The Unholy Wife (1957) Poster

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7/10
Bombshell Diana Dors – surprise! – can act, but throws wine-country thriller out of kilter
bmacv18 April 2003
Despite the BBC/PBS series Danger UXB, bombshells do not lie thick on the English soil. So, in the post-war years – the era of Jayne Mansfield and Mamie van Doren, of Brigitte Bardot and Anita Ekberg – Britain hastened to close the bombshell gap. Its most potent weapon was Diana Dors (née Diana Fluck). Sort of a bangers-and-mash Marilyn Monroe, with the same fulsome figure and cascade of molten-platinum hair, she was an inflatable doll who would soon blow up to Rubenesque proportions. She would become something of a joke, even to herself, as her self-mocking appearance in the Joan Crawford fright vehicle Berserk attests.

But when we first see her, in a prison cell, in John Farrow's The Unholy Wife, her face is innocent of makeup and her mousy brown hair is raked back. Had she chosen to present herself less brassily, she might have been seen not so much as a sexpot but as an actress, and a surprisingly adept one at that. She plays the grass-widow wife of a long-gone pilot and lurks in bars cadging drinks from potential sugar-daddies (her workmate is Marie Windsor, in a stingy tease of a role). She meets and marries lonesome Rod Steiger, who runs a family vineyard in the California wine country (shades of The Most Happy Fella).

But she's restless and sullen, left in the huge gingerbread mansion with her aging mother-in-law (Beulah Bondi) and her pre-existing young son while Steiger stays obsessed with his casks and bottles. On the side, she romances a hired hand (Tom Tryon). Her dissatisfactions turn murderous, and she hatches a scheme to shoot her husband on the pretext that she mistook him for a prowler. Alas, she kills his best friend instead, but comes up with a ploy by which Steiger will be convicted of the murder....

The Unholy Wife is slow and moody rather than tense and agile; Lucien Ballard's color photography shows the dark, muted interiors that would later distinguish the Godfather movies. And typically, we lose track of Steiger's character under all the mannerisms he piles on top of it. But Dors, who starts out high-strung and abrasive, mellows down into a conflicted and even touching trophy wife maneuvered into homicide less out of greed or lust than by stifling boredom; she offers more dimensions than the black-hearted Jezebel demanded by the plot and throws it out of kilter. And at the end, the postman does indeed ring twice, which comes off less as a twist than a cheat. The Unholy Wife finds itself stranded midway between being a brooding marital drama and a suspense story, now meriting attention chiefly because of the underappreciated Dors.
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7/10
A grossly under appreciated murder mystery film. All they had to do was attach Hitchcock to this film and everyone would be raving about it.
Ed-Shullivan5 February 2021
I am quite surprised what little attention this film garnered both when it was first released in 1957, and again by the film historians of today. In my humble opinion this film is a classic film noir that includes a very good script, great acting and a seasoned director in John Farrow who prior to this film, had a resume most other directors would envy.

Diana Dors plays Phyllis Hochen who was a sex pot in the 1950's and her hour glass figure was on full display as the cheating wife of Paul Hochen played by the great actor Rod Steiger whose resume is as long as my arms. Phyllis had planned to kill her older aged and rich husband Paul , but as the old saying goes "the best laid plans" and so it goes. Phyllis shoots the wrong guy by mistake but quickly pulls together an alternative scheme to fool her husband into taking the fall for the killing of his own best friend which she says was an accident.

As another old saying goes "love is blind" so the gullible husband Paul agrees to Phyllis's scheme in which he tells the sheriff that he shot his own best friend but little does Paul know that Phyllis's alternate plan has been set up to find her husband Paul guilty of first degree murder so he would at minimum go to prison for life, or even worse be hanged at the gallows.

Phyllis is cheating on Paul with a rugged good looking and younger bronco busting rodeo man named San Sanders played by Tom Tryon and her plan is to take Paul for all his money and squander it with her lover San. Living with Paul and his cheating wife are Paul's mother and Phyllis's young son. Paul also has a brother who is a devoted priest who symbolizes truth and celibacy, but the sexy Phyllis even has Paul's brother the priest fooled.

This is a very good film noir and I am convinced that all that was missing for this film to have gone onto great fame and accolades and maybe even a few Oscars, would be to have a top five director such as Alfred Hitchcock to have directed the film and without changing even one snippet of the films presentation, or the actors, the film would have received instant recognition and Oscar nominations. I really believe that.

