- Selena Gomez
- Martin Freeman
- Revolusi Kebudayaan
- Yamato (anime)
- Denial (film)
- Ban Hyo-jung
- Power Rangers: Ninja Storm
- The Doraemons
- R2B: Return to Base
- Aki Kaurismäki
- The Scarf (film)
- Scarf
- Red Scarf (film)
- The Girl with the Red Scarf
- Keffiyeh
- Confessions of a Shopaholic (film)
- O (2001 film)
- Penelope (2006 film)
- Scarf (disambiguation)
- Red scarf (disambiguation)
the scarf film
The Scarf (film) GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
The Scarf is a 1951 American film noir written and directed by Ewald André Dupont starring John Ireland, Mercedes McCambridge, James Barton, and Emlyn Williams. The screenplay concerns a man who escapes from an insane asylum and tries to convince a crusty hermit, a drifting saloon singer, and himself that he is not a murderer.
Plot
John Ireland stars as John Barrington, an escapee from an institution for the criminally insane. Actually, Barrington is not insane, but the victim of a plot orchestrated by a clever murderer. The only person who believes Barrington's story is Ezra Thompson (James Barton) a turkey farmer who hides him from the authorities. Then a singing waitress named Cash-and-Carry Connie (Mercedes McCambridge) unwittingly provides the clue that will prove Barrington's innocence. Emlyn Williams co-stars as a psychiatrist.
Cast
Reception
= Critical response
=Film critic Bosley Crowther panned the film, "For a picture so heavily loaded with lengthy and tedious talk, talk, talk, The Scarf, the new tenant at the Park Avenue, has depressingly little to say. As a matter of fact, it expresses, in several thousand words of dialogue—and in a running-time that amounts to just four minutes short of an hour and a half—perhaps the least measure of intelligence or dramatic continuity that you are likely to find in any picture, current or recent, that takes itself seriously."
Film critic Manny Farber writing in the May 26, 1951 issue of The Nation characterizes The Scarf as “a disjointed, monstrously affected psycho-mystery freak show.” Farber adds:
Producer-directors Ewald André Dupont and Isadore Goldsmith glamorize a singing waitress, a turkey-raising hermit, a jaundiced metaphysical barkeep, and a morose amnesiac fugitive from a desert asylum...Dupont and Goldsmith turn their tinny proletarians into sententious talkers, dubbing them with names like “Level Louie” and “Cash-and-carry Connie" and having them oscillate their eyeballs in a sophisticated version of Griffith’s pantomime. It sounds awful but it’s kind of interesting.
References
Sources
Farber, Manny. 2009. Farber on Film: The Complete Film Writings of Manny Farber. Edited by Robert Polito. Library of America. ISBN 978-1-59853-050-6
External links
The Scarf at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
The Scarf at IMDb
The Scarf at the TCM Movie Database
The Scarf is available for free viewing and download at the Internet Archive