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  1. Double Indemnity

    Double Indemnity

    1944 · Crime drama · 1h 46m

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  1. Awards

    • Academy Award Music (Music Score of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture) 1945 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Cinematography (Black-and-White) 1945 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Writing (Screenplay) 1945 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Best Motion Picture 1945 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Sound Recording 1945 · Nominated

    • Academy Award Directing 1945 · Nominated

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  2. Double Indemnity. Jump to. 2 wins & 9 nominations. Academy Awards, USA. 1945 Nominee Oscar. Best Picture. 1945 Nominee Oscar. Best Actress in a Leading Role. Barbara Stanwyck. 1945 Nominee Oscar. Best Director. Billy Wilder. 1945 Nominee Oscar. Best Writing, Screenplay. Raymond Chandler. Billy Wilder. 1945 Nominee Oscar.

  3. At the 17th Academy Awards on March 15, 1945, Double Indemnity was nominated for seven Oscars but did not win any.

  4. The 17th Academy Awards | 1945. Honoring movies released in 1944, Grauman's Chinese Theatre ... Double Indemnity. Actress in a Supporting Role. Winner. Ethel Barrymore.

    • Double Indemnity Awards1
    • Double Indemnity Awards2
    • Double Indemnity Awards3
    • Double Indemnity Awards4
    • Double Indemnity Awards5
  5. Double Indemnity. A Los Angeles insurance representative lets an alluring housewife seduce him into a scheme of insurance fraud and murder that arouses the suspicion of his colleague, an insurance investigator.

    • Billy Wilder
    • 2 min
  6. Feb 27, 2013 · The various talking heads in Shadows of Suspense all agree that the Academy’s recognition of Double Indemnity (seven Oscar nominations), along with its box office success, helped ignite the film noir boom that took place between the mid-1940s and the advent of CinemaScope ten years later.

  7. Awards and festivals for the film: 'Double Indemnity (1944)' Try 7 Days Free; Now Showing; ... Double Indemnity Awards & Festivals. Academy Awards. 1945 | Nominee ...

  8. Thriller Unsuspecting Mr. Dietrichson becomes increasingly accident prone after his icily calculating wife (Barbara Stanwyck) encourages him to sign a double indemnity policy proposed by a smooth-talking insurance agent (Fred MacMurray).

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