The Notorious Landlady | |
---|---|
Directed by | Richard Quine |
Written by | Blake Edwards Larry Gelbart |
Based on | The Notorious Tenant 1956 Collier's by Margery Sharp [1] [2] |
Produced by | Fred Kohlmar Richard Quine |
Starring | Kim Novak Jack Lemmon Fred Astaire Lionel Jeffries Estelle Winwood |
Cinematography | Arthur E. Arling |
Edited by | Charles Nelson |
Music by | George Duning |
Color process | Black and white |
Production company | Columbia Pictures |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 123 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $2.7 million (US/Canada) [3] |
The Notorious Landlady is a 1962 American comedy mystery film starring Kim Novak, Jack Lemmon, and Fred Astaire. [4] [5] The film was directed by Richard Quine, with a script by Blake Edwards and Larry Gelbart based on the short story "The Notorious Tenant" by Margery Sharp.
A young boy shoots passerby with a toy gun. Mrs. Dunhill, an older woman in wheelchair, reacts to a gunshot noise and mentions that is because the gun shot she heard is from a real gun and not the toy gun. Neighbors open their windows to inquire about the gun shot. An American diplomat William Gridley has just arrived in London and is looking to rent an apartment. He responds to an advertisement in the newspaper. When he arrives at the house a maid opens the door and informs him that the apartment is only being rented to couples. He convinces her to take a look at the apartment and during this time he realises that the maid is actually the owner of the apartment - Carly Hardwicke. She lets him rent the second floor of the townhouse. Gridley informs his boss, Franklyn Ambruster that he has found a flat for rent. When Ambruster hears Carly Hardwicke's name it seems familiar so he calls the research department to inquire if they have any information. It turns out that the whole town suspects that Carly murdered her husband Miles, however, since there is no body, Carly cannot be prosecuted. When he moves in to the house she tells him that a closet on the main floor is locked and to use the one in his room. Gridley and Hardwicke go out on a date where they are followed by Scotland Yard. At the restaurant her presence causes quite a stir but Gridley is oblivious to it. While leaving the restaurant a mysterious man approaches her and she takes him aside to have a conversation with him. Gridley inquires about her marital status when they are back in the house and she says that she might be a widow. He wakes up at night when he hears her playing the organ in a thoughtful mood. The next day, a Scotland Yard inspector, Oliphant, visits the embassy and convinces Gridley to spy on her as she has claimed his insurance and suspects that she killed him. When he returns back to the flat he finds a suspicious note and decides to look into the closet, where he finds a uniform which he tries on. He goes through the house and finds a bottle of arsenic and some books that discuss murder. Carly returns while he is in her room, so he hides in her closet and overhears her talking to someone that the job needs to be done tonight and they might need two men to get it out of the house. He manages to return the coat to the closet and pretend that he has just returned. That evening, while having a barbeque in the backyard where all the neighbors are watching them from their windows, a fire erupts. The fire makes Fleet Street headlines and Ambruster decides to transfer him to out of London.
Carly goes to the embassy to plead Gridley's case. She tells Gridley's boss, Franklyn Ambruster, that Gridley is a good man and not to transfer him out of the country. Ambruster is touched. He takes Carly to lunch, becomes smitten with her, and proclaims her innocence in the murder affair and decides not to transfer Gridley. They both decided to look into the matter and decide to go to Carly’s house where they see her talking to the mysterious man that she spoke to outside the restaurant. Gridley decides to follow him while Ambruster follows Carly who leaves the house shortly after that. The man who Gridley is following turns out to be a priest and Carly has sold him the organ way below the cost. When he returns to the flat he finds his bags packed and Carly asks him to leave. He tells her that he doesn’t care if she murdered her husband and tells her that he loves her.
Gridley calls Oliphant to inform him that he will not spy on Carly anymore and when on the telephone they hear a gun shot. When Gridley goes to Carly’s room he finds Miles’s body with Carly standing over it with a gun in her hand. He goes to stand near her when Sgt. Dillings from Scotland Yard detective enters the room leading him to believe that they both shot Miles.
At the coroner's inquest, Carly is cleared when a crippled neighbor's private nurse Mrs. Brown testifies that Miles assaulted Carly. After the inquest, Mrs. Brown attempts to blackmail Carly over a pawn ticket to a candelabra that Miles had stuffed with stolen jewels. Carly and Gridley try to retrieve the candelabra but find the pawnbroker murdered. Gridley and Carly then locate the nurse in a Penzance retirement community. They catch her in the act of pushing Mrs. Dunhill off a cliff to silence her. (It was, in fact, Mrs. Dunhill who witnessed Miles and Carly fighting, not Mrs. Brown.) Gridley and Carly save the elderly lady as Ambruster and Oliphant arrive by helicopter and arrest Mrs. Brown. Ambruster then tells Gridley and Carly that they are better off back in the States.
