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Valerie (1957)

4.3 | Aug 01, 1957 (US) | Western, Drama, Crime | 01:22

Was she guilty of the sins for which she stood accused?

After the American Civil War, former Union Major John Garth marries pretty settler Valerie but tragedy strikes and the two spouses end up in court where they give two different conflicting accounts of their marriage.

Featured Crew

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Makeup Artist
Director of Photography
Original Music Composer
Screenplay
Hairstylist
Screenplay
Producer

Cast

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Sterling Hayden
John Garth
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Anita Ekberg
Valerie Horvat
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Anthony Steel
Reverend Steven Blake
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Peter Walker
Herb Garth
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Jered Barclay
Jim Mingo
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John Wengraf
Mr. Louis Horvat
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Gage Clarke
Jonathan Griggs
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Tom McKee
Dave Carlin
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Sydney Smith
Judge Frisbee

Reviews

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John Chard
7 | Nov 04, 2013
Sinner or Sinned Against? Valerie is directed by Gerd Oswald and written by Leonard Heiderman and Emmett Murphy. It stars Sterling Hayden, Anita Ekberg and Anthony Steel. Music is by Albert Glasser and cinematography by Ernest Laszlo. John Garth (Hayden) is arrested and put on trial for the wounding of his wife Valerie (Ekberg) and murder of her parents. The trial hinges on three testimonies, each telling in flashback what actually unfolded to lead up to the bloodshed. But who is telling the truth? Set in the West, a murder mystery with a noirish edge, with crisp black and white photography keeping things in the ream of sombre, Valerie is a mixed bag. Yet it works as entertainment, the screenplay has some surprises in store, where it’s not afraid to paint a world of wanton desires, seedy suspicions, violent mistreatment and possible war tainted masochistic tendencies. The court case at the centre of tale throws up the sometimes fragility of the law, with some biased spice and hurtful hearsay added into the mix, and it all builds nicely to a dramatically bleak finale. Hayden delivers one for his fans, all straight backed machismo and menacing drawl, and Ekberg scores well as a scenic beauty who deftly pulls of a dual portrayal that calls for seduction or victim credibility. Steel, Ekberg’s real life beau, is a bit lightweight but doesn’t harm the drama, while there’s not much airy landscapes to enjoy (filmed on location at Iverson ranch in Chatsworth). Still, this is very much one for fans of the stars to seek out, whilst noir and Western fans will find pleasures too. 7/10