Screaming Mimi (1958) Poster

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7/10
Late noir oddly recalls haunting cheapies of a decade earlier
bmacv30 April 2002
Somehow surmounting a creaky script rooted in some crackpot psychiatry, Screaming Mimi creates a somnambulistic, doom-laden mood that keeps you watching, bemused. And that's not easily explained.

The director, Gerd Oswald, was one of the lesser expatriates from Germany, a pedestrian workman who the year before helmed Crime of Passion, a jejune noir starring Barbara Stanwyck, Sterling Hayden and Raymond Burr; it's hard to extinguish the sizzle in that kind of cast, but Oswald did a pretty fair job of it.

In Screaming Mimi, he was saddled with the sort of rounded-up cast that doesn't incite box office stampedes. Anita Ekberg, - the Swedish bombshell with the storied bosom - proves oddly affecting in the numbed-out role she's called on to play. And society stripper Gypsy Rose Lee supplies a welcome bit of sass as proprietress of a nightclub called El Madhouse. But the male leads emerged from the La Brea tar pits of Hollywood anonymity. Philip Carey passes as sort of a poor man's Gary Merrill (that is to say, absolutely penniless), while Harry Townes, an even more faceless actor, makes up the roster.

The plot? Ekberg, an exotic `dancer' who writhes about suggestively in an act with bondage overtones, is visiting her sculptor-stepbrother on the California coast when she's almost knifed by an escapee from a nearby asylum, whom the brother promptly shoots dead. In consequence, Ekberg winds up in the selfsame asylum where her smitten shrink (Townes) arranges her release and, in a development reminiscent of The Blue Angel or Sunset Boulevard, leaves his post to manage her career (as `Yolanda Lang').

Then one night she's stabbed (again), but her vicious great dane wards off the attacker. Carey, a columnist whose curiously broad beat includes night clubs and crime in the night, grows intrigued, and stumbles onto the fact that both Ekberg and an earlier victim possessed strange statuettes called Screaming Mimis....

It's a jumble, all right, but it manages to hold some interest. A large part of the credit must, by default, fall to top-notch cinematographer Burnett Guffey, by far the most talented factor in the movie. (He films one scene in the light from a flashing neon sign, alternating between a two-shot and daringly long intervals of pitch blackness.) The movie shares a restive, oneiric quality with certain low-budget noirs from a decade earlier, that again compelled more attention than they deserved. Go figure.
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7/10
A Wonderfully Off-Beat Movie That Now Enjoys Cult Status
seymourblack-112 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Based on a novel by Fredric Brown, this psychological thriller tells the story of a young woman whose life goes out of control after she becomes the victim of a terrifying attack by a knife-wielding madman. Her initial trauma is exacerbated by an unorthodox psychiatrist whose treatment not only causes her condition to deteriorate into a psychosis but also leads her into seriously aberrant behaviour that's linked to a statuette that she associates with her life-changing ordeal. The statuette in question is known as "Screaming Mimi".

One day, Virginia Wilson (Anita Ekberg), a New Orleans dancer who's vacationing at her stepbrother's home at Laguna Beach, California, runs straight from the beach to an outdoor shower cubicle where, almost immediately, she gets attacked by an escapee from a local sanitarium who, after killing her dog "Rusty", advances towards her brandishing a large knife. On hearing her screams, Virginia's stepbrother, Charlie Weston (Romney Brent), produces his rifle and shoots and kills her assailant.

Virginia is so traumatized that Charlie takes her to the nearby "Highland Sanitarium" where she's put into the care of a psychiatrist called Dr Greenwood (Harry Townes) who soon becomes infatuated by her and also becomes more and more controlling as her treatment progresses. After about six months, recognising that she's becoming increasingly anxious to be discharged, Greenwood gives up his job and in an effort to ensure that they both leave their past lives behind them, takes her to a city where, acting as her manager, he secures employment for her as an exotic dancer at the "El Madhouse" nightclub. By this stage, Greenwood and Virginia are generally known as Bill Green and Yolanda Lange.

Yolanda's tremendously popular in her new role and Bill Sweeney (Philip Carey), a newspaper columnist who reports on the city's nightlife for "The Daily Times", is introduced to her by the club's proprietor Joann Masters (Gypsy Rose Lee). Sweeney, who was captivated by Yolanda's dancing, finds her irresistible and also becomes intrigued by a statuette that he notices in her dressing room. Her insanely jealous manager quickly intervenes, however, to bring her meeting with this handsome man to an abrupt end.

