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Deep Valley (1947)
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Overview
Calificación de los usuarios:
Release Date:
30 julio 1947 (USA) másPlot:
Uneducated and poor, Libby lives a sheltered life in a broken down shack with her unloving parents.... más | add synopsisPlot Keywords:
Man Hunt
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Fugitive
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Love
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Stuttering
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Based On Novel
Comentarios de los usuarios:
Lupino Showcase másCast
(Complete credited cast)| Ida Lupino | ... | Libby Saul | |
| Dane Clark | ... | Barry Burnette | |
| Wayne Morris | ... | Jeff Barker | |
| Fay Bainter | ... | Ellie Saul | |
| Henry Hull | ... | Cliff Saul | |
| Willard Robertson | ... | Sheriff Akers |
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Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsDuración:
104 minPaís:
USAIdioma:
EnglishColor:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 másSonido:
Mono (RCA Sound System)Filming Locations:
Barlett's Lake, Big Bear Valley, San Bernardino National Forest, California, USA másMOVIEmeter: 
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IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
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IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
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IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
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IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
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IMDb Calificación de los usuarios:
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Related Links
| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| IMDb Drama section | IMDb USA section | Add this title to MyMovies |








A down-trodden girl, a mutt dog, and a criminal fugitive on the run. Sounds a lot like 1941's High Sierra, even down to lead actress Ida Lupino. But it doesn't matter that these elements got recycled, because Deep Valley is a really watchable 90 minutes of Hollywood melodrama. Sure, it's hokey at times, especially the weepy ending that's squeezed for all its worth. But the movie is also a testimonial to the demandingly high standards of Hollywood studio production-- scope out the great farm house that almost looks like Katrina hit it, and the road project that looks so real, I expect it was. There's also the exquisite b&w photography from cameraman Ted Mc Cord, along with expert direction from studio ace Jean Negulesco. But most of all, it's the absolutely luminous performance from Lupino in the central role. Was there anyone ever better at playing soulful parts. Here, her stuttering, long-suffering farm girl whose only joy is her dog and the great outdoors, is enough to move the Rock of Gibraltar, and is surely Oscar-worthy. Speaking of the outdoors, it's also a measure of the film's underlying romanticism that the lovers seek refuge in the liberating openness of nature, and away from the blessings of civilization. For each has been brutalized by societal forces larger than themselves. Dane Clark is very good too, even if he never got past second fiddle to John Garfield-- then too, his strictly blue-collar personality was a poor fit for the upwardly mobile 1950's, and by that white-collar decade, he was gone. Anyhow, this super-slick film again demonstrates how wonderfully vital B-pictures of the studio era could be, and is well worth a look see.