It is well worth watching at least twice. I give it a solid 7 out of 10 IMDB rating.
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7/10
A film that deserves more attention than it has received
JuguAbraham17 June 2021
An important film that deserves attention for two reasons: 1. An unusual story, of an evil woman who actually shows respect for religion; 2 For an unusual low-key, yet convincing performance from Rod Steiger and an interesting one by the beautiful Diana Dors. Actor Tom Tryon is given third billing for a brief role, while the more important role of the priest and brother of the Rod Steiger character acted by Arthur Franz is given lower billing. The direction is just average fare. But the tale written by an unknown writer named William Durkee is interesting.
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6/10
great guzzlin' grand' guignol
ptb-86 February 2005
The comment by Melvelvit also on this site is fantastic...and I think he is right. I have only just discovered this - yes - lurid thriller - made in the final days of RKO, and it is as much fun in a demented way as it is genuinely interesting. Now that I have seen the film again with Melvelvit's believable comments under my, er, belt, well, it might just be Rod Steiger after all, and not poor Diana at all who is the genuine Unholy Wife. All that (later) Baby Jane and Charlotte campery can be seen it its seed form in this well produced, decorated stylish dark mansion melodrama...complete with trashy rodeo handsome hick and lusty barfly floozies for added tarty extras. Imagine running a cinema in the mid to late 50s and having RKO call you once a month offering double features of any of these mix'n'match titles: SON OF SINBAD / THE FRENCH LINE / SLIGHTLY SCARLET / INFERNO / THE UNHOLY WIFE/ THE GIRL MOST LIKELY etc. What a life there was for some excited cinema goer!
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5/10
How could Diana Dors be anything but an unholy wife?
blanche-24 July 2021
Diana Dors, Britain's answer to Marilyn Monroe, stars with Rod Steiger, Tom Tryon, Arthur Franz, and Beulah Bondi in "The Unholy Wife" from 1957.

Dors as her character, Phyllis, serves as the narrator, telling her own story. When we first see her, she's deglamorized and no longer a blond, but somehow, still beautiful with this natural look.

She tells the story of meeting a vineyard owner Paul Hochen (Steiger) in a bar, where she picks up guys with her friend (Marie Windsor). Here she is dazzling in a form-fitting silver gown and that signature platinum blond hair. Phyllis has a young son from a past relationship, and soon, she is married to Paul, living with him, her son, and his mother (Bondi) in a mausoleum of a house.

Everything with Paul is family tradition and the making of wine. She's bored, so she enters into a liaison with a cowboy (Tryon). Then she decides enough is enough and begins to plot her way out of her situation with murder. Her plan doesn't work the way she wanted, so she has to improvise.

This is a slow, dark film, and the actors underplay - even Steiger, who is so off the wall in The Big Knife. I mean, the man can go big. Here he's a simple, proud man who takes care of his mother, is devoted to Phyllis' son, and has a priest for a brother. Obviously he and Father Stephen were raised with a different set of values from Phyllis.

The film comes off as average. Comparing Dors to Monroe is a mistake. Dors was sultry and sensusal, but she didn't have Monroe's charisma, presence, or likeability. However, had she played down the bombshell routine, she probably would have been considered a good actress.

Routine, but the stars made it interesting.
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Diana Does Hollywood
djwills23 February 2002
As devoted to Blonde Bombshells as I am to food and oxygen, on first viewing The Unholy Wife I really wanted / NEEDED this film to be great. It's not - but DO SEE IT. Forget the plot and just absorb yourself in Hollywood's version of mid-fifties womanhood as a drippingly lacquered Dors, encased in silver lame', is unconvincingly rammed down the audiences throat as a heartless, lusting bitch. Enjoy.
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6/10
Murder in wine country
sol12188 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
***SPOILERS*** In a very reserved and non method and overacting, that were used to seeing him back in the 1950's and 1960's, role Rod Steiger steals the movie, even though he's the star in it, as the sensitive tragic as well as guilt-ridden California wine baron Paul Hochen.

