Directed by Billy Wilder and adapted from a James M. Cain novel by Wilder and Raymond Chandler, Double Indemnity represents the high-water mark of 1940s film noir urban crime dramas in which a greedy, weak man is seduced and trapped by a cold, evil woman amidst the dark shadows and Expressionist lighting of modern cities. Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) seduces insurance agent Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) into murdering her husband to collect his accident policy. The murder goes as planned, but after the couple's passion cools, each becomes suspicious of the other's motives. The plan is further complicated when Neff's boss Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson), a brilliant insurance investigator, takes over the investigation. Told in flashbacks from Neff's perspective, the film moves with ruthless determinism as each character meets what seems to be a preordained fate. Movie veterans Stanwyck, MacMurray, and Robinson give some of their best performances, and Wilder's cynical sensibility finds a perfect match in the story's unsentimental perspective, heightened by John Seitz's hard-edged cinematography. Double Indemnity ranks with the classics of mainstream Hollywood movie-making.
STARS.........: Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward G. Robinson DIRECTOR......: Billy Wilder WRITERS.......: Billy Wilder, Raymond Chandler GENRE.........: Crime, Drama, Film-Noir IMDB RATING...: 8.3/10 104,792 votes IMDB LINK.....: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0036775 RUNTIME.......: 1h 47mn SIZE..........: 3.31 GB VIDEO CODEC...: HEVC ([email protected]) RESOLUTION....: 1920x1080 ASPECT RATIO..: 1.37:1 BITRATE.......: 4000 Kbps (2-pass) FRAMERATE.....: 23.976 fps AUDIO1........: Dolby Digital Plus 1.0 192kbps AUDIO2........: Commentary with Film Historian Richard Schickel AUDIO3........: Commentary with Film Historians Lem Dobbs and Nick Redman SUBTITLES.....: ENG, ENG-SDH CHAPTERS......: Yes SOURCE........: Universal Blu Ray ENCODED BY....: Sartre ENCODE DATE...: 2017-04-22
Extras
• Introduction by Robert Osborne • Shadows of Suspense • Trailer • Commentary with Film Historian Richard Schickel • Commentary with Film Historians Lem Dobbs and Nick Redman