Deception
Deception is a 1946 American film noir drama released by Warner Brothers and directed by Irving Rapper. The film is based on the 1927 play Monsieur Lamberthier by Louis Verneuil. The screenplay was written by John Collier and Joseph Than. It stars Bette Davis, Paul Henreid, and Claude Rains, who had also appeared together in the highly successful Now, Voyager (1942), which was also directed by Rapper.
Plot
Christine Radcliffe runs in the rain up the stairs of a large symphony hall in which a concert is already underway with a performance of Haydn's cello concerto in D. Her eyes fill with tears as she recognizes the cellist on stage: Karel Novak who spent the war trapped in neutral Sweden. After his performance, Novak is mobbed by well-wishers. He then returns to his dressing room and as the concert is heard resuming after intermission with Schubert's unfinished symphony. Christine enters and their eyes meet in his mirror. The couple embrace while Christine cries, "I thought you were dead. I saw them kill you."
More details
| author | John Collier |
|---|---|
| contentLocation | New York City |
| director | Irving Rapper |
| editor | Alan Crosland Jr. |
| genre | drama |
| keywords | cello concerto no. 2 concert hall dressing room even fur coat gift hang haydn\'s cello concerto in d in the closet love affair schubert\'s unfinished symphony sweden symphony no. 8 trap unfinished symphony wedding reception |
| musicBy | Erich Wolfgang Korngold |
| producer | Henry Blanke |
| publisher | Warner Bros. |
| theme | film noir |