In a Lonely Place (1950)

Humphrey Bogart and Gloria Grahame excel in Nicholas Ray’s tale of murder, love and suspicion in 1950s Hollywood.

After a Hollywood screenwriter (Humphrey Bogart), suspected of murder, is given an alibi by his neighbour (Gloria Grahame), the pair become lovers and he overcomes his writer’s block. But can their relationship survive the persistent attentions of the police investigation? Nicholas Ray’s brilliantly precise direction, coupled with superb lead performances and Burnett Guffey’s eloquent camerawork, makes for a psychologically astute account of a love affair under threat.

1950 USA
Directed by
Nicholas Ray
Produced by
Robert Lord
Written by
Andrew Solt
Featuring
Humphrey Bogart, Gloria Grahame, Frank Lovejoy
Running time
93 minutes

Ranked in The Greatest Films of All Time poll

Sight and Sound

Who voted for In a Lonely Place

Critics

Hannes Brühwiler
Germany/Switzerland
Sehad Čekić
Montenegro
Cristóbal Escobar
Chile
Carolyn Funk
USA
Rahul Hamid
US
Pamela Hutchinson
UK
Violeta Kovacsics
Spain
Tomris Laffly
USA
Jeff Lambert
USA
David Marriot
USA
Santiago Navajas
Spain
Imogen Sara Smith
USA
Dana Stevens
USA
Adrian Wootton
UK

Directors

Carlos Abascal Peiró
Spain
Mike Hodges
UK
Raya Martin
Philippines

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