We already see that Paul is up the creek with his wife Phyllis, Diana Dors, in prison clothes and her bleached blond hair a ruddy brown spilling her guts out to how she tried to frame him in the murder of his best friend and fellow wine grower Gino Verdugo, Joe DeSantis. As Phyllis tells her story the movie goes into flashback as we see the events that lead up to Gino's tragic death. It seemed that Phyllis was having an affair with bronco busting rodeo cowboy San Sanders, Tom Tyron, behind her husbands back. If that wasn't bad enough Phyllis planned to murder Paul and make it look like an accident in that he was mistaken for a prowler trying to break into the Hochen Mansion. Waiting for the right moment to pull off the "Perfect Crime" Phyllis saw that opportunity arise in a fight that Paul had with Gino at a wine grower convention over him selling his vineyards to an out of town and get rich quick shyster outfit. Despite making up with Gino in private all those that were at the convention saw was the slug, or better yet slapping, feast the two had in public.

Knowing that Paul was to cut short his precipitation at the convention and go home Phyllis waited for him, with a revolver in hand, to show up and blow him away making it look like he was a prowler trying to break into the house! The thing that screwed up Pyllis' plan was that Gino coming to talk business over with Paul, not Paul, got there first and ended up being shot to death with Phyllis mistaking him for Paul!

***SPOILERS*** With Phyllis faced with a possible murder charge Paul together with Phyllis concoct a plan where he'll take the rap in accidentally killing Gino where she can be free to look after her and Paul's 8 year old son, from a previous marriage, Michael, Gary Hunley, while he in awaiting trial spends the next few months behind bars. The one thing that Phyllis and her boyfriend San, who was in on her murderous plan, never anticipated, until it was too late was the sick and frail and not having long to live Momma Emma Hochen, Beulah Bondi, overheard the whole ghastly plan to murder her son Paul which put a wrench into it! That's if Momma Hochen lived long enough enough to tell to police about it!

***MAJOR SPOILER**** It was also Momma Hochen who knowing that her daughter-in-law Phyllis was totally rotten without a decent bone in her entire body that she took the institutive and did the unthinkable in getting her convicted of a crime that she didn't commit! That was to make up for Phyllis getting off Scot-free for a crime that she did!

The very fine acting, especially by Rod Steiger, made up for the so-so script that at times seemed totally unbelievable. There's also the drop dead gorgeous British actress Diana Dors as Phyllis Hochen to look at when the movie got a bit confusing and hard to follow. And of course there's Arther Franz as Paul's older brother Father Steven Hochen who finally got Phyllis to fess up and take responsibly for what she did in her killing Gino while sent to the San Quentin gas chamber for a crime that she didn't commit. Yet ironically had everything to do with it having happened!
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5/10
Mediocre Acting All Around
Uriah432 October 2012
For some reason this film has a "B-movie" quality about it and I think it has something to do with the lead actress, Diana Dors. Although some have referred to her as, "the English Marilyn Monroe", she just doesn't seem to have the "on-screen presence" that Marilyn had. At least, I don't think so. Because of this, while she is certainly very pretty, I never quite got that intrigued with her performance in this picture. Her acting seemed kind of bland and "wooden". Be that as it may, in this film she plays "Phyllis Hochen" who is the conniving wife of a rich wine-maker ("Paul Hochen") played by Rod Steiger. But she doesn't love him. Instead she is having an affair with a local rodeo cowboy named "San Sanders" (Tom Tryon). Being terribly unhappy with Paul she schemes to get rid of him. Anyway, so much for the plot which is pretty basic and has been used any number of times. While I don't want to sound terribly negative, I will say that one thing I didn't care for was the technique used which had her telling her story from a jail cell in the past tense. Now, I realize that this is a typical film-noir technique but (when used) it often seems to take some of the mystery out of it. Anyway, add in an average script, weak directing (John Farrow) and mediocre acting all around and it pretty much rates a "5 out of 10". While it wasn't "great" I suppose it was an "okay" way to spend an hour and a half.
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6/10
This a good movie.
jacobjohntaylor125 June 2019
This is a good movie. It is kind of scary. It has great acting. It also has a great story line. 5 out of 10 is underrating it. I give it 6 out of 10. This a very good movie. It is a underrated thriller classic. See it. It is awesome.
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2/10
A genuine dud!
mark.waltz27 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Diana Dors is seen on death row telling her story of how her own greed lead to her downfall. She is married to wealthy vineyard owner Rod Steiger whom she met in a bar, but bored spending the day taking care of his elderly mother, she is soon involved in an affair with rodeo horseman Tom Tryon. She commits a murder which her husband is blamed for.

