Ann was very lucky to have met Bruce Ferguson. He restored her faith in life and in men in general. He did not have an agenda or an angle. He wasn’t interested in taking advantage of her. He truly wanted to help. This is a good movie to re-watch when one feels cynical about humanity.
Watched from start to finish in one viewing. Very happy to have found this sentimental woman story and the female director understands a woman's feeling and agony . Thank you♥️😊.
This movie needs to be viewed by all members of congress, of the senate, governors, judges, mayors police persons, i.e., all governing people of the USA.
I think u gotta appreciate Ida Lupino to appreciate this film. Good on you I.L. for your direction, dramatic as it was. It's your style and I bow to the memory of you!
A brave film, showing what rape does to a person. I am not too famillar with Mala Powers, but what a performance! Kudos to Ida Lupino for making this film, and exploring a controversial subject no one would touch.
Brilliant movie, I found it hard to watch in the beginning, but the use of lighting, the tension, the chase, I was on the edge of my seat. Every woman has probably had a frightening experience, not everyone has experienced rape but a lot women experience fear like this at some time in their lives.
Ida was ahead of her time, lots of shadow and light in close shots, bringing out the darkness in character, she really was so talented director, to use such controversial subject matter in 1950 is so commendable, its about time she get the recognition she deserves
Ida was part of the New Vanguard of Independent artists who bucked the studio system to do more personal work with controversial subject matter! Like Humphrey Bogart's Santanna productions, Ms.Lupino only did a handful of Indies (directing 6 of her company's 12), but I'm glad they are winning new fans through DVD!
I never knew who Ida Lupino was until I watched an old version of Charlie's Angels. She starred on an episode. Then I saw her name everywhere in these old movies. This movie was so so good! It warmed the heart 🙏 in faith.... But I rewrote the ending in my mind...
never seen this before, I'm sixty some years old and I can say, this is one of the best movies I've seen. Just one example, I'm glad he didn't kiss her on the lips when departing (even though you ALL know he wanted to, that would of been a misuse of power and position, but he kissed her on the forehead, a show of humility and true friendship, between a man and a woman, though vulnerable, showing true love towards a women and what she has gone though, even though he truly loved her as a women, but he couldn't take advantage of her situation, wow, what an ending, this is true romance and love. :)
It s a miracle on how Anne Wolt returned to her state of reality and how this doctor was her rescue Ranger that fi d her way back home. Thank you to UTUBE in bringing this film out of the Archives directed by the wonderful actress and director Ida Lupino! I ve had a similar experience like Anne of being pushed into situations as Anne was. I ve learned alot that one can t runaway from trauma and must learn to face reality for the choices we make in this wonderful world of ours. Like Louis Armstrong sang his song "What a Wonderful World". Thank you so much again.I was born in 1946; and can relate to time for I was there.
Thank you for posting Outrage on YT. Greatly appreciate a post war film tackling subjects most movies avoided in the late 40's and early 50's, like rape, although the film used the term, "sexual assault." Some nice directing by Ida Lupino, and a strong debut by Mala Powers make Outrage ahead of its time.
I never heard the term, "sexual assault" once in this movie. It was referred to as a "criminal assault" a few times, and everyone seemed to understand exactly what that meant.
Ida's approach to the issue of sexual assault here has such insight...it is not really about sex but about power ...the man feels shamed by the female rejection....thank you for showing the film...
@@vogelfrau2425yes it’s a mixture of power and desire. The you can’t have what you want so you want it more. But depending on the context when predators go after children yes they’re attracted to children but it stems from their depravity and they feel a sick demonic thrill to destroy their innocence. For adult women 18-45 It usually is both power and lust as I first stated.
dian kreczmer Yes, PTSD wasn’t even recognized by the psychiatric profession as a disorder that women (& children) could have as a result to violence and/ or abuse inflicted outside battlefield situations. It wasn’t until about three decades after this film that it was officially recognized, & even after that it was largely ignored by the psychiatric community in practice. It was recognized by psychiatrists & other health professionals involved with the women’s movement by the ‘70s & was treated by these professionals within the movement, who continued to urge recognition by the psychiatric profession as a whole, with many excellent studies done in the ‘70s by those working with crisis centers set up & operated by volunteers within the women’s movement. Now it is acknowledged that the majority of PTSD cases in the US occur among women who have been survivors of rape (within & outside of marriage), as well as survivors of abuse within their homes by husbands, fathers, etc - that is, violence within the home. These cases far outnumber those who contract PSTD in military battles/wars. Many cases of it still go unrecognized by psych. professionals, who often misdiagnose the patient with bipolar disorder or other conditions unless the patient has been a member of the military in warfare. This happened to me, as a matter of fact, starting in the late ‘60s, & although I felt sure I had PTSD, it was unrecognized by every psychiatrist I saw for some ten years. During the ‘80s several prominent psychiatrists diagnosed my disorder as “atypical bipolar disorder” & treated me with many psych. medicines, none of which helped at all & some of which actually made the symptoms worse & at least twice came close to killing me. It’s very hard to treat, usually involving years of special therapy geared specifically for treating PTSD. These treatments are largely based on those developed to treat patients who contracted the disorder as a result of Germany’s concentration camps, as the disorder that results from rape and/or abuse & violence within the home is very similar to that suffered by survivors of the WWII camps. Lupino’s film is incredibly accurate & of course decades before its time, although the symptoms shown in the film are understated, not overstated. Brilliant! Maybe this film should be shown as part of a standard course in public schools...as great artwork in the service of education about a common disorder in our society.
Ida Lupino saw things from a woman's perspective - but with realism as well. The combination was amazing. I am binge watching this stuff all day. Some films of hers I have seen several times. Some I am discovering for the first viewing. Wow..
I continue to find the movies directed by Ida Lupino very interesting. This would not have been a big box office hit, but it was still a pretty good movie. The abrupt change from the focus on the victim to the need for more prison rehabilitation programs near the end wasn't what I was expecting, and was glad when the focus again returned to Ann. Can't help but wish Ann would have stayed with Doc in that beautiful little town with all the oranges.
One commenter stated that they wished they had known what the nature of this movie was going to be. When the uploader offers a synopsis, I am grateful. And when the Commenters offer some insight into the films, I especially am thankful for that if there wasn't one made available by the uploader. So all who offered some info about the movie, thank you. We watched and found the very sensitive subject surprising. After watching film noir movies for a few years, almost daily, we had not come across this plot before. It was a little difficult to accept that this young woman not only walked down dark lonely streets after working late into the night to return to her home, but that she ran to remote dark alleys and a graveyard for autos to escape. And not only did she do this once, but twice when she again ran from potential places of human habitation and presence to an isolated area.
Thank u so MUCH for posting this. I was at work when I saw this commercial for the upcoming movie and thought I'd like to see it. Thanks to u I did. We have no cable or antenna. So thanks again!! Will subscribe!
Excellent movie! Ida did a fantastic job portraying the after math of an evil crime! I was hoping for a different ending, but it was well done! Thank you
Kudos to the clarity of thinking in pastor role. It allowed him to help her until she was readied to resume the life she chose. He too kept his path clear. Very edifying movie.
me pasa igual, me ayude con los subtitulos pero no es lo mismo. De todas maneras la pelicula toda, tematica, actuaciones, climas, direccion y demases...me parecio excelente. Salidos.
Ida Lupino was an excellent director and political activist like her husband. She was able to establish herself as one of the few female independent movie makers of the 50’s. That wasn’t an easy task back in those days.
O The Good Old Days! Go to a new town, get a new job on the word of a stranger… no updating the resume, completing a three page application even though you’ve provided the updated resume, or 2/3 tiered interview process, background check, or vaccine certificate
Excellent movie. In a very strange way this reminds me of The Wizard of Oz. She looks a little like Judy...For ex: at the end when she has to leave back for home....when she said thank you for everything @ 1:13:08... she was dorothy and he was the straw man et. al. as she said goodbye for home.
I didn't realize that Ida Lupino also directed movies as well as starred in them. Very impressive. Especially how she handled a very sensitive, even taboo, subject back then with both sensitivity and understanding.
This film is amazing. Rape from the victim's point of view for once - and not eroticized - terrifying. And of course, male movie reviewers didn't like that. “One topic which would better have been left unfilmed,” wrote Variety. Though the topic had been covered many times before - just in an ignorant sexualized way.
This is Ida Lupino’s directorial debut after (an uncredited) co-direction of Not Wanted, published in 1949. I like her camera work and how she manages to instill a sense of voyeurism in some scenes from the beginning through to the bus station where Ann gets the heebie jeebies and decides to walk off. Good movie.
+jonainwood 1out of 3 women will be raped in her lifetime but 1 out of 33 men will be. If a person cannot see the trauma that rape causes a woman by watching this film is callous.
+jonainwood You are way off base-believing that the soul/mind of a male is more sensitive/vulnerable/valued than a Females. The depth of any being is equal-the assault to any being is as vile and hellish as to any other! To even place one type of impact over another is equal to saying one enjoyed it, and the other didn't.
It had to end the way it did, not like we want it to or thought it would but to show the power of self control on the man’s part. He told us why. Because they both had different destinies and his faith knew what he was supposed to do in life.
Thank you so much for posting this! I want to show it to my film class this fall but couldn't find a copy anywhere (nor a library willing to loan it to my institution, and I honestly don't blame them since it's OOP).
Very intelligent film from Ida Lupino. She was of course restricted by the Censors code at the time, Rape could not be mentioned but inferred only and Anne was never ,not going to return to Jim in the end as that would almost suggest adultery (even though they were not yet married)Jim was a sympathetic character and so would not have been wronged. All in all we are lucky that this film got made at all in 1950.
NOOOO ! Horrible ending ! I was expecting the bus to pull away & she'd still be there with him. Why didn't she stay with him ? They loved each other... He was better than the first guy.
She was very vulnerable at the time he did the right thing as a real man👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 he could have easily taken advantage of her during those emotionally time 😖😖than she would have regretted it all once she came to reality. 👀I seen caring for her not love and he was also protecting his feelings knowing really would set in
As he cupped her face in his hands at the end, for a second he appeared about to kiss her on her lips, then proceeded to kiss her on the forehead instead.
Nice movie, I've seen it over and over again but, there's one thing I just couldn't understand, the girl runs away terrified while being hunted by a predator, at one point she falls from a step, lying on the ground , stops struggling, her vision blurs and so she is reached by the man, I mean...did she pass out falling down a step? Is she semi-fainted because she can't stand terror, paralyzed by fear? Or does she give up because she no longer has the strength? Then I don't understand these maniacs, with so many girls who went to her kiosk, no, did it have to be the one? There was a girl who was putting nail polish on her nails, why rape this other girl who never trusted him? Her friend was there with her, they had coffee together and beauty has nothing to do with it or anything else!
So. [1] how does everyone know her/know who she is, yet no one was in ear shot at the time? and [2] how does everyone know already? Who blabbed? There is no social media, how did it get all over town with her name and her face attached to it in what, just a day or two? ?
Thank you for the upload. I have 2 observations though: i) I don't think the tittle "Outrage" is quite fitting ii) The movie kicks-off nicely but then, instead of gaining momentum, the pace slows down, dragging its feet to the end.
Xyz Xyz You probably felt that way because her lively personality became scared/shy after the attack. She was no longer an interesting character in the movie. And the title wasn't appropriate ~ it should have been called "Outcry".
The girl overreacted. That nervous quality, as if the next man who offers her a cup of coffee, she will tremble, and began to get bug eyed. I would have kicked him in the crotch, and then ran for it. Instead she just lay there on the cement. Like I said..the film sucks.
@@bethmiletti9540 When she was in the lorry and tooted the horn to get attention, she could have locked the doors and kept him out, then kept her hand on the horn. He would have ran away in case someone came.
Well done. The guy that got clubbed had no business touching Ann when she told him not to. He deserved to get hit, Ann didn't know him nor what he may do to her. Tku.for post.
Whoever wrote or was involved in this picture knew first-hand what it was like. A to-the-core about things that happen to women and are hidden because of fear. It lasts a lifetime. Only faith in God can help.
I love how the story plays out without any interloping preachiness! A great job by an amazing director named IDA LUPINO!
Ann was very lucky to have met Bruce Ferguson. He restored her faith in life and in men in general. He did not have an agenda or an angle. He wasn’t interested in taking advantage of her. He truly wanted to help. This is a good movie to re-watch when one feels cynical about humanity.
Agreed.
Watched from start to finish in one viewing. Very happy to have found this
sentimental woman story and the female director understands a woman's feeling and agony . Thank you♥️😊.
Loved this movie😭😭😭there is always healing and hope especially when you rely on God’s loving hand🙏🏻 Thanks for sharing this wonderful movie🎬
This movie needs to be viewed by all members of congress, of the senate, governors, judges, mayors police persons, i.e., all governing people of the USA.
Exactly
Ida lupino, What an artist! ... A genius for deeper elements. And she could fit right into " I Love Lucy" perfectly. Thanks for your sharing these.
I think u gotta appreciate Ida Lupino to appreciate this film. Good on you I.L. for your direction, dramatic as it was. It's your style and I bow to the memory of you!
This movie is visually so strong and well directed that much, if not all of it could stand on its own without dialogue or sound.
A brave film, showing what rape does to a person. I am not too famillar with Mala Powers, but what a performance! Kudos to Ida Lupino for making this film, and exploring a controversial subject no one would touch.
This is what is known as a great film. Amazingly, just as good today.
Brilliant movie, I found it hard to watch in the beginning, but the use of lighting, the tension, the chase, I was on the edge of my seat. Every woman has probably had a frightening experience, not everyone has experienced rape but a lot women experience fear like this at some time in their lives.
Ja leider.
Ida was ahead of her time, lots of shadow and light in close shots, bringing out the darkness in character, she really was so talented director, to use such controversial subject matter in 1950 is so commendable, its about time she get the recognition she deserves
Ida was part of the New Vanguard of Independent artists who bucked the studio system to do more personal work with controversial subject matter! Like Humphrey Bogart's Santanna productions, Ms.Lupino only did a handful of Indies (directing 6 of her company's 12), but I'm glad they are winning new fans through DVD!
JFTR Bex, "lots of shadow and light in close shots, bringing out the darkness in character" IS The Basis of Film Noir....!!! :-)
The Theme, true, but the shadows and light in close shots, bringing the darkness out was already a thing way before Ida.
Ida Lupino directed and starred in some of the best Film-Noir related pictures. She was a great actress, as well as a great director.
I never knew who Ida Lupino was until I watched an old version of Charlie's Angels. She starred on an episode. Then I saw her name everywhere in these old movies. This movie was so so good! It warmed the heart 🙏 in faith.... But I rewrote the ending in my mind...
never seen this before, I'm sixty some years old and I can say, this is one of the best movies I've seen. Just one example, I'm glad he didn't kiss her on the lips when departing (even though you ALL know he wanted to, that would of been a misuse of power and position, but he kissed her on the forehead, a show of humility and true friendship, between a man and a woman, though vulnerable, showing true love towards a women and what she has gone though, even though he truly loved her as a women, but he couldn't take advantage of her situation, wow, what an ending, this is true romance and love. :)
Stupid movie
Ida lupin, the best director ever. who knew!
It s a miracle on how Anne Wolt returned to her state of reality and how this doctor was her rescue Ranger that fi d her way back home. Thank you to UTUBE in bringing this film out of the Archives directed by the wonderful actress and director Ida Lupino! I ve had a similar experience like Anne of being pushed into situations as Anne was. I ve learned alot that one can t runaway from trauma and must learn to face reality for the choices we make in this wonderful world of ours. Like Louis Armstrong sang his song "What a Wonderful World". Thank you so much again.I was born in 1946; and can relate to time for I was there.
Thank you for posting Outrage on YT. Greatly appreciate a post war film tackling subjects most movies avoided in the late 40's and early 50's, like rape, although the film used the term, "sexual assault." Some nice directing by Ida Lupino, and a strong debut by Mala Powers make Outrage ahead of its time.
I never heard the term, "sexual assault" once in this movie. It was referred to as a "criminal assault" a few times, and everyone seemed to understand exactly what that meant.
Good movie! Thanks for showing/sharing!
Excellent movie !
Seen first time, Nov. 3rd, 2020 at 56 y.o..
Ida's approach to the issue of sexual assault here has such insight...it is not really about sex but about power
...the man feels shamed by the female rejection....thank you for showing the film...
Men are hunters. The rejection makes a woman more interesting. They want to have her.
