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WOMAN IN THE WINDOW ('44) WOMAN IN THE WINDOW ('44) 8x10 OR search current auctions Auction History Result 7s986 WOMAN IN THE WINDOW 7.25x9 still '44 Edward G. Robinson helps Joan Bennett hide dead body! Date Sold 3/28/2013Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical 7 1/4" x 9" [18 x 23 cm] Movie Still (Learn More) The Woman in the Window, the classic 1944 Fritz Lang romantic love triangle crime film noir melodrama ("A too-beautiful woman, a too-carefree man - and an evening of gay flirtation shifting madly into a panic of guilt and fear and crimson Murder... That's Excitement For You!"; "It's the screen's supreme adventure in Suspense!"; "The amazing story of a footloose girl with beauty and a solid man with brains - partners by flirtation in a panicked night of guilt and fear and terror MURDER!"; based on the novel 'Once Off Guard' by J.H. Wallis; about a married professor who falls in love with the picture of a beautiful woman that he sees in a window, and then he meets the woman himself, and that launches him on a downward spiral involving murder) starring Edward G. Robinson, Joan Bennett, Raymond Massey, Edmond Breon, Dan Duryea, Arthur Loft, and Ralph Dunn. Note that this movie bears a tremendous resemblance to Lang's next movie, "Scarlet Street", with much the same plot and top cast, and yet both movies came from different source novels! NOTE: Click on linked names to see a biography. Important Added Info: Note that this still has been trimmed and it now measures 7 1/4" x 9" [18 x 23 cm]. Note that this still was consigned to us by legendary collector/dealer Marty Davis! Marty was hired in 1972 to evaluate the entire collection of W. Ward Marsh (1893-1971), who was the film critic for the Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper from 1919, until his retirement in 1970. In 1919 Marsh wrote his first of 23,000 movie reviews for the Plain Dealer. Marsh died less than a year after his retirement in 1970. His library, and photographic and memorabilia archives were given to the proprietor of Cleveland's finest bookstore. Marty Davis was the first person with a background in film history and collectibles to examine the archives. He worked for three to four hours a day, for six months, and his compensation was his pick of the archives. This still (and the other stills that carry this paragraph) are from the W. Ward Marsh archives, and all were stamped on the back by Marty Davis to indicate that they came from this legendary collection. Condition: good to very good. The borders were neatly trimmed, but otherwise, the still is in pretty good condition! Learn More about condition grades
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