Vicki | |
Director: | Harry Horner |
Producer: | Leonard Goldstein |
Screenplay: | Dwight Taylor |
Starring: | Jeanne Crain Jean Peters |
Music: | Leigh Harline |
Cinematography: | Milton R. Krasner |
Editing: | Dorothy Spencer |
Color Process: | Black and white |
Studio: | 20th Century Fox |
Distributor: | 20th Century-Fox |
Runtime: | 85 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Budget: | $560,000[1] |
Vicki is a 1953 American film noir directed by Harry Horner and starring Jeanne Crain and Jean Peters. It was based on the novel I Wake Up Screaming, written by Steve Fisher.[2]
Vicki Lynn (Jean Peters) is a waitress who is transformed into a fashion model by press agent Steve Christopher (Elliott Reid). When Vicki is murdered, detective Ed Cornell (Richard Boone) tries to blame the crime on Christopher. In fact, the cop knows who the real killer is, but he is so hopelessly in love with the dead girl Vicki, who despised him, that he intends to railroad an innocent man to the electric chair. With the help of Vicki's sister Jill (Jeanne Crain), Christopher tracks down the real killer, Harry Williams (Aaron Spelling), and exposes the crooked cop Cornell, who had manipulated Williams into murdering Vicki.
Vicki is a remake of the 1941 film I Wake Up Screaming starring Betty Grable, Victor Mature, and Carole Landis.[3]
Film critic Bosley Crowther did not like the screenplay, but appreciated the acting. He wrote "Meanwhile, the rest of the performers—Jean Peters, as the girl who gets killed; Jeanne Crain, as her misgiving sister; Mr. Reid and several more—make the best of Harry Horner's brisk direction to make it look as though they're playing a tingling film. It might be, indeed, if the story were not so studiously contrived and farfetched, and if Mr. Boone did not wear a label that virtually says, 'I'm IT.'"[4]