Search

Written On The Wind

1956, Movie, NR, 99 mins

WRITTEN ON THE WIND
starstarstarstarstar
The ultimate in melodrama, Douglas Sirk's finest directorial effort, and a searing critique of the American family. Texas oil baron Robert Stack marries secretary Lauren Bacall, but has doubts about the child they're expecting. Stacks's nymphomaniac sister Dorothy Malone tells him his best friend, geologist Rock Hudson, is really the father. Florid, lurid and one of the great American films of the '50s. Best of all is Malone, a wanton bombshell with so much sex appeal, she gives her daddy a heart attack. Read the complete review for Written On The Wind
Year: 1956
Rated NR

User Rating: (1 ratings)
Add Your Rating: 1 stars2 stars3 stars4 stars5 stars

Cast
Rock Hudson: Mitch Wayne
Lauren Bacall: Lucy Moore Hadley
Robert Stack: Kyle Hadley
Dorothy Malone: Marylee Hadley
Robert Keith: Jasper Hadley
Grant Williams: Biff Miley

 

more Written On The Wind cast & details

A family of Texas oil millionaires explodes into melodrama in director Douglas Sirk's Written...
Free | TCM

Posted: 8/1/2008
Oil tycoon Jasper Hadley (Robert Keith) experiences a heart attack while his daughter Marylee...
Free | TCM

Posted: 8/1/2008
Marylee (Dorothy Malone) tries to turn her brother Kyle (Robert Stack) against his wife Lucy...
Free | TCM

Posted: 8/1/2008
The main title and credit sequence for Written on the Wind (1956), directed by Douglas Sirk,...
Free | TCM

Posted: 8/1/2008
Loading...

Mad About Mad Men

I can't remember the last time the most buzzed-about show at a summer critics' press tour had nothing to do with the broadcast network's fall offerings. But this week, the show we can't stop talking and thinking about, and wishing we had more episodes to watch, is AMC's Mad Men, a period drama about advertising men and their professional and sexual exploits at the dawn of the '60s. (It premieres Thursday at 10 pm/ET.) Here's how I logged my first impression of the show in the pages of TV Guide recently, where I gave it a score of 9 out of 10: "Wow. The period look is dazzling: the women's tight skirts, the men's slicked hair. If iconic director Douglas Sirk (Written on the Wind) had made TV, it would have looked like this. But this sleek, sexy, smartly cynical drama about selling everything from cigarettes to Nixon also nails the era's attitudes of casual prejudice and sexual manipulation."In this show, men are wolves and women are pawns, Jews are invisible or patronized, and gays a... read more

Advertisement

Advertisement