Experiment Perilous (1944) Poster

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7/10
What Is This Evil That Shadows Their Lives?
hitchcockthelegend5 February 2013
Experiment Perilous is directed by Jacques Tourneur and adapted to screenplay by Warren Duff from the Margaret Carpenter novel of the same name. It stars Hedy Lamarr, George Brent, Paul Lukas, Albert Dekker, Olive Blakeney and Carl Esmond. Music is by Roy Webb and cinematography by Tony Gaudio.

1903 New York and psychiatrist Dr. Huntington Bailey (Brent) is plunged into a psychological maelstrom when he enters the lives of Clarissa (Blakeney), Allida (Lamarr) and Nick Bederaux (Lukas).

I've been living in that diary tonight, living the strange distorted lives of Nick and his sister.

It's a grand title for a film, but one which is something of a bum steer since it conjures up images of Frankenstein type horror. Experiment Perilous comes from a Hippocrates saying and is quoted by Brent's good doctor during the unfurling of the narrative. The Carpenter novel was actually set in the present day but a decision was made to transfer the story to the early part of the 1900's so as to get some period flavours into the mix. A good move as it turned out.

Very much in the vein of The Murder In Thornton Square (or the remake Gaslight also released in 44), Rebecca, Suspicion et al, Tourneur's movie isn't up to the standard of those films, but that in no way means it doesn't hold many pleasures, because it does, especially for Tourneur fans. It's very much a slow burner, a talky picture that for the first hour nearly crumbles under the weight of too much exposition and cod psychological musings. Yet the visuals and alternating interior and exterior period settings set up by Tourneur and Gaudio are mightily impressive (the interior set designs were nominated for an Oscar). Story unfolds to a back drop of a steam train, snowy gas lighted streets and an imposing period Brownstone abode (good use of miniatures a bonus here as well), while the interiors veer from elegant dressings to gloomy rooms of shadows and a hidden away spiral staircase. These are tailored made for Tourneur who ensures the standard formula of plotting is given a kick by its surroundings.

Narratively it's made obvious to us that something isn't right with Lukas' shifty husband character and it comes as no surprise to see a romance begin to form between Brent's doctor and Lamarr's emotionally confused wife in possible peril. But these sign posted developments are well handled by the director, where flashbacks help and sinister additions such as a child hidden away upstairs and the Bederaux's back story keep things perched on the mystery/thriller edge. Cast performances are strong, with Lukas suitably suspicious, Brent unassuming and reflective and the beautiful Lamarr showing a fragile innocence that underpins the story. It all builds to a furious finale that involves fire, water and hopefully some race against time heroics?...

Some patience is needed to get the most out of the picture, but neo- Gothic delights are within for those so inclined. 7.5/10
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7/10
Similar to Gaslight; worth a look anyway
smatysia9 September 2002
Wow, Hedy Lamarr was so exquisitely beautiful in this film. I really must see some more of her films. There was an obvious similarity to "Gaslight" of the same year, and I wonder which film was released first. I enjoyed this film and recommend it. Grade: B
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7/10
Similar to Gaslight
Maleejandra5 October 2008
Dr. Huntington Bailey is on a train trip when he meets Cissie Bederaux (Olive Blakeney), a nervous woman who reaches out to him. At first he thinks she might be mentally unstable, but he soon learns the truth. She explains that she is the sister of the famous Nick Bederaux (Paul Lukas) about whom she is writing a book. She asks Bailey if he would help her arrange her hotel stay when they reach their destination. He agrees.

It is not to be, however. Cissie dies of a heart condition and her belongings are sent to her brother, all except her writing materials. Bailey meets the Bederauxs, Nick and his unusual wife Allida (Hedy Lamarr). She has many admirers and a lovely home, but she seems sad somehow. Nick quickly engages Bailey to study his wife, secretly of course, but what he finds is not what he originally suspects.

