World Famous Comics NetworkWorld Famous Comics Network World Famous Comics CommunityComic Book ClassifiedsSketchCards.com
WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop
SHOP >> David Mack | Andy Lee | Amy Allen | Michonne | Dean Haglund | Virginia Hey | WFC Published | WFC Auctions



ScheduleUPDATED TODAY! Sun, 7-Sep-2008
Anything Goes TriviaAnything Goes Trivia
Bob Rozakis
Last KissLast Kiss
John Lustig
Megaton ManMegaton Man
Don Simpson
TrevorTrevor
Piper & Lee


NewsNEWS 7-Sep-2008 12:15pm
Marvel at name
Watchmen
Crime did not pay for the old comic book...
RAIMI AND MAGUIRE LOOK SET FOR MORE SPID...

Comic Book - Movie - Video Game - Anime 

Friends & Affiliates
Adobe Store
Amazon.com
Anime Studio
Apple Store
Dick Blick Art Materials
eBay
GoDaddy.com

StarWarsShop.com
TFAW
World Famous Comics: The Blue Gardenia
The Blue Gardenia
Starring: Anne Baxter, Richard Conte, Ann Sothern, Raymond Burr, Jeff Donnell
Directed By: Fritz Lang
Average Rating:4.00 out of 5.00 stars
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Format: Black & White, DVD-Video, NTSC
Label: Image Entertainment
Number of Items: 1
Region Code: 1
Release Date: April 11, 2000
Running Time: 88 minutes
Theatrical Release Date: March 23, 1953

Enlarge Image
The Blue Gardenia
Used Price: $7.21
Collectible: $12.74
3rd Party New: $6.98
Amazon's Price: $9.99

Usually ships in 24 hours


Similar Items

The Woman in the Window (MGM Film Noir)

Dangerous Crossing (Fox Film Noir)

The Big Combo

Black Widow (Fox Film Noir)

The Big Heat
More Similar Items...

Editorial Comments

Product Description:
Fritz Lang's scathing critique of fifties America's hunger for bloodshed and scandal. Classic Hollywood film noir with a feminine twist "The Blue Gardenia" stars Anne Baxter (All About Eve) as Norah Larkin a working girl who wakes up a murderess after passing out in the apartment of brutish playboy Harry Prebble (Raymond Burr). Branded "The Blue Gardenia" by a sensational columnist (Richard Conte) Norah dodges dragnets informants and the cruel hand of fate as she struggles to conceal her involvement with Prebble and to remember the details of her ill fated night. As her hopes for justice fade she decides to gamble her future on the journalist who transformed her into such a notorious public figure. Enhancing the melancholy mood of the film is the haunting theme song arranged by Nelson Riddle and performed to perfection by Nat "King" Cole.System Requirements:Running Time 88 MinFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: DRAMA Rating: NR UPC: 014381904222 Manufacturer No: ID9042AQDVD

Amazon.com essential video:
With its title inspired by the notorious Black Dahlia murder case, The Blue Gardenia throws a twist into the story by making the mystery woman not the victim but the suspect in a lurid murder case. Anne Baxter, playing a virginal blonde with almost breathless innocence, impulsively accepts a blind date after receiving a "Dear Jane" letter from her boyfriend in Korea. Raymond Burr oozes slime as the lothario who plots his seduction with cynical calculation ("For drinks, Polynesian Pearl Divers, and don't spare the rum!") and the naive Baxter is easy prey, until she fights back against his advances with a fireplace poker and stumbles home. Waking up the next morning with the past evening a veritable blank, she discovers herself the prime suspect in a murder case trumpeted into a sensationalistic headline story by calculating columnist Richard Conte. Fritz Lang transforms the rather conventional low-budget thriller into a paranoid nightmare, his cheap sets and flat backdrops creating a tawdry world peopled by cynics and opportunists preying on the guileless, and Baxter makes every guilt-ridden moment palpable. Like in many film noir thrillers, the pat conclusion seems wholly arbitrary, the product of the Hollywood happy-ending machine. However, Lang's film isn't about the mystery, but the experience of an innocent whose single, desperate transgression turns her world upside down. --Sean Axmaker


Customer Reviews
Average Rating:4.00 out of 5.00 stars

4 out of 5 starsBlue Gardenia is a hit
I thought "The Blue Gardenia" was a great movie. I loved the acting. I loved the music. I loved the atmosphere. Anne Baxter is a personal favorite. She never disappoints.



3 out of 5 starsFritz Lang, Anne Baxter, a fireplace poker and a blue gardenia...plus a cost-of-living lesson
Fritz Lang's The Blue Gardenia is not just a minor noir, it's a minor film. The story is so simple and linear, and the final revelation so ordinary, that it's difficult to get much involved. Except...and that's because Lang has put together the movie so professionally and with such craftsman-like assurance that it's difficult not to stick with it. The Blue Gardenia keeps moving and we keep watching.

