![]() ![]() She ends up in the loony ward of a hospital, where she meets one of the world’s worst physchiatrists. Though Merrill (who is falling in love with her) doesn’t think she’s crazy, there’s nothing he can do to protect her. It means to try to drive someone really nuts by making it look like she’s nuts.) He writes threatening letters to himself on her typewriter, and other things to make it look like she’s a crazy woman who is stalking him. (That’s really a word, derived from the classic Ingrid Bergman film Gaslight. But Sanders is a sly old fox he begins “gaslighting” her. ![]() She doesn’t believe it, and tries to get evidence on her own. The detective, Gary Merrill, suggests she just had a very vivid dream. When the cops arrive, there’s no body, no evidence. Meanwhile, George Sanders, the murderer, has time to drag the corpse to an empty apartment. Barbara Stanwyck gets up in the middle of the night to shut her window, and sees someone across the street strangling a woman. ![]() It starts out as a pretty good noir thriller. ![]()
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