I have seen several films with blonde bombshell Diana Dors, and I just don't get her appeal. She certainly isn't beautiful enough to rank up there with Marilyn Monroe or Jayne Mansfield; She's sort of a second-rate "Baby Doll" with a bit of a Gloria Grahame type pout thrown in and is truly unbelievable here as the vixenish wife. She has twice as much hair as Mansfield and Monroe combined, and a head too small which looks like a lion who needs his mane trimmed. She just looks ridiculous. In an attempt to soften his demeanor from early villain roles, Rod Steiger sensitizes his personality in an effort to move into a leading role. His character does have many different nuances-soft at times yet strong in his business dealings, but ultimately stupid for ending up with Dors. The usually lovely Beaulah Bondi, one of my favorite character actresses ever, plays a character that grates on the nerves. Had this been a better script with a better leading lady, it would have been genuinely chilling to see Bondi's fear grow during the spooky storm that ends up with a visit by death. In fact, had the film been in black and white and released during the height of the film noir era, it could have ranked a lot higher in ratings. But late RKO's color films looked somewhat washed out and were poorly photographed, so it is not too surprising that they were only a few films away from turning strictly into a TV studio.

Marie Windsor, whose days as a film noir femme fatale were over, is wasted here as Dors' pal. I feel bad for Rod Steiger here; He really tries to do something with his character, but the script defeats him and he comes off as a small touch of class in an otherwise trashy story. This is a film that works better as a pulp fiction book with a colorful cover that leaves everything else to the imagination.
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9/10
Definitely Worth Viewing
tr-8349511 May 2019
This movie is interesting -- which puts it light years ahead of most films.

It has some real problems, but the acting is believable. Advertised liked a B-movie, but with all the melodrama of a major Hollywood barnburner, Dors, Steiger, and Bondi play their roles with perfection. This one is worth viewing.
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6/10
The potential was there
shoretalk4 February 2021
Rod Steiger is why I chose to watch and perhaps his performance was what left be wanting more. The moments of passion in his relationship with his friend were stilted.

The storyline had hooks that continued to make you wonder right up until the end so that alone raised this rating. Like every good mystery there were twists and turns and the unexpected. The closing dialogue could have gone more than one way.

Clearly this film was shot on the cheap; a classic B film. Diana Dors was shown off as one of those 1950's blonde bombshells but in her case I sense no real explosions going off.

The film made for an acceptable afternoon diversion but I'm not going to go looking for another rod steiger film anytime soon.
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5/10
Lackluster murder drama, though Diana Dors is very, very good
gridoon202415 July 2018
Diana Dors shows in "The Unholy Wife" that besides a smashing, busty figure she had serious acting chops as well (even when she is completely un-glamorous in the "present day"scenes). The plot of the film is not bad, and it has an ironic finish, but it's drearily directed. ** out of 4.
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1/10
Dull, Poorly Directed and Perpetrates stereotypes. Miss this lemon!
fflambeau25 November 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This is truly a pathetic movie--I watched it only because it has Rod Steiger in it and a lady whom I did not know and mistook for Marilyn Monroe. It turns out she was Diana Dors, a Brit who seems to be cast as the typical dumb but beautiful blonde. The director is hapless and does not know how to create tension. Steiger is awful and mumbles and stumbles through his performance (and he looks super fat here). The ending, showing grape fields and Steiger hoisting his young son while showing him how to eat a grape is saccharine in the extreme. The plot makes no sense: who would believe that the blonde would murder the mother in law, when it was equally as possible for her to have committed suicide (which she actually did)? Dors seems to have some acting talent but the studio and director seemed to have only one thing on their mind: her curves. She is simply not evil enough for the part nor does the script give her any good lines. The church is injected as some kind of holier than thou medium of truth through the priest: it all just stinks. Spend your time doing something else and give this lemon a miss.
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4/10
Dors less than stellar
TwoCrude15 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
From John Farrow, I had hoped for better.

This take on the cheating spouse theme was uninspired at best. The pacing is almost languid. Admittedly, the whodunit aspect isn't there. But that doesn't mean the movie in question has to turn out like this.

From the opening scene, the platinum blonde Dors (dark eyebrows and all) glides rather indifferently through this noctambulant drama. Her scenes from the post-murder flashback are admittedly a bit better. Steiger gives an earnest effort, but can't overcome Farrow's direction. Or lack thereof.