Later that night, Yolanda again gets assaulted by another knife-wielding attacker and remembering a similar assault in which a woman called Lola Lake was murdered, Sweeney searches through some of his newspaper's records and finds a photograph of Ms Lake's body and notices that lying beside it is a statuette that's identical to the one he'd seen in Yolanda's dressing room. Intrigued, he then decides to investigate further to solve the mystery surrounding the attacks and to determine what significance, if any, the statuettes had to the crimes.

In order to be believable as someone who's so incredibly attractive to so many people, it was vital to the success of this movie that whoever was chosen to play Virginia should have exactly the right qualities and it's hard to imagine that anyone could have fitted the bill any better than Anita Ekberg whose looks were absolutely stunning and who also had the ability to affect a king of vagueness which conveyed just how detached her character was from reality.

The other outstanding feature of this movie is its cinematography which is strikingly good throughout. In scenes involving Virginia and Dr Greenwood, the contrast between her innocence and his dubious motives is emphasised by him often being enveloped in shadow whilst she's seen in the light and there's also a knockout scene in which a neon light outside an upstairs room intermittently lights two small areas (one in which the couple are lying down together and the other in which Yolanda's dog "Devil" is lying peacefully).

"Screaming Mimi" is a bizarre movie that features a whole assortment of off-centre characters and a main protagonist whose mental state is extremely unstable. Virginia, who ironically exchanges one madhouse for another, is at her most composed when she regularly mesmerizes the patrons of the "El Madhouse" with her dance routines that obviously appeal strongly to everyone in an audience that comprises people of differing ages and sexual orientations. The intensity of the voyeurism that's seen whenever she performs her bondage-themed dances is extraordinary and the club's singing bartender and dancing waiters are absurdly funny. "Screaming Mimi" is wonderfully off-beat and full of eccentricities and these qualities, no doubt, contributed strongly to the cult status that this movie now enjoys.
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7/10
One of the 1950s most twisted noir films!
Dewey196020 September 2008
One of the 1950s strangest noir films, Gerd Oswald's sensational and twisted 1958 psycho- shocker SCREAMING MIMI was based on a pulp novel by the great Fredric Brown. This is one film that devotees of the truly bizarre cannot afford to miss.

Alcoholic newspaper columnist Bill Sweeney (Philip Carey) becomes entwined in a string of grisly murders that seem to revolve around exotic stripper Yolanda Lange (Anita Ekberg!!). Seems that Yolanda killed a man a couple of years earlier who tried to attack her while she showered. Traumatized by this event, she spends some time in a sanitarium and, upon her release, seeks out the help of psychiatrist Dr. Greenwood (the ever creepy Harry Townes) for some quick and dirty therapy. This "poor man's Svengali" falls in love with her (natch!) and soon insinuates himself into her life, even going so far as managing her career by getting her a job at the El Madhouse, a seedy nightclub run by "Gypsy" Mapes ("Gypsy" Rose Lee!). But before long a series of brutal murders begin to occur and poor Yolanda appears to be the prime suspect. (I won't bother to go into the reasons why; it would probably take longer than the running time of the film.)

Anyone looking for or concerned with conventional logic might likely be put off by this wildly lurid and threadbare melodrama as nothing quite makes sense in this demented Fulleresque nether world. But those hungry for the wonderful cheap thrills only to be found in nightmare B movies of the fringe variety will probably come away from the table more than satisfied. Artfully photographed by Burnett Guffey, SCREAMING MIMI probably looks a lot better than it deserves to, and Gerd Oswald's eccentric direction doesn't hurt either. Oswald, as many might recall, later went on to produce and direct many of the more stellar episodes of TV's "Outer Limits" in the early 60s. SCREAMING MIMI provided him with the most stunningly perfect testing ground imaginable.

