Movie |
Rape | Small Town
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7.7/10
IMDbBest Actress in a Leading Role | 1949 | Jane
Best Actress | 1950 | Jane
1950 | Jane
Top Ten Films | 1948
Best Actress in a Supporting Role | 1949
Best Sound Recording | 1949
Best Music Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture | 1949
Best Art DirectionSet Decoration BlackandWhite | 1949
Best Picture | 1949
Best Actor in a Leading Role | 1949 | Lew
Best Actor in a Supporting Role | 1949 | Charles
Best Director | 1949
Best Writing Screenplay | 1949
Best Cinematography BlackandWhite | 1949
Best Film Editing | 1949
1949
Best Written American Drama | 1949
Jane Wyman's Oscar acceptance speech is reportedly the shortest on record for Best Actress: "I won this award by keeping my mouth shut and I think I'll do it again."
Widely considered to be the first Hollywood film to openly tackle the subject of rape.
Jane Wyman became the first person, actor or actress since the silent era to win an Oscar without uttering a word, after sound was created just before The Jazz Singer (1927) was filmed & released 21 years earlier in 1927.
Stephen McNally, who played the hideous Locky McCormick character role, in the theatrical film, also played the saintly doctor in the Broadway production, just to prove he could play a friendly or a diabolical (evil) character role.
Max Steiner received an Oscar nomination for his score, one of 10 that he provided for movies in 1948. Other notable films from that banner year that benefited from his input included two for John Huston, The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948) and Key Largo (1948).
"Dr. Robert Richardson: There's only one shame - failing a human being that needs you."
"Dr. Robert Richardson: Your Lordship, I insist this girl obeyed an impulse older than the laws of man: the instinct of a mother to protect her child."