East of Eden (both versions) was better than this. As was Unfaithful with Diane Lane.
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1/10
An unholy mess.
brogmiller24 September 2021
This is the second of two stinkers that John Farrow directed in the 1950's for his former employers RKO. Lumbered with a moronic script and utterly devoid of passion, tension and momentum it stars a sympathetic Rod Steiger as a harmless, hard-working viticulturist who is framed for murder by his wife, a far from femme fatale Diana Dors, here hoping, rather fruitlessly as it turned out, to make her name in Hollywoodland.

This is a veritable damp squib, redeemed only by the cinematography of Lucien Ballard.

It is customary to say of Miss Dors, née Fluck, that she was a far better actress than she was given credit for. Let's just say that here she runs the gamut from A to B.
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10/10
Diana Dors at her very best!
arrival8 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Dark and brooding suspense Thriller starring Diana Dors.

Whoever said that blondes were dumb has not seen Diana Dors as the 'Unholy Wife'! Giving one of her greatest performances, she plays the beautiful, but deadly wife of Rod Steiger in this marvellous and riveting Movie with a startling twist at the very end! Dors has an agenda of her own, and shows an adept ability at changing her evil plans at the blink of an eye to fit the new circumstances she finds herself in. Looking so good here, Dors has a way of making you want her to get away with everything she can for the handsome San Sanders played by Tom Tryon.

One of two Films Diana made at around the same time, as a woman facing the death penalty.
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1/10
Just plain awful!
mptnla-823703 April 2021
Not sure what was the worst about this film --the bad writing or the even worse directing who drew wooden and sometimes irritating performances out of his actors. When Steiger's characters comes home to find his friend dead on the floor and his wife with the gun in her hand, he shows no energy or emotion, and basically shrugs his shoulders as if to say "now what?" And the lover's reaction when she mentions the winery being worth $250K --a cartoonish villain's single raised eyebrow. I actually laughed out loud at that. Wish I could have back the time I spent watching this train wreck of a film.
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10/10
Will the real "unholy" spouse please stand up?
melvelvit-125 August 2006
Warning: Spoilers
In this more-or-less re-hash of DOUBLE INDEMNITY, Diana Dors' Phyllis is a lot more sympathetic than Billy Wilder's femme fatale -which puts a very strange spin on things. As a wealthy California vineyard owner's wife, Dors sneaks off to the wine cellar to tryst with her rodeo stunt-rider lover (Tom Tryon) and decides to knock off her husband (Rod Steiger) but the plan backfires when she accidentally shoots his best friend (Gilbert Roland) instead. Things get convoluted rather quickly when a resourceful Diana sees an opportunity to frame Steiger for the crime. There's crosses and double-crosses galore with a satisfyingly ironic twist ending but what sets this film apart is the small scenes geared to humanize this murderess. In flashbacks we see that D.D. is a high-class call girl with a young son to support when Steiger inexplicably proposes to her. Later on, in prison, Rod confesses to his priest brother (Arthur Franz) that he never loved Di and only married her because a Korean War wound prevented him from ever having children so he saw an opportunity to take hers because he needed an heir for his Napa Valley dynasty. It's Steiger who's the real unholy "wife" -and not just because he's an adult male still living with his mom. A "war wound" could be interpreted as a repressed 1950's veiled reference to homosexuality. Once married, Phyllis tries to be a good wife and is tearfully thankful someone would overlook her sordid past to make a life for her and her son. But her husband soon develops a cool indifference and condescending attitude towards her and immediately puts the boy in a fancy boarding school. Because Steiger leaves her alone all the time in a brooding mansion with his invalid mother (Beulah Bondi), one isn't all that surprised she'd take a lover. For how many decades would she have to endure that? I realize there's a thing called divorce, and in no way do I condone what Diana did, but I can't help the sympathy I feel for her plight. It was her husband's initial treachery that made the whole sordid situation implode. Shockingly, in the end, the real unholy "wife" gets exactly what HE wanted: an heir to his vineyards with no wife in sight.

Just before Dors is led to the gas chamber for her crimes, she confesses to her priest brother-in-law that, "Yes, Father, I'm truly sorry for what I've done." She's blessed, and if you're of a religious bent, you just know she'll stand before those pearly gates!

