Gaslight

Strange drama of a captive sweetheart!

7.5
19441h 54m

A newlywed fears she's going mad when strange things start happening at the family mansion.

Production

Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer | Gaslight | Warner Archive

Trailer | Gaslight | Warner Archive

Thumbnail for video: Gaslight - Trailer

Gaslight - Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Clip HD | Gaslight | Warner Archive

Clip HD | Gaslight | Warner Archive

Thumbnail for video: Gaslight (1944) Official Trailer - Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman Movie HD

Gaslight (1944) Official Trailer - Charles Boyer, Ingrid Bergman Movie HD

Thumbnail for video: George Hickenlooper on GASLIGHT

George Hickenlooper on GASLIGHT

Thumbnail for video: Lynn Redgrave on Ingrid Bergman and GASLIGHT

Lynn Redgrave on Ingrid Bergman and GASLIGHT

Cast

Photo of Charles Boyer

Charles Boyer

Gregory Anton

Photo of Ingrid Bergman

Ingrid Bergman

Paula Alquist

Photo of Joseph Cotten

Joseph Cotten

Brian Cameron

Photo of May Whitty

May Whitty

Miss Thwaites

Photo of Emil Rameau

Emil Rameau

Maestro Guardi

Photo of Edmund Breon

Edmund Breon

General Huddleston

Photo of Heather Thatcher

Heather Thatcher

Lady Dalroy

Photo of Frank Baker

Frank Baker

Pedestrian (uncredited)

Photo of Lillian Bronson

Lillian Bronson

Lady (uncredited)

Photo of Leonard Carey

Leonard Carey

Guide (uncredited)

Photo of Alec Craig

Alec Craig

Turnkey (uncredited)

Photo of Maude Fealy

Maude Fealy

Bit Part (uncredited)

Photo of Al Ferguson

Al Ferguson

Bit Part (uncredited)

Photo of Helen Flint

Helen Flint

Franchette (uncredited)

Photo of Gibson Gowland

Gibson Gowland

Servant (uncredited)

Photo of Gary Gray

Gary Gray

Boy in Park with Nanny (uncredited)

More Like This

Reviews

J

John Chard

9/10

I knew from the first moment I saw you that you were dangerous to her.

Gaslight is directed by George Cukor and is adapted to screenplay from Patrick Hamilton’s play by John Van Druten, Walter Reisch and John L. Balderston. It stars Ingrid Bergman, Charles Boyer, Joseph Cotton, May Whitty, Barbara Everest and Angela Lansbury. Music is by Bronislaw Kaper and cinematography by Joseph Ruttenberg.

Years after her aunt was murdered in her London home, Paula Alquist Anton (Bergman) moves back there with her new husband, Gregory Anton (Boyer). However, what at first seems to be an idyllic marriage begins to crumble as Paula appears to be losing her mind…

You really have to put into context just how great Gaslight is as per the time it was released. For it holds up now as something of a torch igniter for what has followed over the decades. The psychological thriller – specifically that of a spouse being tormented by their partner – has been mined for all its worth - and will continue to do so. Even the terminology of very real life instances such as Gaslighted/Gaslighting have been born out from the pic, so if it is thought of being dated or old hat, its influence is still quite considerable.

It’s still a terrific atmospheric thriller anyway, played out to a magnificent backdrop of Victorian London, of fogs and cobbled streets, and of course gas lights and eerie shadows. Pic is split into two halves, first half is the set-up of a whirlwind romance that leads to marriage, then the move to the marital home and support characters - nosy neighbour (Whitty), housekeeper (Everest), tart housemaid (Lansbury on debut) - are introduced to proceedings. Deft psychological touches are being played out, though wonderfully we never actually see the misdirection machinations actually being done.

Then as the second half happens upon us it really hits the diabolical straps, the methodical manoeuvres of Gregory Anton really start to gnaw away at our senses. We witness Paula come apart, her mind fractured, so vulnerable and confused, you would have to have a heart of stone not to have your very core ache. It’s here where Bergman, in the first of her three Best Actress Oscar wins, excels without duff histrionics. Boyer also is superb, where guided by the astute Cukor he makes Gregory a dashing dastard, only given to subtle clues about his devious and wicked doings.

Cotton doesn’t try to do a British accent, which is fine as he holds his end up well as Brian Cameron, the man getting to grips with what’s actually going on in the Alton home. Brian is our hero in waiting, giving us something to hang onto as the pic reaches revelations point. With Ruttenberg (Oscar Nominated) drifting what would be known as noirish contrasts over the piece, and Kaper’s music unobtrusively subtle, Gaslight hits high marks for tech credit substance. All told it’s a truly great film, and one that’s well worth going back to if you become jaded with the more slick and polished production line genre pieces that follow in its wake. 9/10

You've reached the end.