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Harriet Craig
Overlook Pick

Harriet Craig

What Was Harriet Craig's Lie?
75
User Score30 ratings
TMDB 7.516+19501h 30mEnglish
Drama

Synopsis

A perfectionist woman's devotion to her home drives away friends and family.

Director
Vincent ShermanFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Columbia Pictures1 production companies
Release
November 2, 1950Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 20
Joan Crawford
Joan Crawford
Harriet Craig
Wendell Corey
Wendell Corey
Walter Craig
Lucile Watson
Lucile Watson
Celia Fenwick
Allyn Joslyn
Allyn Joslyn
Billy Birkmire
William Bishop
William Bishop
Wes Miller
K.T. Stevens
K.T. Stevens
Clare Raymond
Viola Roache
Viola Roache
Mrs. Harold
Raymond Greenleaf
Raymond Greenleaf
Henry Fenwick

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Dec 28, 2022

An elegant, demure, Joan Crawford is mesmerising in this compact and slightly menacing drama. She is the eponymous wife of "George" (Wendell Corey), on the face of it a happily married lady whose husband keeps her in a certain style. As we discover more about her personality, however, we encounter a controlling, lying, deviously manipulative creature who arranges the lives of those around her - her husband, her cousin "Claire" (K.T. Stevens), even the family retainers find themselves pawns in her game. It all comes to head, though, when his boss decides to promote "George" to a new position in Tokyo. She is having none of that and convinces him to cancel the appointment claiming her spouse has a gambling habit that only she can control. A combination of circumstances enable him to find out about her manoeuvrings and ensures their ensuing contretemps - including a reckoning with her cousin, and the housekeeper hanging up her apron for the last time - makes for a compelling scene that challenges any love the couple ever had for the other... Vincent Sherman and George Duning's score help the tension build successfully into quite a fitting ending. It features quite a nice little cameo from Lucile Watson as his bosses wife - who appears, at once, to see though much of the charade, packs a lot into 90 minutes, and is great watch.

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