Of note to jazz fans: the incredible Red Norvo Trio is featured as the house band at the El Madhouse.
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A "missing link"
lazarillo7 June 2004
This film could be considered one of the missing links between American film noir and the suspense and horror films that would become so popular in continental Europe over the next two decades (i.e. the German "krimis", the Italian "gialli", the horror films of Bava and Argento). It's technically a late period film noir, but rather than having the traditional pessimistic tone and hard-boiled, voice-over narrative, it is completely off-the-wall and chock-full of the suggested depravity and lurid psycho-babble that would characterize the later European films. Interestingly, it was apparently based on the same Fredric Brown novel as Dario Argento's "Bird with Crystal Plummage" (although at least one of these movie was obviously only loosely based on the source novel because they don't really resemble each other too much). It also features European sex symbol Anita Ekberg as a voluptuous stripper (who looks like she could eat Edwige Fenech or one of the other later European sex kittens). Rare for the time, it even has a psycho-killer, called "The Ripper", who leaves the epononymous "screaming mimi" dolls next to his/her butchered female victims. Not a great movie perhaps, but I really dug it.
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6/10
Devil or Angel
sol121812 September 2004
****SPOILERS***** Somewhat confusing psychological thriller set in and around Laguna Beach California. With the voluptuous and beautiful Anita Ekberg as the haunted and troubled Virginia Wilson AKA Yolanda the exotic dancer. Virgina was committed to the Highland Sanitarium due to the shock and trauma that she suffered after she was attacked in a Laguna Beach out-door shower by and escaped knife-wielding maniac who was shot and killed by her step-brother Charlie, Romney Brent.

Virginia's psychiatrist at the sanitarium Dr. Greenwood, Harry Townes, realized that she was hopelessly insane but at the same time fell madly in love with her. Dr. Greenwood did his best to get Virginia out into the free world by faking a death certificate with her name on it. Outside and with a new name "Yolanda" and working at the El Madhouse nightclub run by Joann " Gypsy", Gypsy Rose Lee, she was the biggest and hottest hit in town. Doing a dance number with a skimpy outfit on that was nothing more then a display of her God-given natural attributes filled the place to capacity every night that Yolanda was on the stage.

One night going home Yolanda was attacked by a slasher who cut her in the side but was chased away by her pet dog "Devil" a giant Great Dame. It turned that the slasher who attacked Yolanda struck a month before killing a co-worker of Yolanda's at the El Madhouse nightclub dancer Lola Lane. Also found at the crime scene where Yolanda was slashed was a statue of a woman called "The Screaming Mimi".

Dr. Greenwood now calling himself Mr.Green is very concerned about Yolanda and feels that she may become a mental case again and need to be institutionalized. Even though she was not supposed to be out of the Highland Sanitarium in the first place. Mr. Green sees what a mistake he made to get Yolanda out and as much as he tries to get her help on his own and as much he cares and loves her in the end it would cost Mr. Green his life for that fatal misjudgment on his part.

News reporter Bill Sweeney, Philip Carey, who's put on the story of the "Night Slasher" also falls in love with Yolanda but soon sees that there's something wrong with her and that statue "The Screaming Mimi" was also found at the site of the murder of dancer Lola Lane. Swenney tracks down what that statue is all about it leads him straight to Laguna Beach. It's there where he finds out that it was non other then Yolanda who posed for the sculpture who made "The Screaming Mimi" and he was Yolanda's step-brother Charlie.

Pre Psycho-like thriller that has it's good and bad points with the best thing going for it is it's star Anita Ekberg. Miss.Ekberg with her goddess-like body and eye popping measurements or vital statistics of 39-22-36 made it impossible to keep your eyes off the screen even for a second whenever she was on it. It's really hard to judge Anita Ekberg's acting in the movie since her acting is the last thing your interested in.

With reporter Sweeney finding the out secret of "The Screaming Mimi" it's only a matter of time for the truth to come out about Yolanda as well as her lover and the former Dr. Greenwood AKA Mr. Green. It's that truth about Yolanda that will give the movie it's surprising and shocking ending.

