Those who’ve been on the receiving end of a vigorous gaslighting campaign? Readers who’ve yet to see the film may want to skip the below clip, as it does contain something close to a spoiler. The detail is so precise, so committed that every flicker crawls under the skin, projecting terrible uncertainty and fear to the audience. The heaviness of the atmosphere brings us even closer to Paula’s mental state, trapping us with her. In a column on production design for The Film Experience, critic Daniel Walber points out how Boyer destabilizes Bergman by fooling with their gas-powered lamps, and also how the film’s Academy Award-winning design team used the “constricting temporality” of a Victorian London lit by gas to set a foreboding mood:īetween the streetlights outside and the fixtures within, the mood is forever dimmed. (Cunning linguists that we are, had the film retained the play’s title, 2022 may well have found us complaining that some villain tried to Angel Street us…) In the same review, Crowther sniped that Gaslight was “a no more illuminating title” than Angel Street. Boyer doing the driving in his best dead-pan hypnotic style, while the flames flicker strangely in the gas-jets and the mood music bongs with heavy threats, it is no wonder that Miss Bergman goes to pieces in the most distressing way. We can at least slip the information that the study is wholly concerned with the obvious endeavors of a husband to drive his wife slowly mad. In his review, The New York Times’ film critic Bosley Crowther steered clear of spoilers, while musing that the bulk of the theater-going public was probably already hip to the central conceit, following the successful Broadway run of Angel Street, the Patrick Hamilton thriller on which the film was based: A teenaged Angela Lansbury made her big screen debut. Ingrid Bergman, playing opposite Charles Boyer, won an Academy award for her performance. “Gaslighting” is unavoidable these days, five years after it was named 2016’s “most useful” and “likely to succeed” word by the American Dialect Society.Īs long as we’re playing word games, are you familiar with “ denominalization”?Īlso known as “verbing” or “ verbification,” it’s the process whereby a noun is retooled as a verb.
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