Gaslight 1940 and 1944 Adaptations

Posted June 7, 2022 by Whitney in movie review / 1 Comment

Gaslight 1940 and 1944 Adaptations

Twenty years after the murder of Alice Barlow, her house is finally occupied again. However, the husband from the couple who have moved in has a secret which he will do anything to keep hidden.


In 1940 Thorold Dickinson directed Gaslight starring  Anton Walbrook and Diane Wynyard, in which a husband drives his wife slowly insane while he scours the house looking for her late aunt’s hidden jewels.  This was a great thriller, with wonderful acting and pacing.  Although, I discovered this treasure by mistake, thinking I was ordering the 1943 version which won Oscars for best actress and best art direction.  This raised the question, why remake a film after only three years of its predecessor’s release?  It must be better, it just must, I mean it won two Oscars, right?  

I was very disappointed with 1944’s Gaslight. As in classic 1930/40s style, it was very melodramatic almost to the point of annoyance, and thought parts of it dragged on, for instance, I would have been fine with Paula and Gregory’s courtship being a deleted scene. There was also a busy buddy neighbor who couldn’t wait to get into the home where Paula’s aunt was murdered. I felt she added nothing to the story and just wasted screen time. I love Charles Boyer and Ingrid Bergman and even they couldn’t save it, despite their amazingly talented efforts. I had such high expectations for this film and was slowly deflated like a balloon.

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