Wicked as They Come (Portrait in Smoke in the United States) is a 1956 British film noir directed by Ken Hughes and starring Arlene Dahl, Philip Carey and Herbert Marshall.[2]
Wicked as They Come | |
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![]() Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Ken Hughes |
Written by | Ken Hughes Sigmund Miller Robert Westerby |
Based on | novel Portrait in Smoke by Bill S. Ballinger[1] |
Produced by | Maxwell Setton |
Starring | Arlene Dahl Philip Carey Herbert Marshall |
Cinematography | Basil Emmott |
Edited by | Max Benedict |
Music by | Malcolm Arnold |
Production company | Film Locations |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release dates |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Poor girl from the slums Katherine Allenbourg trades on her looks. She enters a beauty contest, then charms the elderly gentleman running it, Sam Lewis, into fixing it so she will win first prize, a trip to Europe. She promptly abandons Sam.
On a plane to London, after changing her name to Kathy Allen, she is attracted to Tim O'Bannion, who works for an ad agency. However, she's determined to land someone wealthier and photographer Larry Buckham, whom she meets at her London hotel, fills the bill. Invited to use his charge account at a department store for a wedding dress, Kathy makes many purchases, pawns the merchandise and leaves Larry without a word.
She gets a job at Tim's advertising firm and seduces Stephen Collins, the man who runs it, and who is married. Tim arouses more passion in her, but Kathy's strictly out for herself. She demands Collins divorce his wife Virginia, whose father John Dowling owns the agency. Virginia tries to pay her off, but Kathy requests a transfer to the agency's Paris headquarters, where she immediately uses her wiles to get Dowling to marry her.
Anonymous threats begin by mail and phone. Someone in the shadows begins stalking her. Kathy picks up a gun and shoots, killing her husband. No one believes her tale of a prowler and Kathy is tried, convicted and sentenced to die.
Realizing that Larry is the man behind this turn of events, Tim reveals to him something he only just discovered, an explanation for Kathy's cruel treatment of men. When she was a girl, she was brutally assaulted. Larry has a change of heart and confesses to stalking her. Kathy's prison sentence is reduced, and she hopes Tim will give her another chance once she gets out.
The film was based on a novel Portrait in Smoke which was published in 1950.[3] The novel was adapted for TV in 1950.[4]
In May 1955 it was announced Mike Frankovich had purchased the screen rights to the novel, to be made under his deal with Columbia. It was the third property Frankovich had purchased, the others being Joe MacBeth and ''Wise Guys Never Work.[5] The film would be made by an associated company, Film Locations, run by Maxwell Setton.[6]
Laurence Harvey was offered a lead role but turned it down.[7] Lead roles eventually went to Arlene Dahl, Phil Carey and Herbert Marshall.[8]
Filming was to have started in London on 28 November 1955 but eventually started 2 December 1955.[9]
The Los Angeles Times said it was "written and directed with humour as well as ironic drama".[10]
Filmink said "The film would have been better off following the lead of the poster art rather than the script: at heart this should have been a campy Joan Crawford vehicle but it’s far too reticent and dull."[11]
In March 1957 Arlene Dahl filed suit against Columbia for $1,000,000 claiming the advertising for the film was "obscene, degrading and offensive."[12] She said she was humiliated by the use of composite drawings and photographs advertising the film.[13] The case went to trial in May. The judge was unsympathetic during the hearing say he felt the photograph was refined.[14] The case was dismissed in August.[15]
Films directed by Ken Hughes | |
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Features |
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Shorts |
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