There are some interesting moments in this film, especially toward the end, but the story goes along predictably. It is very similar to Gaslight, a film with Ingrid Bergman which is considerably better remembered. George Brent is not an impressive leading man. He is adequate in his part, but he is not overly charming or attractive to make him very memorable.
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An Eerie and sumptuous period thriller by the great Tourneur
Kalaman5 April 2003
If you are a fan of Jacques Tourneur, "Experiment Perilous" is a must-see. This sinister and beautifully photographed period thriller ranks with Tourneur's supreme masterpieces, "Out of the Past", "Stars in My Crown", "Canyon Passage", "Curse of the Demon", "I Walked with a Zombie", and "Cat People". It is imbued with Tourneur's trademark touch of ambiguity and mystery. One of the reasons "Experiment Perilous" is so underrated is that the story does not flow logically. You have to do a bit of brain work to understand it, but if you are already familiar with Tourneur's cinema, this may come as a revelation. The film has often been compared to Cukor's similar costume thriller "Gaslight" which was also released in 1944 but "Experiment Perilous" is a better and more personal work. The opening chance encounter between Dr. Bailey (George Brent) and Cissie (Olive Blakeney) on the train resembles the mysterious chance meetings of "Cat People" and Tourneur's 1956 film noir "Nightfall". It has been said that the film was set in 1903 as opposed to 1944 because Heddy Lamarr wanted to wear period costumes. Lamarr is undoubtedly beautiful and her scenes with Brent and Lukas are exquisite and sensual.

There is an excellent analysis on the film in Chris Fujiwara's book, JACQUES TOURNEUR: THE CINEMA OF NIGHTFALL (1998).
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7/10
While not especially original, it was very enjoyable
planktonrules24 April 2008
Warning: Spoilers
In 1940, the British version of GASLIGHT debuted. Until very recently, most people didn't even know that it existed, as Hollywood execs bought up all the prints and remade it into an Oscar-winning film (the 1944 version with Ingrid Bergman). When the more famous version debuted in 1944, EXPERIMENT PERILOUS also appeared in theaters and BOTH films are very, very similar. Both films concern a seemingly normal husband who is insane and is trying to drive their wives insane--and it just doesn't seem like a mere coincidence that they both were made at about the same time. Despite the lack of originality, EXPERIMENT PERILOUS is still an excellent film--though I naturally have to knock off a point for being derivative.

As far as the acting goes, it was generally exceptional. I particularly liked Paul Lukas, as the insane husband bent on manipulating and destroying his wife, Heddy Lamar. While sounding like Bela Lugosi (after all, they were both Hungarian), he was menacing and exciting to watch.

As for George Brent, we was his usual competent and interesting self--sort of an "everyman" character and he did a good job. The only negative can't be blamed on Brent but the writers. That's because at the end of the film, there is a really dumb and clichéd moment-something you know cannot possibly happen. That's because in the huge confrontation scene with Lukas, Brent beats him up and kicks away the gun---but he never bothers to pick up the gun and runs to the next room. Then, as the cliché goes, Lukas returns again and it's yet another fight. In real life, you'd either keep the gun or just shoot Lukas to end the threat once and for all!

Hedy Lamarr was the weakest of the main characters, as she was given a typical Hedy Lamarr role. Hollywood insisted on casting her as a zombie-like lady who went through wardrobe change after wardrobe change. Of course she was a beautiful woman, but these sort of "Barbie doll roles" did little to challenge this highly intelligent woman. Sadly, despite having a brilliant mind, you'd never know it from most of the scripts she was given.

I do have a mild complaint, though, about the producer not doing his job well in casting the film. Lukas was a Hungarian and Lamarr was Austrian--yet they played parts that made no sense. First, Lukas spoke with this accent but his sister sounded like a typical American. Second, although Lamarr hid her accent better than most European-born American starlets (such as Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich), she did NOT sound like a lady from Vermont!! I think Hattie McDaniel or Marjorie Main sounded more like New Englanders than Miss Lamarr! Mentioning where she was from was unnecessary for the plot--they could have easily just said she was from "the country" and left it at that.

Despite several mistakes here and there and a derivative plot, the film still works because it was exciting and captivated me. Plus, although this was made by a "2nd tier studio" (RKO), it looked great--with the most realistic weather in any 1940s film I can recall--with rain, snow and sleet at different times in the film. That and the set designs and decoration were lovely.