The movie was a bit contrived but the acting was more the adequate with excellent black and white film-Noir photography. But by far it was Anita Ekberg that really made "The Screaming Mimi" well worth your time, as well as your libido, watching the film.
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7/10
An Above-Average Film Noir
zardoz-136 January 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Scrambling out of the surf on a beach, Virginia Wilson (Swedish sexpot Anita Ekberg of "War and Peace") climbs into an outdoor shower stall to rinse off the salt water as "Brass Legend" director Gerd Oswald's film noir thriller "Screaming Mini" unfolds. Suddenly, a maniac with a knife confronts our damsel after killing her dog. Before this lunatic from the nearby Highland Sanitarium can carve her up, Virginia's art sculptor stepbrother, Charlie Weston (Romney Brent of "The Fugitive") drops him with a single shot from his rifle. During this harrowing ordeal, our busty, blonde babe has been hysterically screaming her head off. The trauma she endures during this attack lands Virginia in the same loony bin which housed her assailant. Psychiatrist Dr. Greenwood (Harry Townes of "The Brothers Karamazov") supervises Virginia's recovery with a Svengali-like influence and ends up falling in love with her. Gradually, Virginia yearns for a normal life. Eventually, Greenwood spirits her away, and Virginia takes a job as an exotic dancer at a nightclub called El Madhouse. Appropriately enough, the notorious Gypsy Rose Lee of "Belle of the Yukon" plays Joann 'Gypsy' Masters, the dame who runs the joint. She christens Virginia as Yolanda Lange. Changing his name to Mr. Green, the psychiatrist serves as her manager. Everything appears to be going smoothly until our pneumatic bombshell is attacked while out walking her Great Dane named Devil on a dark, desolate rainswept street. An annoying newspaper reporter, Bill Sweeney (Phillip Carey of "The Springfield Rifle"), takes a shine to Virginia. Naturally, Mr. Green isn't happy about the relationship that develops between Virginia and the news hound. Literally, he is 'green' with jealousy.

Any film historian worth their salt will point out Oswald's film, released by Columbia Pictures in 1958, deserves a modicum of recognition since the attempted shower stabbing scene came two years before Alfred Hitchcock set Anthony Perkins on Janet Leigh in a hotel shower and sliced her to ribbons in one of the most chilling scenes in cinema. Mind you, Anita survives her assailant while Leigh wasn't so fortunate. Oswald stages the attack on Virginia with little of the scrupulous detail Hitchcock lavished on "Psycho." Comparably, "Screaming Mimi qualifies as a more conventional, B-movie suspense thriller that generates fewer shocking revelations than "Psycho." "Magnificent Obsession" scenarist Robert Blees adapted Fredric Brown's 1949 novel, which later inspired Dario Argento's "The Bird with the Crystal Plumage." The dialogue is brisk, and the relationship between Virginia and her enamored psychiatrist is bizarre. Harry Townes' performance is first-rate as a doctor who is wrapped tighter than a mummy. Philip Carey plays Sweeney with bluster. You may dismiss Ekberg's performance as superficial, but she performs a provocative dance number in bondage as she gyrates, wiggles, and squirms her curvaceous body. Ekberg makes it look sexy without sinking into sleaze. The Production Code notes must have been interesting!

Does anybody remember Gerd Oswald's films? During the 1950s, he helmed several entertaining films with second-string stars, before turning his directorial talents exclusively to prime-time television. Of course, "Screaming Mimi" is no "Psycho," more like a grade B exercise in spartan noir. Certainly, Townes' obsessive psychiatrist makes him a poster boy for film noir. "From Here to Eternity" lenser Burnett Guffey, who later photographed "Bonnie & Clyde," lights this black & white, psychological thriller with noir in mind. Look at the tell-tale lighting in the scenes between Ekberg and Townes. This cold relationship quivers with the extravagant irrational devotion that is a characteristic of film noir. Above all, "Screaming Mimi" has enough good moments, a sturdy cast, and solid writing. Like all noir movies, a statuette which addresses underlying fetishistic themes of the narrative is present. When Sweeney asks shop dealer Raoul Reynarde (Vaughn Taylor of "The Professionals") about the sculpture of a naked woman in turmoil that recurs throughout the film, Raoul notes the sculpture was originally marketed as simply SM1, and then somebody decided the acronym meant Screaming Mimi. When Sweeney interviews Virginia's half-brother, the sculptor tells the reporter that he created the sculpture based on the sight of his nude stepsister cringing in horror as she was attacked in the shower. There is some subtle lesbianism oozing in the scenes between Joanne and her delectable female roommate who pedals cigarettes at the El Madhouse. Altogether, while no masterpiece, "Screaming Mimi" shouldn't be forgotten.
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5/10
Anita Ekberg out of her depth as a femme fatale...
Doylenf31 May 2008
ANITA EKBERG almost sleepwalks through her role of a disturbed woman who somehow finds herself in the midst of murder and mayhem in SCREAMING MIMI ('58), the title referring to a statue that is some sort of fetish that turns up at every killing. Miss Ekberg is also a statue here, towering above most of the cast except for PHILIP CAREY, the handsome male lead who shares one thing in common with Anita--he's a lifeless presence.

It's hard to get involved with these characters, especially since the story itself is a murky enough affair with some psycho-babble underpinnings in the convoluted storyline. On the plus side, the B&W photography of rainswept streets and dark shadows is impressive and the production aspects aren't too shabby.

