Marie Allen
Eleanor Parker
Marie Allen

A single mistake puts a 19-year old girl behind bars, where she experiences the terrors and torments of women in prison.
Caged (1950) Original Trailer [HD]
Marie Allen
Eleanor Parker
Marie Allen
Ruth Benton
Agnes Moorehead
Ruth Benton
Emma Barber
Ellen Corby
Emma Barber
Evelyn Harper
Hope Emerson
Evelyn Harper
Kitty Stark
Betty Garde
Kitty Stark
Gita "Smoochie" Kovsky
Jan Sterling
Gita "Smoochie" Kovsky
Elvira Powell
Lee Patrick
Elvira Powell
June Roberts
Olive Deering
June Roberts
Isolation Matron
Jane Darwell
Isolation Matron
Georgia Harrison
Gertrude Michael
Georgia Harrison
Helen
Sheila MacRae
Helen
Inmate (uncredited)
Gertrude Astor
Inmate (uncredited)
Prisoner 93850 Caged is directed by John Cromwell and adapted by Virginia Kellogg from her own story Women Without men that was co-written with Bernard C. Schoenfeld. It stars Eleanor Parker, Agnes Moorehead, Ellen Corby, Betty Garde and Hope Emerson. Music is by Max Steiner and cinematography by Carl E. Guthrie. Teenager Marie Allen (Parker) is sent to a women’s prison after being found guilty of being an accomplice in a robbery, a robbery that saw her husband killed. She’s also pregnant and will have to have the child in the prison. Struggling to come to terms with her incarceration and the tough regime overseen by brutish warden Harper (Emerson), Marie comes to realise that she may have to go through a major character transformation to survive. Unfairly tagged as camp and sounding on synopsis like what would become a cheese laden staple of women’s prison movies, Caged is actually rather powerful film making. The deconstruction and subsequent transformation of a young woman who clearly doesn’t belong behind those walls, is bleakly told. The prison is a foreboding place, the lady character’s reactions to their surroundings and way of life are emotionally charged. Frank in its portrayal of prison life back then, but sly with its insinuations of sexual proclivities and criminal doings on the inside, the writing has a crafty edge most befitting the sombre tone that pervades the picture. Parker leads off the list of great performances to bring the drama to life, and with Guthrie’s black and white photography superbly emphasising claustrophobia and pungent emotional turmoil, it rounds out as a thoroughly gripping piece of film. With an ending that’s appropriately biting as well. 7.5/10
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