Overall, it's worth a look, but my advice is to seek out the original GASLIGHT--it's the best and most original in the genre.
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6/10
Strange lady on a train
AlsExGal28 December 2018
Jacques Tourneur directed this RKO historical melodrama that has a good cast, excellent director, and atmospheric cinematography by Tony Gaudio, so the money spent definitely shows on the screen. So what's wrong? The wordy, tortuously slow script that is all talk and no action and tries to echo "Gaslight".

When there's finally a confrontation between the good and bad guys, they yap forever before there's any action. Director Tourneur and his cast do their utmost, but they just can't redeem the script. They do make the film watchable and intermittently fascinating. In the end, Gaudio's cinematography and the performances are better than the script deserves.

It is an interesting factoid that Cary Grant and Gregory Peck were both scheduled to play George Brent's role but both dropped out. It might have been a better film had one of them been in it.
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7/10
Gaslight period suspenser with some effective moments
enigma-192 March 1999
At turn of century, George Brent encounters woman on train with whom he strikes up a conversation. Later in new york, he learned she has died suddenly. The details of her death bother him in light of some of their conversation. later he is taken to the home of her brother, a prominent doctor (Paul Lukas) and his beautiful wife (Hedy Lamarr) and son. At the party, Lukas voices concern about his wife's recent strange, and asks for Brent's help. Though Lamarr's performance is rather flat, perhaps deliberately so, Brent and Lukas give strong performances, and Tourneur's direction is effective as always. The film builds well to a strong finish.
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7/10
Suspenseful Tourneur film
blanche-213 February 2006
Hedy Lamarr is a beautiful but troubled woman in "Experiment Perilous," also starring George Brent and Paul Lukas. This film has been compared to "Gaslight" as well as other works by Tourneur, including "Cat People." It certainly has elements of both.

Brent is a doctor who meets a lovely woman on a train. She says some strange things to him about the home of her brother, where she is going to stay. Shortly afterward, she dies suddenly. When he later meets her brother and his wife, he falls for the wife at first sight. And what man wouldn't - she's Hedy Lamarr. The doctor is soon drawn into a confused and mysterious situation at the house as the husband, Paul Lukas, confesses concerns about his wife.

This is a well done, compelling movie where nothing happens until the end, but there is plenty under the surface to keep the viewer interested and guessing. Underlying suspense and tension pervades throughout as Brent becomes more and more suspicious of activities going on at the house, especially when Lamarr asks for his help.

The casting is a little bizarre. George Brent exhibits no emotion throughout and is quite wooden. Lamarr is supposed to be a former farm girl and evidently from the U.S., so one questions the accent. She has no expression in her voice or face throughout, which may have been the decision of the director. Lukas is excellent, an affability and charm belying what's underneath. He is a member of a wealthy New York family, yet he has an accent and his sister didn't. So one wonders what dictated this strange casting and why at least the story wasn't changed to accommodate the actors chosen.

There's been some discussion as to whether Lamarr could have done "Gaslight" rather than Bergman. Hedy Lamarr with good direction was a decent actress, but not in my opinion a strong enough one for the role in "Gaslight." She was one of the most beautiful women in film and could be absolutely delightful in the right circumstances. Her contribution to film history is more than satisfactory.
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6/10
Tinged with madness
Leofwine_draca14 October 2018
Warning: Spoilers
EXPERIMENT PERILOUS is another film noir of the 1940s about a family who seem to be tinged with madness. The setting is a house full of hidden secrets, where a doctor (the solid George Brent) arrives after being drawn into the story by meeting a woman on a train who ends up dead soon after. This film mainly gets by thanks to a strong and ethereal performance from Hedy Lamarr as a rather unsettling kind of femme fatale character; there's little in the way of plot but the whole thing is laced with atmosphere and subtle meaning. It's very well shot, too.
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7/10
Good film, good performances, interesting plot
vincentlynch-moonoi2 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
First off, I don't see the great parallels between this film and "The Spiral Staircase" that some see. Yes, both films featured George Brent, and a back spiral staircase pops up in this film. But there the similarities end, other than that this is a psychological thriller.