GYPSY ROSE LEE manages to be lively enough as a nightclub proprietress, but her shimmy to "Put the Blame On Mame" is a pretty sorry attempt at the song made famous by Rita Hayworth.

The story starts out on a promising note, but quickly becomes an inept psychological thriller under Gerd Oswald's routine direction and moves toward a conclusion that lacks whatever punch it might have had because much of the disclosed information was already revealed.

This is an easily forgotten item that capitalizes solely on ANITA EKBERG's physical charms which are an eyeful for male fans but her acting is sub-par for a story that requires much more from an actress than mere physical presence and an overly generous bosom. She was much more fortunate a few years later to find herself in "La Dolce Vita". As for PHILIP CAREY, his stone-faced approach to acting doesn't help matters here.

Summing up: Hopelessly confusing and dull, when it should have been tight and suspenseful.
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6/10
Awesome!
BandSAboutMovies19 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Gerd Oswald made the noir films A Kiss Before Dying and Crime of Passion, making him the perfect director for this film. Of course, he'd also direct Agent for H.A.R.M., but let's stick with his mystery work for now.

Virginia Wilson (Anita Ekberg, two years before La Dolce Vita and as stunning as perhaps any human being has ever or will ever be) is just trying to take a shower at the beach when an escaped mental patient stabs her dog and attacks her. Luckily, her stepbrother Charlie blows him away.

Now she's the one inside the sanitarium, but not for long, as Dr. Greenwood convinces her to fall in love with him, fake her death and become an exotic dancer at Gypsy Rose Lee's El Madhouse nightclub. It'd be paradise if it wasn't for that serial killer following her.

Most of the music in this movie is recycled from On the Waterfront. The book that inspired it, written by Fredric Brown (who also wrote the original Star Trek episode "Arena"), was the inspiration for one of the best known giallo films of all time, The Bird With the Crystal Plumage. The script was written by Rober Blees, who also was the scribe for Frogs, Dr. Phibes Rises Again, Whoever Slew Auntie Roo? and High School Confidential!

Red Norvo and his Red Norvo Trio, which is actually a quartet and Charlie Mingus played bass in the group before he became a composer, shows up as well. You can also see Red back up Dean Martin for "Ain't That a Kick In the Head?" in the original Ocean's 11. The jazz vibraphonist - along with his wife Mildred Bailey - were known as Mr. and Mrs. Swing.

This movie was exactly what I needed to watch. It's quick, has some great musical numbers and Eckberg was already carrying herself like a star.
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5/10
Miss Sweden and Scooby Doo.
hitchcockthelegend29 November 2014
Screaming Mimi is directed by Gerd Oswald and adapted to screenplay by Robert Bless from the novel written by Fredric Brown. It stars Anita Ekberg, Phillip Carey, Gypsy Rose Lee and Harry Townes. Music is by Mischa Bakaleinikoff and cinematography by Burnett Guffey.

A woman becomes mentally unbalanced after a failed knife attack by a psychotic and has to spend time in a sanatorium. Whilst there she becomes the object of her psychiatrist obsessions.

Great Dame With A Great Dane!

A curio psychological film noir with horror leanings, Screaming Mimi is just a tad too nutty for its own good. It's also weighed down by a non performance from Ekberg, who you find is purely in the piece to tantalise via her voluptuous body, and also by a colourless performance by Carey. Yet it's a fascinating movie, a sort of car crash piece of cinema that you can't take your eyes away from!

Psycho Schematic.

It's all very lurid, sexy and bonkers, the sort of picture where alcoholic accompaniments would most likely improve the viewing experience tenfold. The characters inhabiting this world are a strange bunch, which is fun, whilst when you got entertainment establishments called Gay "N" Frisky and El Madhouse, you just know we are trawling through an off kilter city of sin and carnal desires. Unfortunately Oswald and Bless seem confused about what to do with all the provocative possibilities, rendering the narrative as confused and at times lifeless.

