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My Name Is Julia Ross

She went to sleep as a secretary ... and woke up a madman's "bride"!
1945 | 65m | English

(4003 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

Julia Ross secures employment with a wealthy widow and goes to live at her house. Two days later, she awakens in a different house in different clothes and with a new identity.
Release Date: Nov 08, 1945
Director: Joseph H. Lewis
Writer: Muriel Roy Bolton, Anthony Gilbert
Genres: Mystery, Thriller
Keywords cornwall, england, mental illness, scary house, identity crisis, cliffs, dominant mother, kidnapping, film noir, mother son relationship
Production Companies Columbia Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Nina Foch Julia Ross
May Whitty Mrs. Hughes
George Macready Ralph Hughes
Roland Varno Dennis Bruce
Anita Sharp-Bolster Sparkes
Doris Lloyd Mrs. Mackie
Queenie Leonard Alice (uncredited)
Joy Harington Bertha (uncredited)
Leonard Mudie Peters (uncredited)
Ottola Nesmith Mrs. Robinson (uncredited)
Milton Owen Policeman (uncredited)
Olaf Hytten The Reverend Lewis (uncredited)
Leyland Hodgson Policeman (uncredited)
Marilyn Johnson Nurse (uncredited)
Charles McNaughton Gatekeeper (uncredited)
Harry Hays Morgan Robinson (uncredited)
Reginald Sheffield McQuarrie (uncredited)
Evan Thomas Dr. Keller (uncredited)
Name Job
Jean Louis Costume Design
George Duning Additional Music
Friedrich Hollaender Additional Music
John Leipold Additional Music
Joseph H. Lewis Director
Muriel Roy Bolton Screenplay
Anthony Gilbert Novel
Burnett Guffey Director of Photography
Henry Batista Editor
Jerome Pycha Jr. Art Direction
Milton Stumph Set Decoration
Milton Feldman Assistant Director
Lambert E. Day Sound
Glenn Rominger Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Lawrence W. Butler Special Effects
Donald C. Glouner Matte Painter
Gert Andersen Second Assistant Camera
Ned Scott Still Photographer
Mischa Bakaleinikoff Music Director
Edwin Wetzel Scoring Mixer
Vera Mikol Researcher
Daniele Amfitheatrof Additional Music
Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco Additional Music
Ernst Toch Additional Music
Name Title
Wallace MacDonald Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 8 12 6
2024 5 10 15 5
2024 6 7 12 4
2024 7 10 17 5
2024 8 10 30 4
2024 9 7 11 4
2024 10 12 26 5
2024 11 9 17 5
2024 12 7 11 5
2025 1 7 13 4
2025 2 5 10 2
2025 3 3 9 1
2025 4 1 4 1
2025 5 2 5 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 2 0
2025 8 0 2 0
2025 9 0 2 0

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

We're doing everything in our power to make you well again. My Name Is Julia Ross is directed by Joseph H. Lewis and adapted to screenplay by Muriel Roy Bolton from The Woman in Red written by Anthony Gilbert. It stars Nina Foch, Dame Mary Witty, George Macready, Roland Varno, Anita Sharp-Bolste ... r and Doris Lloyd. Music is by Mischa Bakaleinikoff and cinematography by Burnett Guffey. Julia Ross (Foch) out of work and in debt arrears to her landlady, hastily accepts a in-house secretarial position to Mrs. Hughes (Whitty). Starting work in the Hughes house in London the first night, she wakes up two days later in a cliff-top mansion in Cornwall. She is told she has been away with mental health problems, her name is Marion Hughes and she is married to Ralph Hughes (Macready)... A very important film in the career of the great Joseph H. Lewis, My Name is Julia Ross would effectively put the director on the map, with noir fans subsequently rewarded with the likes of Gun Crazy and The Big Combo. Compact in running time (65 minutes) and budget, it's a film that showcases just what real good work could be achieved by a director and photographer noir team working under tight restrictions; classical noir production if you like. Story as it is is pretty straightforward and familiar, but atmosphere and visual smartness ensure this is no walk down retread lane. It falls into the Gothic noir spectrum of films, following in the traditions of Rebecca, Gaslight and Suspicion. In fact, it's also very much "old dark house" on staple terms, with eerie staircase, wood panelled rooms, secret passageways and even a black cat. While the setting, house on a seaside cliff where the mist rolls in at night, is splendidly moody. The characterisations (very well performed by the cast) are vivid and odd, with us clearly meant to note that Julia Ross is clearly the only normal being in the Hughes household! Best of the bunch is Macready's Ralph Hughes, the catalyst for all the things that are happening, he fondles his knives like a fetishist, a truly memorable noir antagonist. Ultimately it's what Lewis and Guffey bring to the fore that makes the film better than it is on the page. Expressionistic touches are here of course, but it's the skew-whiff camera placements and up close POV shots that bring the viewer into Julia's confused new world. Memorable scenes are frequent, be it a rain sodden street or Julia peering through the bars of her bedroom, there's visual treats aplenty here. The ending is all to quick and as is often the case in this type of narrative, implausibilities need to be ignored. But that is easy to do, because with atmosphere unbound and not a shot wasted, this is a safe recommendation to the Gothic noir faithful. 8/10

May 16, 2024