The story takes place just after the turn of the century when a doctor -- George Brent -- meets an overly friendly older lady (Olive Blakeney) on a train. She shares with him that she is going to visit her brother (Paul Lukas) and his young wife (Hedy Lamarr). She persuades him to have her luggage sent to the same hotel as where he will be living. But, shortly thereafter, she dies and he is introduced at a tea to Lucas and Lamarr. Lamarr seems slightly crazy, and her husband is seemingly treating her so. Although Lukas asks Brent to treat his wife, he then becomes jealous of him (and others; old husband, young suitors). The question turns out to be -- who is the really crazy one? Brent decides to free Lamarr, but...well, let's just say there's an explosive ending.

There are some nice special effects in this film toward the conclusion, and it's clear this was fairly big budget for RKO.

I'm not at all a fan of Hedy Lamarr, though I admit that every once in a while she came across well; she does here. George Brent hasn't the greatest depth of any American actor, but I almost always find him enjoyable on the big screen...and he is here. Paul Lukas was a darned good actor, and plays his part here nicely.

A classic? Well, no. But a darned good film that is worth watching...and I have, twice so far. Considering buying a DVD.
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3/10
Terrible, unrealistic, boring story
deexsocalygal18 September 2020
Boring boring boring. Heddy Lamar was stoic, stared straight ahead, expressionless, & talked like she was weak & her jaw was wired shut. I've never seen anything like it. What in the world was her problem in this movie? My goodness! The story was unrealistic & didn't make sense. The only thing I enjoyed was looking around inside the old house. Skip this, it's not worth watching.
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8/10
dark society drama
RanchoTuVu11 May 2006
Atmospheric account of a chance meeting on a train that leads a doctor (George Brent) into the strange world of a young woman (Hedy Lamar) and her much older husband (Paul Lukas) . The opening takes place on a night time train ride to New York through cascading rainfall, and the inclement weather conditions continue on into a snowy and cloudy New York of the early 1900's. A story of a rich and jealous older husband with a lovely young wife, whom he had groomed in Parisian salons to enter society, and now feels insecure when she's enjoying the very society that he paid thousands of dollars to educate her to be in, who grew up in Austria and became laden with guilt and who now is so damaged that he can't see clearly enough to recognize his own good circumstances, and thus ruins everything. Director Jacques Tourneur dissects this pathological family (they have a son whom they keep in a bedroom which is up a spiral staircase) with great attention, creating some believable menace in true psychological suspense style. The need for a hero figure (Brent) to rescue the pretty Lamar and her innocent young son and provide a suitable conclusion, and Lamar's rather distracted and distant acting style are legitimate quibbles, but the overall tone is intelligently dark and serious.
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7/10
Beneath the Brooding
LeonLouisRicci6 December 2012
Film-Noir is at its best when placed in a contemporary present time template. The period pieces struggle to fit into the modern sensibility of the genre. That said, there are some directors and films that can pull it off and deliver these off center psychological presentations.

This one is a smooth looking ominous study of driven insanity that is an oft used narrative of twentieth century fixation on mental illness and psychiatry. Set during the time of Freud and Jung this pathological study was in its infancy and lent itself to broad concepts and yet proved diagnosis.

There is a brooding atmosphere with doom laden despair. An urgency of impending impact on the innocent and the gullible. It is a film filled with barely a smile or upbeat behavior where everything and everybody is bursting inside but contained in the periphery.

This is the suspense and the anxiety that is even more so because of the Victorian pleasantries and repressed emotions that culminate in a determined need for venting as the fear simmers and the release is a welcome relief. The Director's take on all this is the usual unsettling couching of style and pacing that is slow, suggestive, and stimulating.
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4/10
Technically Gorgeous, Makes Zero Sense
ghosthotelcomic6 March 2022
The sets, costumes, cinematography and design of the film are spectacular. Lamar is of course spectacular. But that's about it.

The story makes zero sense. I defy anyone to explain it in any detail or to explain the motivations of the characters. The fact that most description just touch on the superficial resemblance to Gaslight proves that it can't be done. The film. Makes. No. Sense.

On top of that,the.male lead is remarkably unattractive. He makes lon Chaney Jr. Look suave. I read that several top leading men like Carry Grant were up for the lead and passed. Well, I think about 2 or 3 dozen more passed before they finally got to this paunchy lug with the hilarious toupee. He is Hedy's leading man?! Really?

