by Marilyn Fabe
In Fritz Lang’s crisply directed thriller, a mild flirtation draws a college professor into a hopelessly tangled web of blackmail and murder. The story mirrors the harsh geometry and stringent fatalism of Lang’s visual style—as Tom Kemper wrote, ”everything that stimulates our dark attraction to the noir genre: the claustrophobic urban studio sets, the wide-awake camerawork, the restless shadows, the nocturnal temptress, and the lapsed hero. Edward G. Robinson is Lang’s Everyman, a psychology professor whose obsession with the problem of murder and motive turns real when he is forced to commit one himself. As in a recurring dream, the guilt-ridden Robinson is led through the crime scenes by his D.A. friend (Raymond Massey), maintaining a world-closing-in feeling down to the film’s own closure, which is both inevitable and surprising.”
• Written by Nunnally Johnson, based on the novel Once Off Guard by J. H. Wallis. Photographed by Milton Krasner. With Edward G. Robinson, Joan Bennett, Raymond Massey, Dan Duryea. (99 mins, B&W, 35mm, From MGM)

