(1954)
4
Michael Costello
Alfred's Hitchcock's adaptation of Frederick Knott's play is hardly the director at his best, though it remains an above-average suspense-melodrama with a typically Hitchcockian villain. It focuses on the efforts of Ray Milland's character, an idler who fears that his wealthy wife might leave him and wants her murdered so that he might inherit her money. The machinery of the play is standard but enjoyable in its tight construction, with only the business of the key being of dubious plausibility. Its most compelling element is Milland's character, who has shades of Cary Grant in Suspicion (1941) and Robert Walker in Strangers on a Train (1951). Most memorable is an ugly scene in which he blackmails an old "friend" into agreeing to kill his wife, played by Grace Kelly. Milland is near the top of his game here, and John Williams turns in his usual fine performance as the wily Scotland Yard inspector. Kelly, and Robert Cummings as her lover, are forced to contend with underwritten stock characters. Neither comes off particularly well.
awards for Dial M for Murder on AllMovie
Dial M for Murder (1954)
Directors Guild of America
|
Nominated |
Best Director
|
1954 |
National Board of Review
|
Won |
Best Actress
|
1954 |
|
Won |
Best Supporting Actor
|
1954 |
New York Film Critics Circle
Rotterdam International Film Festival
|
Presented |
Film Presented
|
2010 |