Affair in Trinidad

"You weren't the first... and you won't be the last!"

6.3
19521h 38m

A nightclub singer enlists her brother-in-law to track down her husband's killer.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Affair in Trinidad (1952) Original Trailer [FHD]

Affair in Trinidad (1952) Original Trailer [FHD]

Cast

Photo of Rita Hayworth

Rita Hayworth

Chris Emery

Photo of Glenn Ford

Glenn Ford

Steve Emery

Photo of Valerie Bettis

Valerie Bettis

Veronica Huebling

Photo of Torin Thatcher

Torin Thatcher

Inspector Smythe

Photo of George Voskovec

George Voskovec

Doctor Franz Huebling

Photo of Juanita Moore

Juanita Moore

Dominique

Photo of Fred Baker

Fred Baker

Baker, Airport Clerk (uncredited)

Photo of Don Blackman

Don Blackman

Bobby (uncredited)

Photo of Steve Carruthers

Steve Carruthers

Party Guest (uncredited)

Photo of Ross Elliott

Ross Elliott

Corpse of Neal Emery (uncredited)

Photo of Joel Fluellen

Joel Fluellen

Jeffrey Mabetes, Fisherman (uncredited)

Photo of Roy Glenn

Roy Glenn

Fisherman (uncredited)

Photo of Gregg Martell

Gregg Martell

Olaf, Fabian's Chauffeur (uncredited)

Photo of Frank McLure

Frank McLure

Party Guest (uncredited)

Photo of Harold Miller

Harold Miller

Café Patron (uncredited)

Photo of Mort Mills

Mort Mills

Martin, Wittol's Henchman (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

5/10

You walked out of that inquest like you were on your way to a cocktail party.

Affair in Trinidad is one of those pretend film noir movies that the public seem to love more than the critics, both back then on release and also now. I was personally hoping that as a big fan of Glenn Ford, and being an admirer of Rita Hayworth, I too would be thumbing my nose at the critics. Sadly not.

Directed by Vincent Sherman and with a screenplay by Berne Gilder and James Gunn, the story is set in Trinidad and pitches Hayworth as a recently widowed nightclub dancer and Ford as the deceased man's brother. The death is suspicious and as the law closes in (in the form of Torrin Thatcher) secrets will out and a bigger picture kind of emerges.

Ok! Lets not compare to Gilda and Notorious, for obvious reasons, and just accept Affair in Trinidad as its own entity. What transpires is a tired tropical exercise in romance and spy like intrigue. In fact it's a bit of a hack job coasting in on the two leading stars reputations, Ford as a genre presence and Hayworth as some sort of ogle feature. The plot is ridiculous where nothing much makes sense. Character's motivations are sketchy at best, and once the screenplay plays its hand for reveal purpose, you wonder just where are the villains from and what exactly are they up to?! Is that explained or did I have a power nap?...

It doesn't help that head weasel Max Fabian (Alexander Scourby) is so not threatening, and boring to boot, that it renders the intended dramatic oomph at pics finale as being akin to a damp squib. Hayworth goes through the motions in the acting scenes, only holding court with her two dance numbers (voice dubbed by Jo Ann Greer), and while Ford can brood with the best of them, his character is so poorly written it doesn't let the actor shine.

As for this remotely being film noir? Not a chance, neither visually, thematically or in characterisations does it work on that film making style. Consider me bloody annoyed. 5/10

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