That Kind of Woman is a 1959 American drama film directed by Sidney Lumet, who was nominated for the Golden Bear at the 9th Berlin International Film Festival.[2] It stars Sophia Loren and Tab Hunter. The screenplay by Walter Bernstein, based on a short story by Robert Lowry ("Layover in El Paso"), is highly reminiscent of the 1938 film The Shopworn Angel.
That Kind of Woman | |
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Directed by | Sidney Lumet |
Screenplay by | Walter Bernstein |
Based on | "Layover in El Paso" (1944 story) by Robert Lowry |
Produced by | Marcello Girosi Carlo Ponti |
Starring | Sophia Loren Tab Hunter George Sanders |
Cinematography | Boris Kaufman |
Edited by | Howard A. Smith |
Music by | Daniele Amfitheatrof |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 92 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $1 million (est. Only four months of US/Canada Rentals)[1] |
The Paramount Pictures release was filmed on location in New York City and Long Beach, New York.[3][4]
The film is set in New York City in June 1944, during World War II. Kay is a sophisticated Italian woman, the mistress of a Manhattan millionaire industrialist known simply as The Man, who uses her to help him influence his contacts at The Pentagon. While en route from Miami to New York City by train, she and her friend Jane meet a considerably younger American paratrooper named Red and his sergeant George Kelly, and Kay and Red fall into a romantic relationship. Eventually the woman finds herself torn between her upscale life in a Sutton Place apartment and the prospect of true love with the GI.
In his review in The New York Times, Bosley Crowther stated, "Walter Bernstein's screen play is a breezy, banal and bumptious thing, and Sidney Lumet has directed it with so many close-ups that it looks like a travesty of a 'silent' style."[5]