IMDb RATING
7.0/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
In early-1900s England, a maid tries to blackmail her master into romancing her when she discovers that he murdered his wife.In early-1900s England, a maid tries to blackmail her master into romancing her when she discovers that he murdered his wife.In early-1900s England, a maid tries to blackmail her master into romancing her when she discovers that he murdered his wife.
- Awards
- 1 win
Marjorie Rhodes
- Mrs. Park
- (as Margery Rhodes)
Norman MacOwan
- Grimes
- (as Norman Macowan)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAt the time of filming, Stewart Granger and Jean Simmons were married in real life. This is the third and final film in which they appeared together. (Miss Simmons had an uncredited role in "Caesar and Cleopatra" (1945) which co-starred Granger).
- GoofsMarjorie Rhodes' character is referred to as Mrs Parks in dialogue, but Mrs Park in the closing credits.
- Quotes
Stephen Lowry: Another woman once thought she owned me. Don't drive me too far!
- SoundtracksWestminster Quarters
(uncredited)
Traditional
Featured review
Bonnie Jean, just too beautiful...
She died last weekend aged 80, a great star whose career never seemed to find a summit, forestalled by middling films and imprecise casting. While this Edwardian Gothic gave her one of her more intriguing roles I've always felt she was too beautiful for it. If Lily the blackmailing housemaid had been less attractive the dangerous affair with her murderous employer would have felt a lot darker, seamier and her final pathos - the little skivvy whose dream-world collapses around her - more acute. When the Grangers are together they look perfectly suited - a married star-team of their day. Full marks to their performances, though.
While one or two plot-twists are far too facile - the brother-in-law mistaking the barrister for Lowry just because he comes out of a room, for instance - Arthur Lubin's direction gets the points across clearly and efficiently though lacking the Hitchcock intensity and lingering touches which might have made this a minor classic. A solid Technicolor production there's nonetheless a certain aura of rush and tweaking here and there with odd continuity slips and scenes that suddenly trail away in mid-sentence. Some bad processing is evident when the rather wet second-leads go driving together in the new horseless-carriage, which at least provides some topically amusing light-relief. But it's a memorable little show overall, good to watch with a last glimpse of Granger that's quite clammy - and now to be cherished more than ever as another movie-icon slips away from us in the dark.
While one or two plot-twists are far too facile - the brother-in-law mistaking the barrister for Lowry just because he comes out of a room, for instance - Arthur Lubin's direction gets the points across clearly and efficiently though lacking the Hitchcock intensity and lingering touches which might have made this a minor classic. A solid Technicolor production there's nonetheless a certain aura of rush and tweaking here and there with odd continuity slips and scenes that suddenly trail away in mid-sentence. Some bad processing is evident when the rather wet second-leads go driving together in the new horseless-carriage, which at least provides some topically amusing light-relief. But it's a memorable little show overall, good to watch with a last glimpse of Granger that's quite clammy - and now to be cherished more than ever as another movie-icon slips away from us in the dark.
helpful•162
- derekcreedon
- Jan 26, 2010
- How long is Footsteps in the Fog?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Zwischen Haß und Liebe
- Filming locations
- Chalvey Park, Slough, England, UK(Exterior shots)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.75 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content