But I digress. The main point is the story is incomprehensible. Even if you manage to parse out the flow of events, those events are nonsensical and random Having said all that, I still enjoyed it on a technical level.
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peril at the house..
dbdumonteil21 March 2008
Jack Tourneur knew how to build an ominous atmosphere :remember the scenes at the pool in "cat people",the meeting on the moor in "circle of danger" and almost everything in " night of the demon".

The meeting with the old Clarissa on the train,the station where she leaves the hero ,and the way she says goodbye (actually farewell) is almost supernatural.Then the extraordinary beauty of Hedy Lamarr and her picture add to build an eerie atmosphere ,sometimes recalling as user has pointed out ,"gaslight" .

The script,however ,does not always make sense ,and lacks focus ,unlike the three other works I mention.But just for the atmosphere ,this is another Tourneur you should not miss.
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6/10
Who sent the daisies?
AAdaSC28 March 2010
A chance encounter on a train between Dr Bailey (George Brent) and Cissie (Olive Blakeney) brings the doctor into the world of Nick (Paul Lukas) and Allida (Hedy Lamarr). When Cissie dies, Dr Bailey is suspicious and he he starts to look through Cissie's travel case which has been sent on to him by mistake from their train journey together.

The story keeps you watching and the cast are good, although Hedy Lamarr comes across as slightly too feeble on occasion. There is no complicated plot twist and it is pretty obvious who the evil one is. The psychological torture that is portrayed is extremely lame ("Gaslight" is far better at achieving the required effect) and may have you wondering what the point of the film is. There seems to be nothing suspicious to be investigating. It's an OK story about love that doesn't work out and the moral is don't marry someone who is way older than you......unless you like daisies....
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6/10
Murky Victorian melodrama has a "Gaslight" connection...
Doylenf16 December 2005
That HEDY LAMARR was one of the great beauties of the screen goes without saying. But whether she had the acting abilities to play a woman being driven slowly out of her mind by a calculating doctor husband (PAUL LUKAS) still remains questionable. There is no evidence in EXPERIMENT PERILOUS to suggest that she would have been up to the demands of the Ingrid Bergman role in GASLIGHT, which she turned down.

Instead, she chose to star in this murky melodrama full of flashbacks and with an obscurely motivated script by Warren Duff. While it's by no means a complete failure, neither is it a resounding success.

GEORGE BRENT as the friend who comes to Lamarr's aid is as stiff and wooden as ever, using just one expression throughout and obviously not too well connected to his role. Whether this was the director's fault or not, I can't say, but a more persuasive performance on his part would have made the whole thing more effective. PAUL LUKAS gives his usual professional performance as the doctor with an unhealthy perspective on how to deal with his wife and child.