Kind of campy (there's times you'll want to choke Steiger's mom), definitely over-wrought, and at times over-the-top, the tag line on posters for THE UNHOLY WIFE screamed: "HALF angel, HALF devil, she made him HALF a man! This is the wine cellar of the most respectable house in the valley. This is where she met them, made love to them, laughed with them at her husband ...the man who gave her a name, a home and a heritage...the man she wanted to destroy!" This lurid come-on doesn't quite ring true once you see the film. The Korean War (or his gaiety) made him that way, and it's what he did to HER that put the whole dark scenario in motion.

Diana Dors, "England's answer to Marilyn Monroe", glows in the dark in this color-noir from RKO. Words can't describe the mind-boggling "Swingin' Dors" images on parade. With silver-platinum hair, diamond bracelet & dangling earrings -and a shiny silver skin-tight cocktail dress (very low-cut with rhinestone spaghetti straps) finished off with silver-sandal heels, she's a blinding heavy metal vision. Rod Steiger probably needed a can-opener to get her out of that ensemble.

Added bonus: Marie Windsor's always a pleasure. She co-hooks with Dors in a tres bizarre nightclub and, lounging on bar-stools waiting to get picked up by dudes with lotsa dough, these ladies of the night are killer!

****NOTE****

What's up with the movie's title? It's gotta be an inside joke. What's strange is the fact that the sanctity of MARRIAGE and the CHURCH may be the only "unholy" things in this film. In the twist ending, the priest knows D.D. isn't guilty of murdering her mother-in-law, but allows her to be convicted and put to death anyway. Diana's marriage is nothing more than deceitful sham and (technically) the only thing the lady was guilty of was accidentally killing a man. She may have meant that bullet for Rod, but it didn't happen (voluntary manslaughter?). Either way it's an odd choice of role for RKO to give it's new sex-symbol star, the tawdry tale wasn't even entirely new to the public as it had already been a tele-play on live TV under it's original title, THE LADY AND THE PROWLER. The tale was obviously "ripped from the headlines", inspired by the notorious Woodward murder case that had recently rocked the nation after a Manhattan socialite used the cover of a neighborhood prowler lurking around their Long Island estate to kill her husband. Arlene Dahl's WICKED AS THEY COME also re-imagined that lethal scenario and the tawdry, glittery saga was eventually made into the TV movie THE TWO MRS. GRENVILLES with Ann-Margret playing the deadly ambitious former showgirl.

Forgotten by nearly all, THE UNHOLY WIFE has at least one devoted fan!
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8/10
She's niceness impaired.
planktonrules17 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"The Unholy Wife" must have seemed like a golden opportunity for Diana Dors, the British blonde bombshell. After all, she had just signed a three picture deal with RKO and would have the opportunity to show folks she really could act. Unfortunately, RKO soon ceased production...and only two of these films ended up getting made. That combined with her husband's outburst at a pool party AND the poor box office to this film and Dors opportunity slipped away. It is sad, as she was very good as the femme fatale in "The Unholy Wife"...and perhaps the public stayed away due to her hubby's behaviors, as she was quite good and the film very good.

The story is told by Phyllis (Dors). You can assume she is in jail telling someone about her 'perfect crime' because her peroxided hair isn't present in these scenes...her hair has gone to its original dark brown. I appreciated this, as DOrs had been billed for years because of her looks...and here she allowed herself to look less than gorgeous in these few flashback scenes.

Phyllis, we learn, is a very bad girl. Despite having a young son, she appears to have little in the way of maternal instincts and she likes catting around with a ne'er-do-well, San Sanders (Tom Tryon). But when a rich but not particularly pretty guy, Paul Hochen (Rod Steiger) falls for her, she hides her boyfriend....marries Paul...and continues with the affair. Eventually, she tires of this arrangement and decides to kill Paul and make it look like an accident...and then things get REALLY wild and unpredictable!

I liked the film...the public didn't. It's possible I am wrong...perhaps some disliked how Phyllis came clean at the end and did the right thing. But that didn't bother me in the least....she had nothing to lose by finally telling the truth. I also liked how well she adopted an American accent for this movie. See the film and see what I mean.

By the way, it is interesting that Dors completely upstaged Steiger...something that almost NEVER happened, as Steiger was known to be a much larger than life personality in most of his films.