Norah Larkin (Ann Baxter) is a telephone switchboard operator at West-Coast Telephone Company in Los Angeles. She rooms with her two best friends, also operators. There's Crystal Carpenter (Ann Southern), a wisecracking, sympathetic lady who always has a cigarette in her mouth, and Sally Ellis (Jeff Donnell), a friendly, mystery-reading young woman who could use a date now and then. Norah's fiancée, a man she loves dearly and to whom she is faithful, is a soldier in Korea. On her birthday she opens a letter from him, a letter she has been saving for a special moment. Turns out it's a "Dear Norah" letter and he tells her he's decided to marry someone else. Norah's world crashes around her. When successful painter of calendar girls and major lecher Harry Prebble calls (he had discovered Crystal's number), Norah impulsively pretends to be Crystal and accepts Harry's invitation to dinner. All she has to do is take a taxi to The Blue Gardenia.

When she arrives, Harry already has things well in hand. "Chinese peas," he tells the waiter before she arrives, "fried rice and Lobster Cantonese. Well, that's the dinner. The drinks...Polynesian Pearldivers...and don't spare the rum." While Norah is grateful not to be alone, Harry keeps ordering those Pearldivers and Nat Cole at the piano croons...
"Blue gardenia...now I'm alone with you
and I am also blue...
she has tossed us aside.
And like you, blue gardenia, once I was near her heart...
...love bloomed like a flower...
then the petals fell...
Blue gardenia...thrown to a passing breeze...
but pressed in my book of memories..."

Soon Norah is considerably more than tipsy and she's at Harry's apartment. He puts on a record of "Blue Gardenia," turns down the lights and starts getting way too physical. Norah is so woozy she can hardly see, but she finds a fireplace poker in her hand, swings and shatters a big mirror. She swings again, hits Harry and passes out. When she comes to she runs from Harry's apartment, makes her way home in the rain and can't remember much except the dinner. Then the newspaper headlines scream that Harry Prebble has been murdered. Hot on the case are the cops and Casey Mayo (Richard Conte), ace reporter on the Los Angeles Chronicle, "the peoples' favorite columnist." He's determined to find the woman who killed Prebble before the police do. Among the clues, a crushed blue gardenia at Harry's place, bought for the mysterious woman by Harry at The Blue Gardenia. Said the elderly, blind flower seller when she came to Prebble's table, "Good evening, sir. Would you like a blue gardenia for the lady? It's a specialty of the house. Aren't they pretty...?"

Will Norah be caught? Will Casey find love? Will Crystal make wry observations? Will the real killer turn out to be interesting, unexpected, startling? Well, no the last question.

This is Anne Baxter's movie. For me, that's more a drawback than an advantage. She was 29 when she made The Blue Gardenia but seems older. Baxter too often carried around with her an aura of well-bred graciousness. She spoke (and acted) with a carefully modulated voice. In The Blue Gardenia she gives the impression of one of those wealthy young matrons who live in the most exclusive of neighborhoods, not a young telephone operator with limited experience, natural warmth and real vulnerability. Baxter's great weakness as an actress, in my opinion, was too often appearing so earnest that the acting could be detected. This made her perfect as Eve Harrington in All About Eve (Two-Disc Special Edition). When she could tone it down, she could be most appealing, as in Yellow Sky.

In addition to the pleasure of Fritz Lang's craftsmanship, Richard Conte was an intriguing actor, Ann Southern is a joy even if she's playing an Ann Southern character; Richard Erdman as Casey Mayo's photographer adds his fine ability to read a line and be both likable and wry; Jeff Donnell, now forgotten, always made an appealing best friend in so many movies; and Raymond Burr, considerably slimmer than in his Perry Mason years, makes a memorable and sleazy Harry Prebble.

We even learn a little about the cost of living in Los Angeles in the early Fifties. Casey has met Norah in a diner. She wants to trust his offer of help, but she knows he's a newspaperman. Casey isn't quite sure if Norah is the Blue Gardenia murderer. They eat and they talk, but then it's time to leave. "How much do I owe you," Casey asks the counterman.

We listen enviously to the reply. "Two hamburgers and five coffees...three for you and two for the lady. That's $1.40, Mr. Mayo."

The DVD transfer looks fine. There are no extras and the movie starts as soon as you slip it in the player. If you hit "menu" the chapter stops will appear.



2 out of 5 starsLang's weakest noir
The Blue Gardenia is a rather disappointing noir from Fritz Lang, and easily the weakest of his tabloid trilogy (Gardenia, Beyond a Reasonable Doubt and the superb While the City Sleeps). It lacks the guts to really go for the jugular and the set-up is pure production line stuff - watchable but forgettable, with Raymond Burr's seduction technique leaving the only lasting impression. It's hard to get excited by Kiino's DVD either - no extras and an acceptable but far from outstanding transfer.



