Watch: Whirlpool 1950 123movies, Full Movie Online – The wife of a psychiatrist falls prey to a devious hypnotist when he discovers she’s an habitual shoplifter. Then one of his former patients – now being treated by a real psychoanalyst’s, found murdered, with her at the scene, suspicion points only one way..
Plot: The wife of a psychoanalyst falls prey to a devious quack hypnotist when he discovers she is an habitual shoplifter. Then one of his previous patients now being treated by the real doctor is found murdered, with her still at the scene, and suspicion points only one way.
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Whirlwind
Movies were meant to entertain, and not all movies can be a “Citizen Kane” but this movie does what it’s meant to do. Gene Tierney, perhaps the most beautiful actress ever to grace the screen, and highly under rated, handles the task of playing the fragile, accused murderess in the movie. An odd choice but Jose F. does a great job too…his hospital scene still makes me wince when he gets up from his bed! Barbara O’Neil (aka, Scarlet’s mother) pops up in the most unlikeliest of places, but I have a new appreciation for her work. She adds style and elegance to every movie she appears in, including this one as the murdered socialite. Sure the movie might have some flaws, but if you listen carefully everything can be explained. It’s great viewing time and again.
A repository of plot holes and psychobabble
Ann Sutton (Gene Tierney) is married to Dr. Bill Sutton, an upright psychoanalyst (played by a completely miscast Richard Conte). When we first meet Ann, she’s getting arrested by a store detective in a department store after attempting to steal an expensive piece of jewelry. Okay, so that’s a bit of a twistour heroine is a kleptomaniac. Next into the mix is the oily David Korvo (nicely and seedily played by Jose Ferrer). He knows the department store owner and convinces him to drop the charges against Ann.Korvo is 1949’s answer to a new age practitioner: he dabbles in astrology but is principally a hypnotist. At first Ann believes Korvo is trying to blackmail her but he persuades her that he really wants to be her ‘therapist’. Ann is smart enough to realize that Korvo is trying to get her to come up to his hotel room so they can have sex so she meets him downstairs in the hotel lobby. Korvo gives up on the sex idea but has more sinister plans. At first, he charges $50 for hypnotism sessions which appear to be helping Ann with her insomnia.
We learn more about Korvo from one of Bill Sutton’s patients, Theresa Randolph, who tries to warn Ann that Korvo is a blackmailer and up to no good but Ann believes that Theresa is merely jealous of her relationship with this extremely crafty Svengali (apparently Bill adheres to a strict code of doctor-patient confidentiality as Ann has never met Theresa Randolph before). Bill records his therapy sessions on new-fangled long playing records which he stores in a closet in his home. Everything about Korvo’s ‘modus operandi’ (his penchant for blackmail and physical abuse) are detailed in these recordings and Korvo realizes that he has to get his hands on them if he is to continue in his career as a con artist.
So what does Korvo do? He murders Randolph (just as she’s about to change her will negating a bequest that leaves Korvo a large amount of money as part of her estate). He also hypnotizes Ann and has her steal the Randolph therapy session recordings and puts them in a closet in Randolph’s house. He sets Ann up by leaving a glass with Ann’s fingerprint on it in Randolph’s home. The police arrive and arrest Ann for murder.
Now it gets strange, real strange! Korvo needs an alibi. Apparently he’s been having gall bladder problems so he arranges to have an operation at two in the afternoon on the day of the murder. The murder occurs at nine in the evening so how does Korvo pull it off? Well we find out (quite improbably) that Korvo hypnotized himself and was able to drag himself out of bed and commit the murder.
The hypnotist’s power of suggestion has a prominent role in this film but unfortunately much too prominent. I always believed that hypnotism might be a useful tool in helping people overcome minor health or psychological problems (such as Ann being helped with her insomnia at the beginning of the film). But I didn’t buy it for a minute when Korvo orders Ann around in a trance and then hypnotizes himself hours after major surgery. And then Korvo does it againhe hypnotizes himself once more so he can leave the hospital and try and get his hands on the recordings. But instead of taking the recordings and getting out of the deceased Randolph’s house right away (or even destroying them at the house), he tarries and begins playing them on the phonograph in the living room. This gives the Suttons and the investigating detective enough time to arrive at the crime scene where they eventually confront Korvo, who drops dead from blood loss (apparently his hypnotic suggestions are not powerful enough to stanch the bleedingcomplications from his surgery earlier that afternoon).
Aside from the obvious plot holes, there is also a distasteful conceit being peddled by the film’s screenwriters here. The dubious and subjective ‘profession’ of psychoanalysis not only is depicted as being highly ‘scientific’ but is also placed on par with practitioners in the medical profession. ‘Unscientific’, unlicensed ‘healers’ (represented by the evil Korvo) are presented as bogus and manipulative in striking contrast to the upright Dr. Sutton (who uses his psychobabble) to uncover the ROOT of his wife’s kleptomania. With some kind soothing words, Dr. Sutton will soon solve his wife’s neurosis and they can once again move amongst their social equals and bring good cheer to them without the fear of scandal.
If you see this on DVD, there’s some interesting commentary by film critic Richard Shickel. He notes that the late film critic, Pauline Kael, termed this film “a real stinker”. But Schikel is more on the side of critic Andrew Sarris who felt there were a lot of worthwhile things about the film. While Tierney and Ferrer’s performances draw you in, the plot holes and the psychobabble are enough to keep one from taking the DVD off the shelf and watching it every couple of months. I’m not sure if ‘Whirlpool’ deserves to be called a ‘real stinker’ but it’s decidedly no great work of art!
Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 38 min (98 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Approved
Genre Crime, Drama, Film-Noir
Director Otto Preminger
Writer Ben Hecht, Andrew Solt, Guy Endore
Actors Gene Tierney, Richard Conte, José Ferrer
Country United States
Awards N/A
Production Company N/A
Website N/A
Sound Mix Mono (Western Electric Recording)
Aspect Ratio 1.37 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory N/A
Film Length 2,665.75 m (10 reels)
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm