Marked Woman

The star teaming you'll never forget!

6.5
19371h 36m

Production

Logo for First National Pictures
Logo for Warner Bros. Pictures

In the underworld of Manhattan, a woman dares to stand up to one of the city's most powerful gangsters.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Marked Woman trailer (1937)

Marked Woman trailer (1937)

Cast

Photo of Bette Davis

Bette Davis

Mary Dwight Strauber

Photo of Humphrey Bogart

Humphrey Bogart

David Graham

Photo of Lola Lane

Lola Lane

Dorothy "Gabby" Marvin

Photo of Isabel Jewell

Isabel Jewell

Emmy Lou Eagan

Photo of Rosalind Marquis

Rosalind Marquis

Florrie Liggett

Photo of Mayo Methot

Mayo Methot

Estelle Porter

Photo of Jane Bryan

Jane Bryan

Betty Strauber

Photo of Eduardo Ciannelli

Eduardo Ciannelli

Johnny Vanning

Photo of Ben Welden

Ben Welden

Charlie Delaney

Photo of Damian O'Flynn

Damian O'Flynn

Ralph Krawford

Photo of Henry O'Neill

Henry O'Neill

Arthur Sheldon

Photo of Raymond Hatton

Raymond Hatton

Vanning's Lawyer

Photo of Robert Strange

Robert Strange

George Beler

Photo of Archie Robbins

Archie Robbins

Bell Captain

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7.5/10

Hostesses Arrested In “Clip-Joint” Murder.

Marked Woman is directed by Lloyd Bacon and written by Robert Rossen and Abem Finkel. It stars Bette Davis, Humphrey Bogart, Lola Lane, Isabel Jewell, Mayo Methot and Eduardo Ciannelli. Music is collectively arranged by Bernhard Kaun, Heinz Roemheld and David Raksin, and cinematography by George Barnes.

In spite of the film’s disclaimer put out at the pic’s beginning, Marked Woman is an adaptation of the real life case of Lucky Luciano, who the previous year was found guilty of compulsory prostitution after sterling work by U.S. Attorney Thomas E. Dewey. Ciannelli plays Luciano as Johnny Vanning, Bogart plays Dewey as David Graham and Davis is “madame” Cokey Flo Brown as Mary Dwight Strauber.

Unsurprisingly for the time it was made, Marked Woman is a distinctly sanitised version of events, full of euphemisms and hinted at unlawfulness, with the beatings et al off camera. However, it still packs a punch, both in narrative thrust as the underworld shenanigans are brought to life, and as an acting curio to see the young Davis and Bogart bouncing off each other before their respective stars were about to be ignited with petroleum.

Interesting aspect of the picture is that it is in essence a gangster movie, with a good guy/bad guy scenario at the core, yet it’s the women who rightly dominate the story. The girls are held up as bastions of hardship and heroism, and it gives the production a riveting edge, as well as some much needed glamour in amongst the sordid machinations.

Well acted, well told and well interesting. 7.5/10

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