Double Indemnity - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Double Indemnity"
Double Indemnity (1944)
Timing: 1:47 (107 min)
Double Indemnity - TMDB rating
8.093/10
1999
Double Indemnity - Kinopoisk rating
7.93/10
14884
Double Indemnity - IMDB rating
8.3/10
181000

Actors and characters

Photo Fred MacMurray #92151Photo Fred MacMurray #92152Photo Fred MacMurray #92153Photo Fred MacMurray #92154

Fred MacMurray

Fred MacMurray
Character Walter Neff
Photo Barbara Stanwyck #51984Photo Barbara Stanwyck #51985Photo Barbara Stanwyck #51986Photo Barbara Stanwyck #51987

Barbara Stanwyck

Barbara Stanwyck
Character Phyllis Dietrichson
Photo Edward G. Robinson #41828Photo Edward G. Robinson #41829Photo Edward G. Robinson #41830Photo Edward G. Robinson #41831

Edward G. Robinson

Edward G. Robinson
Character Barton Keyes
Photo Porter Hall #44674Photo Porter Hall #44675Photo Porter Hall #44676

Porter Hall

Porter Hall
Character Mr. Jackson
Photo Jean Heather #111167Photo Jean Heather #111168

Jean Heather

Jean Heather
Character Lola Dietrichson
Photo Tom Powers #111169Photo Tom Powers #111170
Tom Powers
Character Mr. Dietrichson
Photo Byron Barr #111171
Byron Barr
Character Nino Zachetti
Photo Richard Gaines #111165Photo Richard Gaines #111166

Richard Gaines

Richard Gaines
Character Edward S. Norton Jr.
Photo Fortunio Bonanova #2406
Fortunio Bonanova
Character Sam Garlopis
John Philliber
Character Joe Pete
Photo John Berry #111172

John Berry

John Berry
Character Bit Part (uncredited)
Photo Raymond Chandler #110214Photo Raymond Chandler #110215Photo Raymond Chandler #110216

Raymond Chandler

Raymond Chandler
Character Man Reading Book (uncredited)
Photo Edmund Cobb #2433
Edmund Cobb
Character Train Conductor (uncredited)
Photo Kernan Cripps #54344Photo Kernan Cripps #54345

Kernan Cripps

Kernan Cripps
Character Conductor (uncredited)
Photo Bess Flowers #58646Photo Bess Flowers #58647

Bess Flowers

Bess Flowers
Character Norton's Secretary (uncredited)
Photo Eddie Hall #111173

Eddie Hall

Eddie Hall
Character Man in Drug Store (uncredited)
Photo Teala Loring #111174
Teala Loring
Character Pacific All-Risk Telephone Operator (uncredited)
Photo Sam McDaniel #111175

Sam McDaniel

Sam McDaniel
Character Charlie the Garage Attendant (uncredited)

Billy Mitchell

Billy Mitchell
Character Pullman Porter (uncredited)
Photo Clarence Muse #111176

Clarence Muse

Clarence Muse
Character Man (uncredited)
Photo Douglas Spencer #111177
Douglas Spencer
Character Lou Schwartz (uncredited)
Harold Garrison
Character Redcap (uncredited)
James Adamson
Character Pullman Porter (uncredited)

Betty Farrington

Betty Farrington
Character Dietrichsons' Maid Nettie (uncredited)
Photo George Magrill #90380Photo George Magrill #90381
George Magrill
Character Man (uncredited)
Photo Constance Purdy #111178
Constance Purdy
Character Shopper in Market (uncredited)

Dick Rush

Dick Rush
Character Pullman Conductor (uncredited)
Photo Floyd Shackelford #111179
Floyd Shackelford
Character Pullman Porter (uncredited)
Oscar Smith
Character Pullman Porter (uncredited)
Photo Miriam Nelson #75528

Miriam Nelson

Miriam Nelson
Character Keyes' Secretary (uncredited)
Photo Mona Freeman #276488Photo Mona Freeman #276489Photo Mona Freeman #276490Photo Mona Freeman #276491