4 out of 5 starsGood film, Bad transfer.
Performances by Anne Baxter and Raymond Burr and Fritz Lang's direction make this a top drawer noir. Unfortunately the transfer leaves an awful lot to be desired, especially when compared to recent releases of Fox and Warner noirs. While the source print is contrasty but clean, this transfer appears to have been made from an early D1 or D2 digital video master, early digital formats that predate current DVD mastering processes, resulting in a blocky, pixilated image much like watching the film through through a window screen. By putting an already compressed image (D1 master) through another round of compression (MPEG-2 for DVD), you get an image that's perpetually distracting, and un-film-like. This is not uncommon with many low-budget DVD releases, especially from the wild-frontier days of the shift from VHS to DVD. Thanks to TCM and The Critereon Collection, our expectations are much higher now, and this is a film that deserves better.



4 out of 5 starsspellbinding noir gem with Anne Baxter
If you love Anne Baxter ("All About Eve", "The Ten Commandments"), chances are you'll most certainly appreciate her bravura performance in THE BLUE GARDENIA, directed in 1953 by Fritz Lang. This spellbinding film noir gem, based on a story by Vera Caspary (best-remembered for "Laura"), takes the audience on a mysterious murder case with lots of unexpected twists and turns.

When Norah Larkin (Anne Baxter) learns that her boyfriend overseas has become engaged to another woman, she drowns her sorrows at the Blue Gardenia club with notorious playboy Harry Prebble (Raymond Burr). The following morning, Harry is discovered dead in his apartment, and Norah has no memory of what occurred in those few crucial hours. Driven to the brink of near-hysteria, Norah begins to fear the worst as scandal-hungry newspapers start to fill their columns with stories of the "Blue Gardenia" murderess. Could Norah have really killed Prebble?...

Anne Baxter leads a dream cast in THE BLUE GARDENIA which also boasts delightful Ann Sothern ("Lady in a Cage") and Jeff Donnell ("In a Lonely Place") as Norah's flatmates; Richard Conte as the newspaper reporter who just might provide the key to Norah's salvation, and the legendary Nat 'King' Cole in a cameo appearance, singing the haunting title song (composed by Bob Russell & Lester Lee).

THE BLUE GARDENIA is filled with the sickening paranoia which was so indicative of the times in which it was filmed. Director Fritz Lang was one of the unfortunate targets of McCarthy's House Un-American Activities Committee; an anti-Communist witchhunt which ultimately (and needlessly) destroyed the lives of many actors, screenwriters and directors in the Hollywood community. Lang used that same sense of paranoic dread in depicting the ordeal of Norah in the movie.

If you love noir, THE BLUE GARDENIA will be an essential purchase. The DVD sadly has no extra materials. (Single-sided, single-layer disc).


Related Categories:Similar Items

The Woman in the Window (MGM Film Noir)

Dangerous Crossing (Fox Film Noir)

The Big Combo

Black Widow (Fox Film Noir)

The Big Heat
More Similar Items...

DVDs
 Top Selling DVDs
 Action & Adventure
 Alias
 Angel
 Animation
 Anime
 Battlestar Galactica
 Boxed Sets
 Buffy the Vampire Slayer
 Cartoon Network
 Classics
 Comedy
 CSI
 Cult Movies
 Disney
 Doctor Who
 Drama
 Farscape
 Fox TV
 Futuristic
 Harry Potter
 HBO
 Heroes
 Highlander
 Hong Kong Action
 Horror
 James Bond
 Kids & Family
 Lord of the Rings
 Lost
 MTV
 Martial Arts
 The Matrix
 Monty Python
 Mystery & Suspense
 Nickelodeon
 PBS
 Sci-Fi Animation
 Sci-Fi & Fantasy
 The Simpsons
 Smallville
 Special Interests
 Sports
 Stargate SG-1
 Star Trek
 Star Wars
 Superheroes
 Supernatural & Occult
 Television
 Thrillers
 X-Files

 Top Selling UMDs


WFC Home | About | Columns | Comics | Contests | Features | Freebies | Gallery | Links | News | Podcasts | Shop



World Famous Comics Network
World Famous Comics Community
ComicsCommunity.com
Comic Book Classifieds
ComicBookClassifieds.com
SketchCards.com
SketchCards.com

GO SHOPPING >>

© 1995 - 2008 World Famous Comics. All rights reserved. All other © & ™ belong to their respective owners.
Advertiser Info . Terms of Use . Privacy Policy . Contact Info
World Famous Comics Network