Rose Lee is great though as she flits between manipulator and sultry proprietor, as is Townes, who underpins the whiff of mania running through the pics veins. Guffey and Bakaleinikoff offer up solid tech work, and the jazzy strains provided by Red Norvo are most welcome. It really should have been a great movie though, such promise in story and set-ups, but sadly it ends up as a faux Freudian potboiler. 5/10
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7/10
Scared me as a child
wmav0120 November 2005
I remember this movie only because my sister and I were the original latch key kids. My older sister and I used to watch TV from the old channel 5 ( pre- Fox network ) TV out of Washington DC. They ran great late afternoon movies and reruns I watched for years before cable. Anyone who grew up in the channel 5 area during the late 60's knows hows what I mean. The Untouchables, Highway Patrol, The Big Valley, Dear Lord where are these great reruns today?? But I digress.. This movie scared the living crap out of me, and I remember my sister teasing me for months. I remember so little about this movie, but it scared me bad enough I've never forgotten the title. Netflix doesn't have this..anyone know where to get a copy of it? I want to face my fear!!
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5/10
What happened??
adriangr8 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"The Screaming Mimi" is based on a detective novel published around 1950 in which beautiful young women are being murdered. In the book, a hardboiled reporter named Sweeney becomes obsessed with solving the case, but the only leads he has are that one of the victims has survived, and that a macabre statuette of a screaming woman seems to link all the victims together. This is the same plot as the movie follows, but what boggles my mind is how badly the movie screenplay handles the events depicted in the book. The book only reveals it's secret at the very end. The movie, however, reverses the order in which the truth is uncovered, thereby destroying the entire twist.

*Spoilers follow from here!*

The movie opens with Anita Ekberg as Virginia, having a mental breakdown after being menaced by an escaped asylum escapee with a knife. The movie then flashes forwards to Ekberg again, who, after years of therapy, has changed her name to Yolanda, and is now trying to start a new life as a stripper (a sure fire way of having stable mental health!). She is then attacked again, apparently by the maniac who has already stabbed and killed several other women, and this is when the reporter Sweeney starts to take an interest in the case. Sweeney follows up clues, investigates who else had a copy of the statuette (it is a mass produced item), and generally starts to fall in love with Yolanda, who occasionally suffers night terrors and moments of memory loss. Eventually Sweeney manages to work out who the murderer is, but by that time, you may have nodded off.

I can't quite put my finger on why, but watching the movie is a really boring experience. None of the acting is any good. The two leads deliver really drab performances. There are many boring scenes set in the nightclub where Yolanda does her act. But the worst part is the way the movie messes up the plot of the book, which I will now explain:

*Last chance to avoid spoilers*

In the novel, we don't know about Virginia or her trauma. Sweeney only knows that there have been knife murders, and that the screaming statuette is somehow linked. Only at the very end of the book do we discover that the statuette depicts Virginia, and this is the first time we learn about the original attack and resulting trauma, and that Virginia and Yolanda are the same person. Yolanda is psychotic and it is in fact she who has been performing the murders, but outwardly she has been exhibiting a calm and controlled persona. That's the book. What the movie does, is blow this revelation by showing the original trauma at the start, showing that the statue is based on Virginia's terror, and showing that Yolanda is suffering from memory loss and nightmares, and shows that the sight of the statuette triggers her. What a disaster. There's no real attempt to divert suspicion away from her, so what we end up is a character study of Ekberg's madness, rather than the surprise explanation that didn't come to light until the final few pages of the book.

As a movie, watched with no prior knowledge of the book, it still doesn't work because everything that happens is so unconvincing. A sad waste of time.
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8/10
Anita Ekberg will be missed.
HumanoidOfFlesh13 January 2015
Swedish sex symbol of late 50's and 60's Anita Ekberg sadly died on 11th January 2015,so to honour her jaw-dropping physical beauty I decided to watch "Screaming Mimi".Frederic Brown 1949 novel has been adapted into a movie twice:Gerd Oswald's "Screaming Mimi" in 1958 and more loosely Dario Argento's first giallo "The Bird with the Crystal Plumage" in 1970.I must say that dancing scenes of Anita Ekberg in "Screaming Mimi" are very sensual.The beginning of the film probably inspired infamous shower scene in "Psycho"(1960).The film is well-shot and genuinely entertaining with some gleefully perverse overtones.If you like low-budget noir cinema,Italian gialli or krimi movies it's a must-see.8 Screaming Mimis out of 10.
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7/10
Screaming Mimi
JohnHowardReid20 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Despite its unpromising title and the somewhat jaded presence of Gypsy Rose Lee (who theatrically tends to over-act and who, alas, is so obviously now well past her prime), this little thriller engages the attention, thanks to its engrossing script, some fascinating performances (however did director Gerd Oswald get such a skillful study out of Anita Ekberg?), atmospheric direction and moody photography.