@@vogelfrau2425yes it’s a mixture of power and desire. The you can’t have what you want so you want it more. But depending on the context when predators go after children yes they’re attracted to children but it stems from their depravity and they feel a sick demonic thrill to destroy their innocence. For adult women 18-45 It usually is both power and lust as I first stated.
the PTSD, what insight ms lupino had
dian kreczmer Yes, PTSD wasn’t even recognized by the psychiatric profession as a disorder that women (& children) could have as a result to violence and/ or abuse inflicted outside battlefield situations. It wasn’t until about three decades after this film that it was officially recognized, & even after that it was largely ignored by the psychiatric community in practice. It was recognized by psychiatrists & other health professionals involved with the women’s movement by the ‘70s & was treated by these professionals within the movement, who continued to urge recognition by the psychiatric profession as a whole, with many excellent studies done in the ‘70s by those working with crisis centers set up & operated by volunteers within the women’s movement. Now it is acknowledged that the majority of PTSD cases in the US occur among women who have been survivors of rape (within & outside of marriage), as well as survivors of abuse within their homes by husbands, fathers, etc - that is, violence within the home. These cases far outnumber those who contract PSTD in military battles/wars. Many cases of it still go unrecognized by psych. professionals, who often misdiagnose the patient with bipolar disorder or other conditions unless the patient has been a member of the military in warfare. This happened to me, as a matter of fact, starting in the late ‘60s, & although I felt sure I had PTSD, it was unrecognized by every psychiatrist I saw for some ten years. During the ‘80s several prominent psychiatrists diagnosed my disorder as “atypical bipolar disorder” & treated me with many psych. medicines, none of which helped at all & some of which actually made the symptoms worse & at least twice came close to killing me. It’s very hard to treat, usually involving years of special therapy geared specifically for treating PTSD. These treatments are largely based on those developed to treat patients who contracted the disorder as a result of Germany’s concentration camps, as the disorder that results from rape and/or abuse & violence within the home is very similar to that suffered by survivors of the WWII camps.
Lupino’s film is incredibly accurate & of course decades before its time, although the symptoms shown in the film are understated, not overstated.
Brilliant! Maybe this film should be shown as part of a standard course in public schools...as great artwork in the service of education about a common disorder in our society.
Ida Lupino saw things from a woman's perspective - but with realism as well. The combination was amazing. I am binge watching this stuff all day. Some films of hers I have seen several times. Some I am discovering for the first viewing. Wow..
Thanks for the uploads, love Ida!
I continue to find the movies directed by Ida Lupino very interesting. This would not have been a big box office hit, but it was still a pretty good movie. The abrupt change from the focus on the victim to the need for more prison rehabilitation programs near the end wasn't what I was expecting, and was glad when the focus again returned to Ann. Can't help but wish Ann would have stayed with Doc in that beautiful little town with all the oranges.
what a good 'moral' movie ...in this wicked world today ! thank you for sharing with us !😇
How timeless this is regarding evil behavior, mental health, help, and hope.
One commenter stated that they wished they had known what the nature of this movie was going to be. When the uploader offers a synopsis, I am grateful. And when the Commenters offer some insight into the films, I especially am thankful for that if there wasn't one made available by the uploader. So all who offered some info about the movie, thank you.
We watched and found the very sensitive subject surprising. After watching film noir movies for a few years, almost daily, we had not come across this plot before.
It was a little difficult to accept that this young woman not only walked down dark lonely streets after working late into the night to return to her home, but that she ran to remote dark alleys and a graveyard for autos to escape. And not only did she do this once, but twice when she again ran from potential places of human habitation and presence to an isolated area.
Dee BRown Panic can cause one to do some stupid things.
I totally agree with you about the walking home alone part.
Thank u so MUCH for posting this. I was at work when I saw this commercial for the upcoming movie and thought I'd like to see it. Thanks to u I did. We have no cable or antenna. So thanks again!! Will subscribe!
Excellent movie! Ida did a fantastic job portraying the after math of an evil crime! I was hoping for a different ending, but it was well done!
Thank you
Kudos to the clarity of thinking in pastor role. It allowed him to help her until she was readied to resume the life she chose. He too kept his path clear. Very edifying movie.
Very fine work. Ahead of its time
Thx for. Loading. Was not seen in France on those days when I was there.....
Thanks for posting,Happy Holidays
Sensitive film about a difficult subject matter, a belated congratulations.
Extraordinaria película la pena grande es no ponerla en castellano para q no se pueda ver aunque yo ya la he visto en castellano año pasado
me pasa igual, me ayude con los subtitulos pero no es lo mismo.
De todas maneras la pelicula toda, tematica, actuaciones, climas, direccion y demases...me parecio excelente. Salidos.