Jacques Tourner's direction leaves a lot to be desired. This is a story in the same mold as GASLIGHT, but nowhere as effective with a murky script and a dull payoff for the climax. As for Hedy Lamarr, she was much more at ease in other films, even though this is said to be one of her own favorite films.
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6/10
WELL MADE BUT STILL FEELS INERT...!
masonfisk19 December 2021
In probably the worst titled film of any era, Hedy Lamarr (that's Hedley!) stars in this 1944 noirish melodrama. On a rainy night & during a train ride, a psychiatrist, played by George Brent, meets a fearful traveler who sidles up to him & to calm her nerves, she relates the tale of her sister-in-law, Lamarr, which intrigues him but once he hears about his companion's sudden death, Brent, along w/his friend, played by Ralph Meeker, engages Lamarr & her husband, played by Paul Lukas. During their burgeoning relationship, we find out Lamarr's marriage is an unhappy one w/Lukas seeming to keep Lamarr locked up in her New York brownstone so he decides to become the hero & free her from her moorings but Lukas has made plans to kill them both (including their child) when due to a gas leak, the house will explode to bits. Okay...The usually reliable Jacques Tourneur (Cat People/Out of the Past) helmed this well mounted but ultimately too nonsensical for its own good yarn where strangely the acting, set design & cinematography are all tops but the story itself feels over-baked w/a protag who seems to be involved through all fault of his own. An interesting misfire but a misfire none the less.
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6/10
pacing somnolent
mossgrymk26 October 2023
Jacques Tourneur directed arguably the greatest noir of all time, 1946's gripping "Out Of The Past". But you'd hardly know it from this ungripping predecessor. It is moody, elegant, dreamy and psychological as all get out. It even features a late Victorian era shrink not named Freud. What it most assuredly is not, at any point, is disturbing, suspenseful or compelling. I guess the basic problem is that it's simply too allusive and suggestive. All the murders that Lukas' character commits occur offscreen so that even though we are told repeatedly that Lukas' wife, played by Hedy Lamarr, is in danger one never FEELS the peril. For this major flaw I'm afraid one has to mostly blame Tourneur, although producer/writer Warren Duff's screenplay is not exactly pitched at a Daniel Mainwaring level (the scribe of "Past"). So enjoy a good Lukas performance and Hedy at her loveliest and try to survive the endless, dull scenes of George Brent sleepwalking through fin de siecle NYC with his suspicions of Lukas' insanity and Hedy's vulnerability. C plus.
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6/10
Hedy Lamarr does not get enough to do...
Philipp_Flersheim20 November 2021
Other reviewers have said all that needs to be said about how derivative this film is. Howerever, it has been some years since I last watched 'Gaslight', so this did not bother me too much. What did bother me was the lack of focus. The picture takes an inordinate amount of time to come to the point. Instead of deftly setting the scene and then concentrating on the attempts of the husband (Paul Lukas) to manipulate his wife (Hedy Lamarr) into believing she is going mad, there is an endless exposition: In a dark and stormy night (sounds like the beginning of one of the novels Snoopy is trying to publish) strangers are meeting on trains, suitcases are being confused, secret diaries read and so on and so on. The story really gets going only after about three-quarters of an hour. Then it hits its stride and becomes very good. Still, for reasons that remain director Jacques Tourneur's secret, Lamarr - an actress whose combination of intelligence and beauty Hollywood has never surpassed - does not get a lot to do except looking helpless, frightened and confused. Instead, Tourneur focuses on George Brent and Lukas. Granted, both do an excellent job, but that does not change the fact that all in all watching this film is a less than satisfying experience.
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7/10
A fascinatingly noirish mystery.
MOscarbradley12 November 2023
This highly unusual B-Movie has been totally forgotten even among aficionados of both its star, Hedy Lamarr and its director, Jacques Tourneur. It's hardly one of Tourneur's masterpieces but it's a fascinatingly noirish mystery nevertheless and Lamarr is excellent as the beautiful woman who may or may not be mad or the victim of a controlling husband. He's Paul Lukas who, despite winning an Oscar for playing a sympathetic anti-fascist, was always at his best playing the bad guy. The hero is George Brent, the good doctor trying to figure it all out and make sense of a chance meeting on a train.

In many respects it's a fairly typical 'women's picture', closer to a Gothic Romance than a film noir and its period setting may remind you a little of "Gaslight" and there's good supporting performances from the likes of Albert Dekker, Margaret Wycherly and George N. Neise. If Lamarr was no Greta Garbo she was still one of the most beautiful women ever to grace the screen and if you need proof of that you need look no further than here. More than a curiosity, this has a lot to recommend it.
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5/10
Gas Lite
utgard1431 October 2013
So-so melodrama has a decent cast and a great director but somehow never takes off. Part of the problem is it's one of those movies where everybody talks like they're trying to be quotable. Like every line should be delivered like a poem. Also, Tourneur's direction is a bit of a disappointment. I'm a fan of his but this is a rather pedestrian workmanlike effort by him. George Brent and Paul Lukas are fine actors but here both seem miscast, particularly Lukas. Then there's Hedy Lamarr. I've never been a huge Hedy Lamarr fan. Of all the screen goddesses of the golden age she leaves me rather cold. I've enjoyed some of her films but she's not a favorite of mine. I find her acting OK, although it's strained in this picture. She seems stretched beyond her limits and her portrayal makes Allida seem mentally slow.

It's a fairly by-the-numbers flick in the Gaslight mold. But Gaslight was better in every respect. Obviously fans of Hedy Lamarr will probably enjoy it more than I did. So take that for what it's worth.
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8/10
Bederaux Family Values
bkoganbing8 October 2014
George Brent while traveling on a train back to New York meets nice but frightened spinster lady Olive Blakeney and they strike up an acquaintance. He accepts her invitation to visit her posh home in Manhattan and then finds that she's died rather suddenly. That's enough to intrigue Brent, but when he meets the family head Paul Lukas and his beautiful wife Hedy Lamarr that's more than enough to keep him interested in the Bederaux Family.

