Rotten Tomatoes
Submit search Movies Tv shows RT App News Showtimes

Outrage

Play trailer Poster for Outrage 1950 1h 15m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
61% Tomatometer 23 Reviews 71% Popcornmeter 50+ Ratings
A California preacher (Tod Andrews) reaches out to a rape victim (Mala Powers) who has left her fiancé (Robert Clarke) and town.

Where to Watch

Outrage

Critics Reviews

View More
Marjory Adams Boston Globe 12/15/2020
The picture has a message of hope for such girls and mistreated women who feel themselves in an abyss of despair through no fault of their own. Go to Full Review
Helen Bower Detroit Free Press 12/15/2020
Producer Collier Young, Director Lupino and Malvin Wald wrote the screenplay. Everything has been done with their usual good taste, and freedom from sensationalism. Go to Full Review
Wanda Hale New York Daily News 12/15/2020
2.5/4
It's a grim story... but it carries a worthwhile message to girls who undergo such a terrifying and humiliating experience. It also deplores the unkind attitude that unfeeling people adopt toward victims of rape. Go to Full Review
Jane Corby Brooklyn Daily Eagle 12/15/2020
Miss Powers is touching as the girl, and her performance in this difficult portrayal marks her as an actress of considerable resource. Go to Full Review
Harry MacArthur Washington Star 12/15/2020
Ida Lupino, who directed Outrage for Producer Collier Young, has a great liking for the frank, blunt look at subjects which Hollywood has hitherto ignored. Go to Full Review
Liza Wilson Photoplay 12/15/2020
Since she has turned director-producer, Ida's aim has been to seek new themes for pictures and new faces. In this picture she has been far more successful with the latter. Go to Full Review
Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View More
nick s @Nick_S 03/05/2024 Some nice artistic flourishes from the director. She handles the subject matter with a deft hand, as does the lead actress. A couple of flat patches and a bit of expositional rambling, but not enough to lose focus. Overall a great movie. See more Matthew D @OceanSage 05/12/2023 Shockingly forward thinking and empathetic towards victims of sexual assault. Legendary lady director Ida Lupino's film noir drama Outrage (1950) feels bold for its era and still distinctly feminist. Lupino lets audiences understand how helpless and frightened a woman can feel when around men, especially when creepy guys will just not take no for an answer. I really cannot understate how progressive and sensitive Outrage still comes across. I do wish the ending had a more resolute and understanding conclusion rather than sending Ann home, but I guess that was the best anyone could think to finish Outrage on a slightly positive note. Writers Ida Lupino, Malvin Wald, and Collier Young write with a real understanding of the justified fears of sinister men's advances. Outrage feels especially critical of the so called nice guys that pretend at being genuine only to get close to unsuspecting girls. Mala Powers is phenomenal as the sympathetic heroine Ann Walton. Her terrified faces and eyes are heartbreaking. I really felt for her. Editor Harvey Manger keeps Outrage moving briskly with a tight 75 minute run-time that doesn't drag. All the cuts between mens' faces that Mala sees with fear are impressively spliced together. Even the slightest hand touch feels threatening. Cinematographer Archie Stout zooms into chilling close-up shots to show how each unwanted touch from a man is disgusting and frightening for a woman. Composer Paul Sawtell's sweeping orchestral film score is wonderful. It feels tense and suspenseful even in the brief encounters with men that scare Ann. Sound designers Clem Portman and John L. Cass makes men's catcalls and whistles chilling with subtle echos. Makeup artist Bill Phillips does really pretty facial makeup on Mala Powers. Hairstyling from Josephine Sweeney is really neat as she can do prim and proper or disheveled for Mala's hair depending on her mental status. In short, Outrage is a killer film noir picture from the masterful director Ida Lupino. It is her distinctly empathetic direction that lets Mala Powers shine as a sympathetic girl, now afraid of men. See more s r @ScottR 11/04/2020 A bit too melodramatic for me on such a tricky topic to handle. Saw it on TCM. See more 10/24/2020 Technically the film is not something really exceptional but it tackles the subject of rape in an incredible way, especially for the time it was realeased. See more 10/21/2020 Very disingenuous; there is no redemption for these people. See more 01/02/2014 female director ida lupino tackles rape way ahead of it's time and gr8 cast See more Read all reviews
Outrage

My Rating

Read More Read Less WRITE A REVIEW EDIT REVIEW POST RATING

Movie Info

Synopsis A California preacher (Tod Andrews) reaches out to a rape victim (Mala Powers) who has left her fiancé (Robert Clarke) and town.
Director
Ida Lupino
Producer
Collier Young
Screenwriter
Collier Young, Malvin Wald, Ida Lupino
Production Co
The Filmakers Group
Genre
Drama
Original Language
English
Runtime
1h 15m