Ida Lupino was an excellent director and political activist like her husband.
She was able to establish herself as one of the few female independent movie makers of the 50’s.
That wasn’t an easy task back in those days.
beautiful film making
Thank you so much for posting this.
This is very good movie about a very serious topic that unfortunately still going on today, thank you for sharing it 👍...!
Pretty sure it will be going on 'till the end of time.
A real great film.
Ida directed this, Mala Powers stars.
Thank you very much for taking the time to post.
I give it a 10 just in acting.Very nice.
I am for sure an Ida Fan.
Wow! Wonderful movie!
O The Good Old Days! Go to a new town, get a new job on the word of a stranger… no updating the resume, completing a three page application even though you’ve provided the updated resume, or 2/3 tiered interview process, background check, or vaccine certificate
A movie about rape and a script that never uses the word.
Outstanding.
They wasn't allowed to.The Hays code would not permit the word in 1950.
Excellent movie. In a very strange way this reminds me of The Wizard of Oz. She looks a little like Judy...For ex: at the end when she has to leave back for home....when she said thank you for everything @ 1:13:08... she was dorothy and he was the straw man et. al. as she said goodbye for home.
He said he ment u no harm, but he was pushing himself on her.
I didn't realize that Ida Lupino also directed movies as well as starred in them. Very impressive. Especially how she handled a very sensitive, even taboo, subject back then with both sensitivity and understanding.
Of course we do Kam. It's a crime of violence, not of sex or passion.
Very revealing because as a person whom has experienced trauma this exposes a lot of nerosis
This film is amazing. Rape from the victim's point of view for once - and not eroticized - terrifying. And of course, male movie reviewers didn't like that. “One topic which would better have been left unfilmed,” wrote Variety. Though the topic had been covered many times before - just in an ignorant sexualized way.
Susie McD Thank u for ur intelligent comment. I could not agree more. Ida Lupino rocks both as actor and director. U said it BEST!
@@aileenwagner2576 Awww thank you!
What a Great movie
This is Ida Lupino’s directorial debut after (an uncredited) co-direction of Not Wanted, published in 1949. I like her camera work and how she manages to instill a sense of voyeurism in some scenes from the beginning through to the bus station where Ann gets the heebie jeebies and decides to walk off. Good movie.
Like in the last film by Lupino, again she created a soap opera.
Will men ever understand the damage that rape does to a woman?
+jonainwood I disagree, Women are more susceptible to PIV, PID, pregnancy, and HIV.
+jonainwood 1out of 3 women will be raped in her lifetime but 1 out of 33 men will be. If a person cannot see the trauma that rape causes a woman by watching this film is callous.
+jonainwood FACTS
+KAM COLORADO It is one of the most senseless crimes there is in my opinion.
+jonainwood You are way off base-believing that the soul/mind of a male is more sensitive/vulnerable/valued than a Females. The depth of any being is equal-the assault to any being is as vile and hellish as to any other! To even place one type of impact over another is equal to saying one enjoyed it, and the other didn't.
thank you kindly.
Serían fantástico subtituladas estas joyas cinematográficas
It had to end the way it did, not like we want it to or thought it would but to show the power of self control on the man’s part. He told us why. Because they both had different destinies and his faith knew what he was supposed to do in life.
That minister is bucking for sainthood; talking about being centered.
Espectacular.
wonderful
Thank you so much for posting this! I want to show it to my film class this fall but couldn't find a copy anywhere (nor a library willing to loan it to my institution, and I honestly don't blame them since it's OOP).
It's good Ida directed this. It's very believable.
last 15 seconds scared the crap out of me
I felt sad for Bruce at the end.
So for defending herself against a physically pushy character, she gets charged. .upside down world..like today
ahhhh...back when bread was without chemicals and preservatives...lemme get back to some of that, please!
I am surprised, everybody paid for their crimes in those days. The criminal never got caught.
Very intelligent film from Ida Lupino. She was of course restricted by the Censors code at the time, Rape could not be mentioned but inferred only and Anne was never ,not going to return to Jim in the end as that would almost suggest adultery (even though they were not yet married)Jim was a sympathetic character and so would not have been wronged. All in all we are lucky that this film got made at all in 1950.
good movie but strange ending
Outrage, 1950……No such movie as 0 50…?? 👍
GOOD STUFF!!!!!!!@
💜💛💚💜💯💯💯💯💜💛💚💛
Found the above film wrongly titled. Outrage. Is the Name. Here we refute What's in a Name. Doctor
Richard Brody, film critic of The New Yorker magazine, wrote a great article on this film in a June 16, 2014 posting.
