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Dead Ringer

Catalog Number
11812
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Dead Ringer (1964)

Additional Information

Additional Information
Mirror, mirror, on the wall, now who's the fairest twin of all?

What Bette Davis does to Bette Davis and to Karl Malden and Peter Lawford in DEAD RINGER is just what "Baby Jane" people will adore!

They were twins who once looked exactly alike until . . .

Though he's most famous for his portrayal of Victor Laszlo in 1942's Casablanca, actor Paul Henreid took a few turns behind the camera as evidenced by this 1964 thriller starring Bette Davis as twins Margaret DeLorca and Edith Phillips. After landing the beau they both sought after by falsely claiming she was pregnant, Margaret lives a life of luxury as the wife of a wealthy man. Now, 20 years later, a broke and lonely Edith has returned for revenge. After killing the recently widowed Margaret, Edith assumes her identity with plans of living the life she feels she's deserved all along. But in order to pull it off, she'll have to play the role of Margaret connivingly enough to fool her servants as well as a local playboy and the police. Dead Ringer was remade in 19

Dead Ringer, also known as Who is Buried in my Grave? is a 1964 thriller film made by Warner Bros. It was directed by Paul Henreid from a screenplay by Oscar Millard and Albert Beich from the story La Otra by Rian James. The music score was by André Previn and the cinematography by Ernest Haller. The film stars Bette Davis, Karl Malden and Peter Lawford with Philip Carey, Jean Hagen, George Macready, Estelle Winwood, George Chandler and Cyril Delevanti.

The film marks the second time Davis played twin sisters, the first being in the 1946 film A Stolen Life. For this reason, Dead Ringer is sometimes mistakenly listed as a remake of A Stolen Life.

At the funeral of her husband Frank, wealthy widow Margaret DeLorca (Bette Davis), meets up with her twin sister, downcast Edith Phillips (also played by Davis), from whom she has been estranged for 18 years. The two return to DeLorca's opulent mansion, where the two argue about their falling out over Margaret's marriage to DeLorca, who originally courted Edith but had an affair with Margaret. Margaret had told Frank she was pregnant and forced him into marriage. However, Edith finds out from Margaret's chauffeur (George Chandler) that Margaret was never pregnant, and becomes resentful. While Margaret now enjoys a life of ease and wealth, Edith is struggling financially. Edith's business, a cocktail lounge, is losing money and she is threatened with eviction for not paying her bills.

Later that day, Edith tells her sister to come to the cocktail lounge. When Margaret arrives, she admits there never really was a pregnancy, and Edith shoots her in the head. She then assumes Margaret's identity and makes it appear that Edith has committed suicide. While Edith looks like Margaret, the staff notice differences, such as the house's Great Dane hating Margaret but taking to Edith immediately, as well as Edith's smoking habit. Because of her failure to imitate to her sister's signature, Edith purposely burns her hand on a fire poker to cover her tracks.

Meanwhile, Edith's boyfriend, police sergeant Jim Hobbson (Karl Malden) visits "Margaret" several times, asking questions about the death of Edith, whom he loved. Edith's scheme runs into trouble when Margaret's lover Tony (Peter Lawford) sees through her disguise. Tony blackmails her for killing her sister, and receives very expensive jewelry as payment. Edith then learns that Margaret and Tony conspired to murder Frank by poisoning him with arsenic. Tony and Edith quarrel; when he threatens her, Margaret's Great Dane attacks and kills him.

Jim Hobbson has become suspicious about DeLorca's death and leads an investigation in which the police eventually exhume Frank's body and find traces of arsenic. When Jim arrives to arrest her, Edith confesses her true identity. Jim is repulsed and does not believe her, telling her "Edith would never hurt a fly."

Edith (as Margaret) is tried, found guilty of murder, and sentenced to death. As she is taken away from the courthouse, a troubled Jim approaches her and asks if she really is Edith. She reminds him that "Edith would never hurt a fly" and departs.

Release Date: February 19, 1964 from Warner Bros.

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