Even the music score skilfully creates just the right mood of horror and suspense - although I'll admit that the night club numbers are somewhat of a let-down, both musically and choreographically. But maybe they were supposed to be just that - namely second rate?

All in all, director Oswald has created an unusually absorbing programmer out of very limited resources.
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4/10
Inferior B film
mls418227 June 2021
There are only two VERY BIG reasons to watch this film.

The same two reasons that made Monroe, Mansfield, Mamie Van Doren and Diana Dors envious of Anita Ekberg.

Gypsey Rose Lee, with her trademark lisp and ill fitting false teeth, butchers "Put the Blame on Mame."
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Read the book first! (if you can find it)
drspecter26 January 2003
When I first read Fredric Brown's 1948 novel, I was mesmerized. I have read it a few times since and have no intention of stopping-- it's really one of those forgotten classics of the hardboiled genre. Also being a Fellini fan, I have long been curious to see the film, Anita Ekberg's first starring role, (La Dolce Vita was two years later.) I know that Fellini was a pretty big fan of Brown-- at one point he planned to adapt his sci-fi novel What Mad Universe-- so I'm pretty sure he discovered Ekberg in this film.

Though I think the above reviewer was kind of harsh on Oswald and the cast-- especially Harry Townes, who understates the creepy obsessiveness of Doc Greene very well-- the fact is the movie falls short of the book by a considerable margin. I would put most of the blame on screenwriter Robert Blees, who had previously scripted the giant monster movie The Black Scorpion. But for all its faults (unfortunately, the ending is one of the things they botched) the film has its charms. Not only the cinematography but the music performed by Red Norvo captures the mood of the novel very well. And there are scenes that they actually get right. So I guess it's a love/hate thing for me.

Before I go, one last sidelight. Gypsy Rose Lee, who's featured in Mimi, was an exotic dancer in the forties and wrote one novel, The G-String Murders-- also about a killer who stalks strippers-- which was adapted as Lady of Burlesque, with Barbara Stanwyck.
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6/10
Low-budget thriller
blanche-211 June 2008
1958's "Screaming Mimi" is based on a novel by Frederic Brown and stars Anita Ekberg, Philip Carey, Harry Townes and Gypsy Rose Lee. Ekberg is Virginia, aka Yolanda, a drop-dead gorgeous exotic dancer who is institutionalized after nearly being murdered at her stepbrother's house. The kindly psychiatrist (Townes) trying to help her takes the transference a bit too far - he fakes her death and takes off with her. Virginia changes her name to Yolanda and gets a job as an exotic dancer in a club run by Joann Masters (Lee). A reporter named Sweeney (Philip Carey) gets onto a story about a slasher and crosses paths with Virginia/Yolanda and, like every other man, falls for her. In Yolanda's dressing room, Sweeney finds a statue - the same statue was found next to the last murder victim, also an exotic dancer.

This is an interesting story for sure with sexual undertones (or shall I say overtones) galore - Ekberg's chained slave dance, the lesbian relationship Joann has with another dancer, the statue fetish, and Ekberg herself, sex on heels. Her first film was "Mississippi Gambler," in which she was uncredited; not surprisingly, she got the attention of the film's star, Tyrone Power, and had an affair with him that lasted into the mid-'50s. She even got to meet his relatives in Cincinnati - and he was still married at the time. Was she good in this? I have no idea; she's so stunning, it doesn't matter. Philip Carey, known today for his portrayal of Asa Buchanan in "One Life to Live" was a hunk in the '50s who was relegated to B films costarring many beautiful women - he's easy on the eyes too and does a decent job as Sweeney. Harry Townes had a huge career in television and underplays the role of Greene, the psychiatrist. He does a good job - if the character appeared sinister, it wouldn't have been believable.

