Lady in a Cage is a 1964 American psychological thriller film directed by Walter Grauman, written and produced by Luther Davis, and released by Paramount Pictures. It stars Olivia de Havilland, and features James Caan in his first substantial film role.
Lady in a Cage | |
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1964 Theatrical poster | |
Directed by | Walter Grauman |
Produced by | Luther Davis |
Written by | Luther Davis |
Starring | Olivia de Havilland James Caan |
Music by | Paul Glass |
Cinematography | Lee Garmes |
Edited by | Leon Barsha |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 94 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $1,650,000 (US/ Canada) |
Screenplay
When an electrical power failure occurs, Mrs. Hilyard (Olivia de Havilland), a wealthy widow recuperating from a broken hip, becomes trapped between floors in the cage-like elevator she has installed in her mansion. With her son Malcolm (William Swan) away for a summer weekend, she relies on the elevator's emergency alarm to attract attention, but the only response comes from an alcoholic derelict, George (Jeff Corey), who enters the home, ignores her pleas and steals some small items.
The wino sells the stolen goods to a fence, then visits his prostitute friend, Sade (Ann Sothern), and tells her of the treasure trove he has stumbled upon. The expensive goods George fences attract the attention of three young hoodlums, Randall (James Caan), Elaine (Jennifer Billingsley) and Essie (Rafael Campos). The trio follows George and Sade back to the Hilyard home, where they conduct an orgy of violence, killing George the wino and locking Sade in a closet.
Randall then pulls himself up to the elevator and taunts Mrs. Hilyard by suggesting that her son Malcolm might be gay. Randall then shows her a letter that Malcolm left on her nightstand that morning, in which Malcolm threatens suicide because of her domineering manner. Shocked by the revelation, Mrs. Hilyard faints. After she regains consciousness, she struggles with Randall, escapes the elevator, and crawls out of the house, begging for help from passersby who fail to notice her. Randall follows and, as he is attempting to drag her back inside, Mrs. Hilyard stabs him in the eyes with a pair of shivs she secretly made from parts of the elevator, but he is dragged inside by his accomplices who soon abandon him and attempt to leave with the stolen goods. As Mrs. Hilyard crawls back outside, the now-blind Randall stumbles into the street and is run over by a passing automobile and killed instantly. Police arrive seconds later in response to the auto accident. Mrs. Hillyard is then, finally, able to report the violence to the police. The surviving intruders are arrested, and an ambulance crew comforts Mrs. Hilyard. Electrical power to her home is restored moments later.
- Olivia de Havilland as Mrs. Cornelia Hilyard
- James Caan as Randall Simpson O'Connell
- Jennifer Billingsley as Elaine
- Jeff Corey as George L. Brady Jr. aka Repent
- Ann Sothern as Sade
- Rafael Campos as Essie
- William Swan as Malcolm Hilyard
- Charles Seel as Mr. Paul (Junkyard Proprietor)
- Scatman Crothers as Junkyard Proprietor's Assistant
- Richard Kiel as Pawn shop strongman (uncredited)
- Ron Nyman as Neighbor (uncredited)
The film was based on an original idea by Luther Davis. He was working on a play about the effect of a power outage on the inhabitants of a house in oil country in the Midwest; it turned into a battle for survival. Davis then felt he could shift the action from a house to an elevator "since like so many New Yorkers I have a sense of claustrophobia in these little automatic elevators."
Davis later said he was also inspired by the New York blackout of 17 August 1959. He knew a lady who was stuck in a private elevator on the Upper East side; she called for help and was heard by two men who raped her. Other influences were the cases of Olga Romero and Kitty Genovese.
During his research, Davis learned that all elevators in New York have to be equipped with a phone, which would have ruined the story, so the film is set in an unnamed city.
The film was announced in August 1962 with Ralph Nelson to direct and Robert Webber attached as star. Joan Crawford and Elizabeth Montgomery were being sought for the female lead. Rosalind Russell was offered the part but turned it down. In December 1962 Olivia de Havilland was announced as star. Her fee was $300,000.
By February 1963 experienced TV director Walter Grauman signed to make his feature debut a director.
Filming took place in February 1963 at Paramount Studios. It took 14 days and de Havilland called the experience "wonderful" praising the talent of James Caan.
Bosley Crowther wrote a special column in the New York Times criticising the film, calling it "reprehensible" which led to a press controversy.
"The picture should be burned," wrote Hedda Hopper. "Why did Olivia do it?"
The film was profitable for Paramount.
- List of films featuring home invasions