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  1. Nov 2, 2019 · The Seventh Victim is a very bleak noir film. It’s not a lush, nuanced classic, nor is it a dose of cheap exploitation. The movie started out as an A-list Val Lewton production. Val insisted that his film-editor friend Mark Robson make his debut in the director’s chair for the film, which RKO Radio Pictures was not happy about.

  2. Satanists over the city. The Leopard Man sense of society breakdown reworked into a large urban nightmare of pure desolation. Kim Hunter is told in the opening scene she shouldn't fear and go live life and The Seventh Victim then procceds in illustrate how that is a bad idea. 165 likes. Review by SilentDawn ★★★★. 80.

  3. A woman in search of her missing sister uncovers a Satanic cult in New York's Greenwich Village and finds that they could have something to do with her sibling's random disappearance. Mark Robson. Director. Charles O'Neal. Writer. DeWitt Bodeen. Writer. Written by Steve on July 1, 2016.

  4. Oct 19, 2021 · My own favorite among Lewton’s films is “The Seventh Victim” (possibly tied with “The Body Snatcher,” Karloff superfan that I am), which transforms from the story of an innocent young woman searching for her missing sister into a tale of Satanic terror, and ends on a note of such alarming bleakness that I’m honestly surprised RKO ...

  5. Oct 11, 2020 · Title: The Seventh Victim Summary: A woman in search of her missing sister uncovers a Satanic cult in New York's Greenwich Village, and finds that they may have something to do with her sibling's random disappearance. Directed by: Mark Robson Actors: Kim Hunter, Tom Conway, Jean Brooks Production Company: RKO Radio Pictures

    • 71 min
    • 15.5K
    • derecho-noir
  6. Critics reviews. A woman in search of her missing sister uncovers a Satanic cult in New York’s Greenwich Village, and finds that they may have something to do with her sibling’s random disappearance.

  7. The Seventh Victim is a 1943 American horror film noir directed by Mark Robson and starring Tom Conway, Jean Brooks, Isabel Jewell, Kim Hunter, and Hugh Beaumont. Written by DeWitt Bodeen and Charles O'Neal, and produced by Val Lewton for RKO Radio Pictures, the film focuses on a young woman who stumbles on an underground cult of devil ...

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