The film was announced in December 1957 with Richard Quine to direct and Jack Lemmon to star opposite Victoria Shaw, and filming was originally scheduled to begin in February 1958. [6] [7] Blake Edwards wrote the first version of the script. Quine recruited writer Larry Gelbart to write a draft, and S. N. Behrman revised it. [8]
Lemmon and Novak had appeared together on screen twice previously, in Phffft! (1954) and Bell, Book and Candle (1958). Novak, who had previously been engaged to marry Quine, [9] was paid $600,000. It was her last performance for Columbia after eight years with the studio. [10]
The song "A Foggy Day (in London Town)" by George and Ira Gershwin, which serves as the film's main theme, was introduced in the 1937 Fred Astaire film A Damsel in Distress .
Filming began on May 15, 1961. The opening London scenes were filmed at the Columbia Ranch in Burbank, California. The closing scenes set on the cliffs of Cornwall were filmed at Point Lobos State Natural Reserve in Carmel, California.
In a contemporary review for The New York Times , critic Bosley Crowther wrote that the film is "well worth the viewing of anybody who wants a nice breezy comedy concocted with a little standard mystery and suspense" and succeeds despite Novak's performance: "[T]he title role is played by Kim Novak, and that simply does not augur well. Miss Novak is one of those performers who have cast so many drab and saggy palls over good motion pictures that one shudders to see her name in a cast. ... In short, Miss Novak is a flat tire. But Mr. Lemmon as the embassy chap makes up in solid measure for her lack of inflation and bounce." [11]
John Uhler Lemmon III was an American actor. Considered proficient in both dramatic and comic roles, Lemmon was known for his anxious, middle-class everyman screen persona in dramedy pictures. He received numerous accolades including two Academy Awards, six Golden Globe Awards and two Primetime Emmy Awards. He received the AFI Life Achievement Award in 1988, the Cecil B. DeMille Award in 1991, and the Kennedy Center Honors in 1996. The Guardian labeled him as "the most successful tragi-comedian of his age."
Larry Simon Gelbart was an American television writer, playwright, screenwriter, director and author, most famous as a creator and producer of the television series M*A*S*H, and as co-writer of the Broadway musicals A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and City of Angels.
The Apartment is a 1960 American romantic comedy-drama film directed and produced by Billy Wilder from a screenplay he co-wrote with I. A. L. Diamond. It stars Jack Lemmon, Shirley MacLaine, Fred MacMurray, Ray Walston, Jack Kruschen, David Lewis, Willard Waterman, David White, Hope Holiday and Edie Adams.
Marilyn Pauline "Kim" Novak is an American retired film and television actress and painter. Her contributions to cinema have been honored with two Golden Globe Awards, an Honorary Golden Bear, and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
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Bell, Book and Candle is a 1958 American supernatural romantic comedy film directed by Richard Quine from a screenplay by Daniel Taradash, based on the 1950 Broadway play of the same title by John Van Druten and starring James Stewart, Kim Novak, Jack Lemmon and Ernie Kovacs. Novak portrays a witch who casts a spell on her neighbor, played by Stewart. The supporting cast features Lemmon, Kovacs, Hermione Gingold, Elsa Lanchester and Janice Rule. The film is considered Stewart's final role as a romantic lead.
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"The Forms of Things Unknown" is an episode of the original The Outer Limits television show. It first aired on May 4, 1964, and was the final episode of the first season. It was filmed in a dual format as both a regular episode of The Outer Limits and as a pilot episode for a possible series called The Unknown. The opening and closing narration listed here are only in The Unknown version and not in the broadcast The Outer Limits episode. There are plot differences between the two versions.
Romance in Manhattan is a 1935 American romantic comedy film directed by Stephen Roberts, starring Francis Lederer and Ginger Rogers, and released by RKO Radio Pictures.
Bring Your Smile Along is a 1955 American Technicolor comedy film by Blake Edwards. It was Edwards' directorial debut and the motion picture debut of Constance Towers. Edwards wrote the script for this Frankie Laine musical with his mentor, director Richard Quine. Songs Laine sang in the film included his 1951 hit "The Gandy Dancers' Ball."
Phffft is a 1954 American comedy romance film starring Judy Holliday, Jack Lemmon, and Jack Carson and featuring Kim Novak in a supporting role. The picture was written by George Axelrod and directed by Mark Robson. It was the second film starring Holliday and Lemmon that year, after It Should Happen to You.
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