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DramaMystery

Psyche 59

- The screen prowls the lonely place where lust hides!

An industrialist's wife tries to remember the shocking sight that made her blind.

Release Date : 1964-04-29

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Columbia PicturesTroy-Schenck Productions

Production Country : United Kingdom

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Curd Jürgens

Character Name : Eric Crawford

Original Name : Curd Jürgens

Gender : Male

Patricia Neal

Character Name : Alison Crawford

Original Name : Patricia Neal

Gender : Female

Samantha Eggar

Character Name : Robin

Original Name : Samantha Eggar

Gender : Female

Ian Bannen

Character Name : Paul

Original Name : Ian Bannen

Gender : Male

Beatrix Lehmann

Character Name : Mrs. Crawford

Original Name : Beatrix Lehmann

Gender : Female

Elspeth March

Character Name : Mme. Valadier

Original Name : Elspeth March

Gender : Female

Sandra Leo

Character Name : Susan

Original Name : Sandra Leo

Gender : Male

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

Freudian Frolics. Psyche 59 is directed by Alexander Singer and adapted to screenplay by Julian Zimet from the novel written by Francoise des Ligneris. It stars Patricia Neal, Curd Jurgens, Samantha Eggar, Ian Bannen and Beatrix Lehmann. Music is by Kenneth V. Jones and cinematography by Walter Lassally. Blind Alison Crawford (Neal) lives with her husband Eric (Jurgens) and finds the equilibrium of life upset when her young sister Robin (Eggar) comes to stay. It seems there are secrets to will out, both with Robin and the matter of how Alison came to be blind. A strange, almost hypnotic type of movie, Psyche 59 aims to be a Freudian thriller but just misses the mark of being great. The set up is intriguing, the twists risqué and the photography suitably moody. Neal gives a fine performance as the afflicted Alison, both physically and emotionally, Eggar is super sultry and raises the temperatures considerably, while both Bannen and Jurgens are fine considering the former is under written and the latter gets a character arc that’s a bit of a stretch. Unfortunately the pay off is hopelessly weak, the whole build up holds the attention, you sense we are heading for great dramatic denouement, but sadly that’s not the case and it leaves a disappointing taste in the mouth. 6/10