Director(s) | Lloyd Bacon, Michael Curtiz (uncredited) |
Producer(s) | Louis F. Edelman (associate uncredited), Hal B. Wallis (executive uncredited), Jack L. Warner (executive uncredited) |
Top Genres | Crime, Drama, Thriller/Suspense |
Top Topics | Gangsters, New York |
Featured Cast:
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Marked Woman Overview:
Marked Woman (1937) was a Crime - Drama Film directed by Michael Curtiz and Lloyd Bacon and produced by Hal B. Wallis, Jack L. Warner and Louis F. Edelman.
BlogHub Articles:
Classic Films in Focus: MARKED WOMAN (1937)
By Jennifer Garlen on Feb 4, 2014 From Virtual Virago
The world of the gangster movie is largely a boys' club, where women exist only as victims or commodities and the mobsters' guns serve as constant reminders of their phallic power. In opposition to that trend we have director Lloyd Bacon's very effective Marked Woman (1937), which features Bette Dav... Read full article
Classic Films in Focus: MARKED WOMAN (1937)
By Jennifer Garlen on Feb 4, 2014 From Virtual Virago
The world of the gangster movie is largely a boys' club, where women exist only as victims or commodities and the mobsters' guns serve as constant reminders of their phallic power. In opposition to that trend we have director Lloyd Bacon's very effective Marked Woman (1937), which features Bette Dav... Read full article
Classic Films in Focus: MARKED WOMAN (1937)
By Jennifer Garlen on Feb 4, 2014 From Virtual Virago
Theworld of the gangster movie is largely a boys' club, where women exist only asvictims or commodities and the mobsters' guns serve as constant reminders oftheir phallic power. In opposition to that trend we have director Lloyd Bacon'svery effective Marked Woman (1937), which features Bette Dav... Read full article
Marked Woman (1937)
By Beatrice on Sep 26, 2013 From Flickers in Time
Marked WomanDirected by Lloyd BaconWritten by Robert Rossen and Abem Finkel1937/USAWarner Bros.First viewing Bette Davis is a sometime thing for me. ?This wasn’t one of those times. Mary Dwight (Davis) is a “hostess” at a nightclub/clip joint owned by ruthless gangster Johnn... Read full article
Marked Woman – 1937
By Bogart Fan on May 9, 2013 From The Bogie Film Blog
My Review —Pretty Good— Your Bogie Fix: ? out of 5 Bogies! Director: Lloyd Bacon The Lowdown This is the third Lloyd Bacon / Humphrey Bogart movie I?ve reviewed since starting the blog?? the first being Action in the North Atlantic,?and the second Brother Orchid?? and again, Bacon comes ... Read full article
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Quotes from
Johnny Vanning:[talking to the hostesses in an intimidating manner] I'm taking over this joint. From now on you're working for me. Most of you know how I operate. If you don't, read the papers and find out!
Mary Dwight Strauber:Please don't ask me to talk. He'll kill me.
David Graham:Now you help me to prove that he was responsible for this and I'll put him where he won't kill anybody.
Mary Dwight Strauber:You don't know what he's like! He stops at nothing. People just disappear and are never heard of again. I don't want that to happen to me.
Mary Dwight Strauber:I'll get you, even if I have to crawl back from the grave to do it!
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Facts about
Dedicated to realism, Bette Davis left the set when the makeup department outfitted her with dainty bandages for the hospital scene following the physical attack on her character by mobsters. She drove to her own doctor and instructed him to bandage her as he would a badly beaten woman. Returning to the set, she declared, "You shoot me this way, or not at all!" They did.
Humphrey Bogart and Mayo Methot fell in love during production. They were married as soon as he had divorced his second wife, Mary Philips.
Screenwriters Rossen and Finkel capitalized on a sensational trial reported by the "New York Times" between May 14 and June 22, 1936 according to film historian Charles Eckert. Prosecutor Thomas E. Dewey was the prosecutor and Charles "Lucky Luciano" Lucania his target. Dewey went on to become New York governor and a two-time Presidential candidate while Luciano went on to organize Dannemora, the New York dock workers, and the international drug trade. The women whose testimony led to a conviction left the House of Detention and were sent to Dewey's offices in the Woolworth Building, where they received sums ranging between $150 and $175 dollars, barely a half week's wages that they earned as prostitutes. Then, according to Eckert they "disappeared, as they do in the film, into the fog."
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