By the way, although I don't see mention of this, the story in many ways seems like a reworking of the story "Thérèse Raquin" by the French writer, Émile Zola.
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8/10
Somebody up there does not like me
dbdumonteil25 October 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Next to last movie by John Farrow,this work is a return to the style of some of his earlier films Noirs ,particularly "Alias Nick Beal" and above all William Irish's (aka Cornell Woolrich)" the night has a thousand eyes" :what was written in the stars in the 1948 effort (thus everything man does to change his fate is pointless) has become a supernatural (shall we say divine?) intervention.This immanent justice,the old lady believes in it and she is sure that God will know his own.Ray Milland portrayed the Devil in "Alias Nick Beal" which was an updated Faust .Diana Dors portrays another devil with a red dress on.

The title says it all: "the unholy wife" is a Christian movie (In Irish's books the Gods are closer to the Greek divinities) ,which the presence of a priest in the family (the husband's brother) reinforces . The story,which is a long flashback ,is a long confession -and becomes a true one ,in the religious sense of the term in the last sequence.There's an unusually inventive use of colors ,with blue ,yellow and black predominance .Hot Diana Dors 'look sharply contrasts with the prisoner in jail.

Farrow 's obsession of time running out recalls "the big clock" (remade as " no way out" by Roger Donaldson with Johnny Depp); it was also present in "night has a thousand eyes" .Time becomes a matter of life .The big clock invented by Farrow and Latimer in 1948 was a splendid metaphor of this time which is rarely on man's side.
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9/10
The Holy Wife.
morrison-dylan-fan13 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Talking to a fellow IMDber a few years ago on the IMDb Film Noir board (RIP!) I got told about a great-sounding Noir starring Diana Dors and Rod Steiger. Hoping to find the title,I was surprised to not being able to find it on DVD or Video in the UK. Keeping a note of the movie over the years,I decided whilst doing some online X-Mas shopping,to have another go at finding it,and stumbled on the US Video version! Despite the postage price tag being a bit hefty,I decided it was time to at last meet the unholy wife.

The plot:

Moving to the US from London, Phyllis gets married to former pilot/now vineyard owner Paul,and has a son Michael with him. Over the next six years,vines grow on their marriage,which leads to Phyllis falling out of love with Paul. Looking for a spark in life,Phyllis becomes tangled in an affair with rodeo San Sanders. Desiring a fresh start in life,Phyllis makes a plan with San to kill Paul. Going out with a gun one night,Phyllis aims to kill Paul,but in the dark accidentally kills his pal Gino Verdugo. Running back into the house,Phyllis starts changing her plan to manipulate Paul,so he can fade into the darkness of the night for her.

View on the film:

Gliding across the screen, the alluring Diana Dors gives an incredible performance as Phyllis, whose seductive innocence Dors threads into a Femme Fatale ruthlessness of Phyllis manipulating Paul and San to play her tune. Looking back on her games in flashbacks, Dors digs her nails deep into Phyllis Femme Fatale state of mind,that Dors transforms from being devilishly mischievous,to life completely from Phyllis's face. Riding a wave of passion with Phyllis, Tom Tryon gives a swaggering performance as drifting Noir loner San. Setting off Paul's concerns about Phyllis's faithfulness, Tryon gives San an arrogance dripping with menace. Caught between Tryon and Phyllis, Rod Steiger gives a brittle performance as Paul. Worn down by the years of a loveless marriage, Steiger's brings out Paul's attempts to grasp of what little remains of the Phyllis he knew.

Introducing the leading lady in a washed-out close-up,director John Farrow & cinematographer Lucien Ballard bravely contrast the glamour of the Film Noir with raw present-set scenes splashed with murky colours that subtly bring the bad times to Phyllis and her guys. Hearing Phyllis and San's plans on the grapevine, Farrow and Ballard give the flashbacks a ruby red appearance which brims a fantastic atmosphere of a "Woman's Picture" that has gone off the tracks into Film Noir,as scattered close-ups uncover the rot eating away in the vineyard.

Mapping out the state of Paul and Phyllis's romance as she makes a plot with San, the screenplay by Jonathan Latimer and William Durkee pour a glass of cracking Film Noir dialogue,that is shaken with a harsh pessimism and jet-black comedic one-liners. Whilst having to go for a "spiritual" ending that the Hays Code would accept, the writers make Phyllis's journey to the spirit world be one that takes a wrong turn to merciless desire for murder,and a calculating Femme Fatale knife edge,where the unholy wife stands.
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