翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Leave 'Em Laughing
・ Leave (album)
・ Leave (Get Out)
・ Leave (military)
・ Leave (U.S. military)
・ Leave a Light On
・ Leave a Light On (EP)
・ Leave a Mark
・ Leave a Tender Moment Alone
・ Leave a Whisper
・ Leave All Fair
・ Leave and Earnings Statement
・ Leave Before the Lights Come On
・ Leave Everything Behind
・ Leave Freeze or Die
Leave Her to Heaven
・ Leave Here a Stranger
・ Leave Him Out of This
・ Leave Home
・ Leave Home (The Chemical Brothers song)
・ Leave Home (The Vindictives album)
・ Leave in Silence
・ Leave It
・ Leave It All Behind
・ Leave It All Behind (album)
・ Leave It All to Me
・ Leave It Alone
・ Leave It Alone (Broken Bells song)
・ Leave It Alone (Living Colour song)
・ Leave It Alone (Operator Please song)


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Leave Her to Heaven : ウィキペディア英語版
Leave Her to Heaven

''Leave Her to Heaven'' is a 1945 American Technicolor film noir starring Gene Tierney, Cornel Wilde, Jeanne Crain, with Vincent Price, Darryl Hickman, Ray Collins, and Chill Wills.〔''Variety'' film review; January 2, 1946, page 8.〕〔''Harrison's Reports'' film review; December 22, 1945, page 203.〕 The story was adapted for the screen by Jo Swerling from the best selling novel of the same name by Ben Ames Williams and directed by John M. Stahl.
The story (told in an extended flashback that constitutes the bulk of the film) revolves around a femme fatale who entraps a husband and commits several crimes motivated by her insane jealousy over everything concerning him. Tierney received an Oscar nomination as Best Actress. The film grossed over $5,000,000, Fox's highest-grossing picture of the 1940s.
The film's title is drawn from William Shakespeare's ''Hamlet''. In Act I, Scene V, the Ghost urges Hamlet not to seek vengeance against Queen Gertrude, but rather to "leave her to heaven, and to those thorns that in her bosom lodge to prick and sting her."
==Plot==
Novelist Richard Harland (Cornel Wilde) returns to his remote island home, called ''Back of the Moon,'' after two years in prison. His friend and attorney, (Ray Collins), narrates how Richard meets beautiful socialite Ellen Berent (Gene Tierney) on a train. She falls in love with him based mainly on his close resemblance to her recently deceased father, to whom she was obsessively attached.
Ellen is previously engaged to an ambitious Boston attorney, Russell Quinton (Vincent Price), who begs her not to marry Richard because of the bad press it would bring to his upcoming political campaign. However, she jilts Russell and marries Richard, who at first is fascinated not only with Ellen's beauty but her exotic and intense manner. It gradually becomes apparent however that Ellen is pathologically jealous towards any other person and activity that her husband cares about.
Richard's younger disabled brother, Danny (Darryl Hickman), whom Richard dearly loves, comes to live with them at their lodge even though Ellen pleads with the doctor to not allow the move. She becomes increasing irritated by Danny's presence and the attention he gets from Richard. One day, while she and Danny are out on a rowboat, Danny decides to see how far he can swim. However, Danny's paralyzed legs weigh him down, and Ellen watches heartlessly as Danny struggles to stay afloat. He drowns in front of her as Ellen registers no reaction on her face. When she hears Richard approaching the lake, she only then begins screaming.
Later, she becomes pregnant, but tells her adoptive sister, Ruth (Jeanne Crain), that she has an active disdain for the "little beast" inside of her. She then deliberately causes the miscarriage of the couple's unborn son when she throws herself down a flight of stairs. She returns after a few weeks in the hospital and accuses Ruth of being in love with Richard, especially after the dedication of Richard's new book is to "the girl with the hoe" – a reference to Ruth's penchant for gardening.
Richard begins to suspect that Ellen is directly responsible for both the death of his brother and his son. He accuses her of letting Danny drown. When Ellen confesses that she did let him drown and would do it again, he leaves her. She decides to poison herself, coldly framing Ruth in jealousy over Ruth's warm but innocent friendship with her husband. Posing as a victim, Ellen writes to her ex-fiance (since elected a county district attorney) laying out her claims of murder, which said that Ruth wanted her dead. Ellen expires hand-in-hand with Richard, who is next seen being grilled by Russell, the prosecutor for Ruth's trial. Ruth is then pressured by Russell into admitting she has always loved Richard. In response, the previous recalcitrant Richard resumes the witness chair and testifies about Ellen's insane jealousy and her dual confessions to him. Ruth is acquitted, but Richard is sentenced to two years in prison as an accessory to his brother's death for withholding knowledge of Ellen's actions from investigators.
With those two years now behind him, Richard is welcomed home to ''Back of the Moon'' by a loving embrace from Ruth.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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