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Noir Alley screens Stolen Face, spotlights Lizabeth Scott

moviesJun 28, 202629368

TCM's Noir Alley screened Stolen Face (1952), the Terence Fisher film starring Lizabeth Scott and Paul Henreid, prompting viewers to discuss Scott's double role and the movie's doppelgänger plot. Posts called out an unscrupulous doctor, plastic surgery central to the story, and a Pygmalion-like makeover dynamic that leaves identity and desire tangled. Several first-time viewers said they had no memory of the film, while others praised Scott's husky voice and noted a childhood laryngitis as its cause. Commenters criticized the film's British accents, called the soundtrack overbearing, and flagged a train scene as a noir checklist item. Reactions also said the picture felt short and the ending overly convenient, and one viewer framed it as an interesting follow-up to Contempt (1963). Eddie Muller was named as part of the Noir Alley watching experience and participants enjoyed spotting costume touches such as an Edith Head gown during the screening.