Outrage (1950 film)

Outrage
Directed by Ida Lupino
James Anderson (assistant)
Produced by Collier Young
Malvin Wald
Written by Ida Lupino
Malvin Wald
Collier Young
Starring Mala Powers
Tod Andrews
Robert Clarke
Music by John Franco (Didn't You Know)
Paul Sawtell
Cinematography Louis Clyde Stoumen
Archie Stout
Edited by Harvey Manger
Production
company
The Filmakers
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release dates
  • September 27, 1950 (1950-09-27) (US)[1]
Running time
75 minutes
Country  United States
Language English

Outrage is a 1950 black-and-white B-movie starring Mala Powers. It was directed by Ida Lupino. Lupino also wrote the film, along with the producers Malvin Wald and her then-husband Collier Young.

Outrage was both controversial and remarkable for being only the second post-Production Code Hollywood film to deal with the issue of rape—after Johnny Belinda (1948), which earned the actress who portrayed the victim, Jane Wyman, the Best Actress Academy Award.

Cast

Plot

A young woman is the victim of a criminal sexual assault. Traumatized and desperate, as she is not in the position to live normally again, she leaves with a bus to Los Angeles. On the way in the radio of a restaurant she hears about her disappearance and the police searching for her. She is terrified and leaves the bus, wandering around. When she finally has an ankle problem she breaks down. A young Reverend Doctor finds her and brings her to the house of a couple. She stays with them, working in the orange boxing factory chain. A few months she goes on quite well, although her traumata's to men coming too close is still active. So when she goes to a farmhouse ball a young men comes really too close and Anne (Mala Powers) sees in him her criminal attacker from back home. She screams and hits him with a metal tool. In the trial she comes out well as the young man retires the claim. BUt she has to go back home, and can't stay with Rev Doctor Ferguson.(Tod Andrews).

== References ==
  1. "Outrage: Detail View". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 18, 2014.

External links

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