I though this had a little of "The Lady Vanishes" (1938) to it as we follow the adventures of "Ruth" (Jeanne Crain) aboard a cruise liner. She embarked with her new husband "John" but he's gone missing. Not just missing, but there's not a trace of him to be found anywhere. The Captain (Willis Bouchey) and ship's doctor "Manning" (Michael Rennie) are not convinced that she's the full shilling - and as she becomes more and more frantic and desperate most conclude that the man never existed in the first place! Gradually, though, we realise that this is quite a clever cat and mouse game with a man playing the poor woman like a fiddle for her fortune. Luckily the doctor seems to see some sanity in her behaviour and maybe, just maybe, he can help her thwart the plan to drive her mad - or, even, overboard! Crain holds this together well. She manages her voyage between lucidity and madness effectively and though Rennie is maybe just a little too insipid, it's still quite an engaging and intriguing maritime thriller with an haunting fog-horn sounding throughout like a mourning bell!

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Dangerous Crossing
1953 • 1h 15m • ★ 6.2 (36 votes) Released
A honeymoon aboard an ocean liner is cut short when the bride finds herself suddenly alone, and unable to convince anyone of her husband’s existence.
Director
Joseph M. Newman
Screenplay
Leo Townsend
Rating
6.2
Runtime
75 min
Production
20th Century FoxTop Billed Cast
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Audience Reviews
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CinemaSerf
★ 7/10 • Jan 3, 2024
Keywords
honeymoonbrideocean linerfilm noirconspiracydisappearancecruise shipnewlywedmissing husbandship's doctorgaslighting

