Hedy Lamarr was now away from the really big studios and on a downward slide in her career that was interrupted somewhat by Samson And Delilah. But she was still putting out some good product as Experiment Perilous demonstrates. This drama set during the Henry James/Edith Wharton period in New York is one creepy movie that presents Lamarr as a frightened, but self controlled woman not knowing what her millionaire husband will do next. A poet George Neise with whom she had an affair has already been done in and she's rightly scared. She reaches to Brent like a drowning woman for a life raft.

Lukas is fresh off his Oscar from 1943's Watch On The Rhine and for a while and really for the rest of his career that Oscar guaranteed him some better character roles. He certainly wasn't a traditional leading man, but he notched above his fellow character players for the rest of his life.

Director Jacques Tourneur kept the atmosphere murky, moody, and creepy not necessarily in that order. Experiment Perilous did get an Oscar nomination for Art&Set Direction for a perfect recreation of turn of the last century New York. And he got great performances out of his three leads and the ensemble cast RKO assembled.

If you are a Hedy Lamarr fan this is one of her major films.
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6/10
How did you know about the daises?
kapelusznik1818 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** Far too deep in the subject of criminal psychology this overly complicated film about murder and insanity revolves around the not too wrapped tight and beautiful Allida Bederaux played, who was considered the most beautiful woman in the world at that time, by the drop dead gorgeous Hedy Lammar. It's Allida who feels that her crazy and carpet chewing husband Nick, Paul Lukas, who turns out to be a real murderous wacko is trying to both turn her five year old son Alex against her as well as have her committed to a lunatic asylum.

It's psychiatrist Dr. Huntington "Hunt" Baily, George Brent, who gets the lowdown to Allida and Nick's strange relationship while on a train ride from the mid-west, Nebraska, to New York from Nick's just released from a sanitarium sister Cissie, Olive Blakenly. It's Cassie who filled him in on just what's happening in the Bederaux household and how her brother is a threat to both Allida and Alex. Before "Hunt" even gets to meet Allida whom, by seeing a painting of her, he has developed the hots for Cissie drops dead of a heart attack and her luggage ends up with "Hunt" by mistake. Finding a manuscript by Cissie about her brother and his wife Allida that exposes Nick as a first class psycho who's a danger to himself as well as those , like Allida & Alex, around him. "Hunt" is now more then determined to keep her and the boy away from him for their own good and safety.

***SPOILERS*** Later after in an effort to save both Allida & Alex from Nicks' plan to murder them as well as the non-existent family butler who's identity Nick plans to use in faking his own death, if you can figure out what his deranged plan is, "Hunt" confronts the madman and after trying to talk some sense into him by getting him to have himself committed. Nick now pulls out all the stops as well as his rod, gun, and not only attempt to blast "Hunt" away but have his own beautiful wife and five year old son iced by burning the entire house, or mansion, down by igniting its gas works that he secretly turned on!

It's now up to "Hunt" to put and end to this insanity on Nick's part who at the same time is pointing a gun to his head. In a wild free for all it's "Hunt" who gets the upper hand by disarming, in knocking the gun out of his hand, Nick and having enough time to get himself together with both Allida & Alex, who were left unconscious by the gas fumes, out of the house before it exploded! As for crazy Nick he quite didn't make it out with the house erupting in a massive gas explosion that burned him to a crisp and, in the only thing that he accomplished in the movie, left him unidentifiable!
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2/10
A waste of time
richard-178715 October 2023
This movie about a mad husband trying to drive his wife insane opened in Dec 1944. Gaslight, with the same plot, had opened six months before in June. Gaslight is a remarkable movie, with a great performance by Ingrid Bergman and chilling direction. This movie has largely flat acting - yes, Lamarr is beautiful, but way too understated - and lifeless direction.

Very frankly, I don't see why RKO bothered to release this so soon after Gaslight. The comparison is inevitable, and not at all flattering.

Just watching Lamarr's beautiful - but too often expressionless - face and nice black and white cinematography is not enough to hold me for 91 minutes.
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