And he said what?
Here's the link: www.newyorker.com/culture/richard-brody/ida-lupinos-prescient-outrage
Well done.
Great camera work for 1950. There was another 'Lupino' in the credits, who is this person?
❤
NOOOO ! Horrible ending !
I was expecting the bus to pull away & she'd still be there with him.
Why didn't she stay with him ? They loved each other... He was better than the first guy.
yes! exactly what i thought!! wrong ending!!
bootsamou WOW! I thought the same thing!
She was very vulnerable at the time he did the right thing as a real man👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 he could have easily taken advantage of her during those emotionally time 😖😖than she would have regretted it all once she came to reality. 👀I seen caring for her not love and he was also protecting his feelings knowing really would set in
As he cupped her face in his hands at the end, for a second he appeared about to kiss her on her lips, then proceeded to kiss her on the forehead instead.
It's Stella, not Ida in this one.
Nice movie, I've seen it over and over again but, there's one thing I just couldn't understand, the girl runs away terrified while being hunted by a predator, at one point she falls from a step, lying on the ground , stops struggling, her vision blurs and so she is reached by the man, I mean...did she pass out falling down a step? Is she semi-fainted because she can't stand terror, paralyzed by fear? Or does she give up because she no longer has the strength? Then I don't understand these maniacs, with so many girls who went to her kiosk, no, did it have to be the one? There was a girl who was putting nail polish on her nails, why rape this other girl who never trusted him? Her friend was there with her, they had coffee together and beauty has nothing to do with it or anything else!
I remember being her...the police and looking over all those profiles and not remembering.
Her boyfriend was an idiot and he was abusive too...shaking her screaming at her telling her to shut up. Damn fool he was and she just got assaulted.
@@LLStark At least he still wanted to marry her. Some men don't want to marry a woman after rape and they break up.
I’m sorry you had to go through that, must have been a horrible event in your life. I cannot imagine.
Outrage 1950
Outrage (1950)
So. [1] how does everyone know her/know who she is, yet no one was in ear shot at the time? and [2] how does everyone know already? Who blabbed? There is no social media, how did it get all over town with her name and her face attached to it in what, just a day or two? ?
Thank you for the upload. I have 2 observations though:
i) I don't think the tittle "Outrage" is quite fitting
ii) The movie kicks-off nicely but then, instead of gaining momentum, the pace slows down, dragging its feet to the end.
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You probably felt that way because her lively personality became scared/shy after the attack. She was no longer an interesting character in the movie. And the title wasn't appropriate ~ it should have been called "Outcry".
The girl overreacted. That nervous quality, as if the next man who offers her a cup of coffee, she will tremble, and began to get bug eyed. I would have kicked him in the crotch, and then ran for it. Instead she just lay there on the cement. Like I said..the film sucks.
@@bethmiletti9540 Way to victim-shame.
@@bethmiletti9540 When she was in the lorry and tooted the horn to get attention, she could have locked the doors and kept him out, then kept her hand on the horn. He would have ran away in case someone came.
i had a leather jacket like that once but i never did anything like that
Graham Carter I'm surprised you can even talk!
Good looks are a curse - Most of you people dont realise how lucky you are
What's up with the 0 50? I've seen it before, but not with that title.
Lovely song 55:12. Anybody know the name of it?
"Didn't You Know?" by John Franco. It was listed in the opening credits.
In the opening credits, Rita Lupino! Ida's sister, cousin? Someone enlighten me? 🙄
She played Stella Carter, Ann Walton's immediate superior at work.
Type:. Rita Lupino,. IMDb
Too dramatic but it had some good parts...the ending was a bummer
But where was everyone in the city
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Well done. The guy that got clubbed had no business touching Ann when she told him not to. He deserved to get hit, Ann didn't know him nor what he may do to her. Tku.for post.
Whoever wrote or was involved in this picture knew first-hand what it was like. A to-the-core about things that happen to women and are hidden because of fear. It lasts a lifetime. Only faith in God can help.
Well at least she didn't get pregnant. I couldn't have taken THAT much drama.