Mona Freeman

Mona Freeman
Character Secretary (uncredited)
Photo Florence Wix #79423
Florence Wix
Character Train Passenger at Station (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • Production period: September 27 – November 24, 1943.
  • The protagonist was originally named Walter Ness in the script. However, Wilder learned in time that a real insurance agent named Walter Ness lived in Beverly Hills. To avoid accusations of libel, the character's name was changed to Walter Neff.
  • Billy Wilder had very little time to find someone for the lead role. But one after another, many Hollywood actors (such as George Raft) turned him down. Only Fred MacMurray agreed – partly because he had long wanted to get rid of the tiresome image of a comedic performer.
  • Of all the actors Wilder approached, only Dick Powell wanted to play the role of Walter. But he was under contract with another company, which refused to release him. An angered Powell broke his contract, but it was too late – the role had already gone to MacMurray.
  • For the role of Phyllis, the director wanted only Barbara Stanwyck. However, she strongly doubted whether she should play such a ruthless villainess. Wilder then asked her: “Are you a mouse or an actress?”
  • Billy Wilder made Barbara Stanwyck wear a white wig throughout the entire film. Later, he decided that the wig looked bad and unnatural, but it was too late to redo anything. And in interviews, Wilder stated that he deliberately made the wig look bad on Stanwyck. Producer Buddy J. DeSilva, hinting at the wig, quipped: “We hired Barbara Stanwyck and got George Washington.”
  • In the scene where Neff kisses Phyllis, a wedding ring can be noticed on his finger. The fact is that MacMurray was married and had long been accustomed to not paying attention to the ring.
  • Wilder wrote the screenplay together with the famous detective author Raymond Chandler. They had a hard time getting along with each other, often argued, and once Chandler slammed the door and left, stating that he would only return when his demands were met. His demands were met, and he returned.
  • Wilder invited Chandler to co-write, as he was impressed by his novel "The Big Sleep." He was disappointed when it turned out that Chandler was withdrawn, perpetually drunk, smoked like a locomotive, unable to come up with snappy dialogue, and, moreover, as Wilder claimed, kept trying to sneak his sexual frustration into the script. This was Chandler’s first attempt to work for the cinema.
  • Mr. Dietrichson, Phyllis’s husband, works for an oil company. This was a fabrication by Chandler, who himself worked as an "oilman" for a time.
  • George Raft was willing to play the role of Neff only on one condition – if it suddenly turned out in the finale that his character was an FBI agent who was trapping Phyllis Dietrichson. The demand was absurd; Wilder had to reject Raft’s candidacy.
  • The film is based on the novel of the same name by James M. Cain. Cain’s work is based on a real crime from 1927 that shook all of America.
  • In 1992, the Library of Congress included "Double Indemnity" in the National Film Registry.
  • The first script drafts appeared in 1935, but were blocked by censors of the Hays Code, who deemed the story immoral.
  • One shot captures screenwriter Raymond Chandler, who accidentally wandered into the camera's frame.
  • After the murder, Walter and Phyllis struggle to start the car for a long time. Wilder added this scene after his own car failed to start all day.
  • In one scene, Neff and Keyes walk into the foyer and continue their conversation in the hallway. Neff holds open a door slightly ajar, behind which Phyllis is hiding at that moment. However, according to all fire safety regulations, in such a building, the door cannot open outwards – only inwards.
  • Initially, Billy Wilder planned to end the film with a scene where Keyes watches Neff being sent to the gas chamber.
  • Another potential finale could have been a scene where Case desperately watches as Neff is arrested by the police. However, Wilder decided that Case's desperation could only be explained if Neff died in his arms.
  • In the 3rd episode of the 5th season of the series "House of Cards," the main characters Francis and Claire Underwood watch this film on election day.
  • Billy Wilder had very little time to find an actor for the lead role. But one after another, many Hollywood actors (such as George Raft) refused him. Only Fred MacMurray agreed – partly because he had long wanted to get rid of the tiresome comedic role he was known for.
  • Of all the actors Wilder approached, only Dick Powell wanted to play the role of Walter. But he was under contract with another company, which refused to release him. An enraged Powell broke his contract, but it was too late – the role had already gone to MacMurray.
  • In the scene where Neff kisses Phyllis, a wedding ring can be noticed on his finger. The fact is that MacMurray was married and had long been accustomed to not paying attention to the ring.
  • Billy Wilder had very little time to find an actor for the lead role. But one after another, many Hollywood actors (such as George Raft) refused him. Only Fred MacMurray agreed – partly because he had long wanted to shed the tiresome image of a comedic performer.
  • Of all the actors Wilder approached, only Dick Powell wanted to play the role of Walter. But he was under contract with another company, which refused to release him. An enraged Powell broke his contract, but it was too late – the role had already gone to MacMurray.
  • For the role of Phyllis, the director wanted only Barbara Stanwyck. However, she seriously doubted whether she should play such a ruthless vixen. Then Wilder asked her: “Are you a mouse or an actress?”
  • Billy Wilder made Barbara Stanwyck wear a white wig throughout the film. Later, he decided that the wig looked bad, unnatural, but it was too late to redo anything. And in interviews, Wilder stated that he deliberately made the wig look bad on Stanwyck. Producer Buddy J. DeSilva, alluding to the wig, quipped: “We hired Barbara Stanwyck and got George Washington.”
  • Wilder invited Chandler as a co-author, as he was impressed by his novel 'The Big Sleep'. He was disappointed to find that Chandler was withdrawn, perpetually drunk, smoked like a locomotive, incapable of coming up with snappy dialogue and, moreover, as Wilder claimed, constantly tried to inject his sexual frustration into the script. This was Chandler's first attempt to work for the cinema.
  • Mr. Dietrichson, Phyllis's husband, works in an oil company. This was Chandler's invention, as he himself worked as an 'oilman' for a while.
  • George Raft was willing to play the role of Neff only on one condition – if it turned out in the finale that his character was an FBI agent trapping Phyllis Dietrichson. The demand was absurd; Wilder had to abandon Raft's candidacy.
  • In the third episode of the fifth season of the series 'House of Cards', the main characters, Francis and Claire Underwood, watch this film on election day.
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