poster

The Forbidden Street (1949)

6.7 | Mar 31, 1949 (GB) | Drama, History | 01:30

For herself alone...she must answer for what she was and did!

In Victorian London, young Adelaide is born into luxury, but marries starving artist Henry. His alcoholism and their lack of money lead to many quarrels. During one such fight, Henry slips down a flight of stairs and dies. A neighbor, Mrs. Mounsey, is the only witness, and she blackmails the young widow by threatening to tell the cops that Adelaide killed her husband. Luckily, lawyer Gilbert swoops in to help Adelaide.

Featured Crew

Director
Assistant Director
Executive Producer
Screenplay
Music Director
Camera Operator
Producer
Original Music Composer
Production Manager

Cast

profile
Maureen O'Hara
Adelaide 'Addie' Culver
profile
Dana Andrews
Henry Lambert / Gilbert Lauderdale
profile
Anne Butchart
Alice Hambro
profile
Sybil Thorndike
Mrs. 'The Sow' Mounsey
profile
Anthony Tancred
Treff Culver
profile
June Allen
Young Adelaide
profile
Fay Compton
Mrs. Culver
profile
Diane Hart
The Blazer

Reviews

avatar
CinemaSerf
7 | Jul 09, 2022
Maureen O'Hara is a young girl who lives a well-to-do existence with her family until she takes a shine to her art teacher "Lambert" (Dana Andrews). Their relationship doesn't impress her family, but they press on anyway, set up on their own before, fairly soon, she rues the day. He turns out to be a bit of a lush. When an accident befalls him, she finds herself the subject of a pernicious blackmailing from an elderly neighbour - "Mrs. Mousey" (Dame Sybil Thorndyke) and her miserable life looks pretty set. Until, that is, another man enters her life - a man who bears a startling resemblance to her husband, and... It's quite a well paced story, this. Jean Negulesco keeps the story engaging without descending into melodrama, and Thorndyke is excellent as the avaricious old woman. The production detail is fine - the costumes and scenarios are decent enough, but the score - it really is weak, seemingly determined to slow the film down. There is some chemistry between O'Hara and Andrews that makes this just a little better than a routine costume drama and worth 90 minutes.