A story like this could easily have been given a big budget and big director and been much more effective. As it is, it keeps one's attention with its twists and turns and one of the great va-va-vooms, Ekberg.
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6/10
An exotic dancer is involved in a murder mystery.
michaelRokeefe7 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
The voluptuous Anita Ekberg plays Virginia Wilson, an exotic dancer that comes in from a swim in the ocean and witnesses a man get shot while trying to stab her with a knife as she showers. She is placed in a sanitarium, where her psychiatrist, Dr. Greenwood(Harry Townes),is mesmerized by her charms and falls in love with her. Greenwood wants to take over her life; they both leave the hospital and the doctor decides to change both of their names. Virginia becomes Yolanda and is very animate about going back to her job dancing at a nightclub owned by a character played by the legendary stripper Gypsy Rose Lee. The beautiful dancer becomes a person of interest in a series of murders that involves a small sculpture created by her step-brother. A police captain(Alan Gifford)and a newspaper columnist(Philip Carey)work steadfast to clear up the mystery. Some of the sets are rather nice, but pleasing on the eyes is the provocative dancing of Ekberg. Lee's routine seems pretty worn out. I really like the sequence of walking on an empty street in the night. The title SCREAMING MIMI is based on the name of the mysterious sculpture.
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3/10
A whole lotta psychological mumbo-jumbo.
planktonrules3 June 2021
"Screaming Mimi" is an inept movie in most every way. It's cheap nonsense...from start to finish.

When the story begins, some maniac attacks Virginia (Anita Ekberg) and tries to kill her with a knife. She's saved by her step-brother who shoots the attacker. But now Virginia's lost her mind...and is sent away to a sanitarium. Her therapist there is a nut-case himself, a Svengali-like guy (Harry Townes) who is a a whole lotta french fries short of a Happy Meal. The 'therapist' tells her step-brother that Virginia has died and now Virginia and this looney relocate and rename themselves....and Virginia is now Yolanda, an exotic dancer! But there's much more...and it's mostly nonsense.

The script looks like it was made up by a couple very talented chimps. It just doesn't make much sense and the story is convoluted and bizarre to say the least. Add to that Gypsy Rose Lee playing one of the major players in the film and there certainly is NOTHING like it...thank goodness!

In addition to a dopey script, we are to believe that the Swedish bombshell, Ekberg, playing the step-sister of a guy who isn't the least bit Swedish and a totally different accent is just weird. We also are to believe that Yolanda's dancing is very sexy....which, amazingly, it isn't. Despite Ekberg being gorgeous, the dance is more ridiculous than seductive. Overall, a cheap and dumb little film.
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7/10
Put The Blame On The Censors
boblipton12 March 2024
When exotic dancer Anita Ekberg is attacked when outside of Gypsy Rose Lee's night club, and another girl is killed, crime reporter Phillip Carey finds a connection in a statue called "Screaming Mimi". But what does it mean?

It's based on the novel by Fredric Brown, (1906-1972) remembered for funny science fiction, grungy mysteries, and super-short stories ("The last man on Earth sat alone in a room. There was a knock on the door."). The grunge is present in this movie, although it is coded. The brownstone buildings in the neighborhoods that Miss Ekberg lives in may be pristine, the streets spotless, the club Gypsy Rose Lee runs may be shiny, but compare them with their real-life equivalents in the era, and contemporary audiences would have known it. It may have its moments, but Miss Lee singing "Put the Blame on Mame" is not one of them. Still, you have to admire any mystery with a character named McGuffin.
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1/10
Sleazy but stupid and plain dull
preppy-331 May 2008
It starts off with Anita Ekberg being attacked by an escaped lunatic. She survives but is institutionalized. A Dr. Greene (Harry Townes) becomes obsessed with her. Next thing we know she's playing a "stripper" called Yolanda. Crime reporter Bill Sweeney (Philip Carey) falls for her and Greene doesn't like that. Also there's a murderer around and it seems Yolanda may be his next victim...If that sounds disjointed you should see the movie! Hopelessly confusing and extremely dull piece of work. Ekberg is certainly gorgeous but no actress. Also her "stripping" has her not taking off anything! Then there's Gypsy Rose Lee as the owner of the "strip" club. At one point she gets on stage and sings (and "dances") to "Put the Blame on Mame"! Rita Hayworth has nothing to fear. There's also a hint of lesbianism (very daring for 1958) and a constantly barking dog named Devil! I'm probably making this sound more fun than it is. It's slow, confusing and dull with bad acting (except for Carey) and pointless musical numbers in the club to pad out the movie. This might be worth watching if you're an Ekberg fan or you want to see Gypsy Rose Lee--but it's rough going. A 1 all the way.
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6/10
A mediocre movie!
RodrigAndrisan5 June 2022
Not because of the actors, no. They all worked hard and seemed credible and convincing. Especially a very young and well-made Anita Ekberg, in a difficult role for any actress. It is mediocre because of the subject matter and the way it was made, that is, in the cliché way of most Hollywood productions from the '50s.
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4/10
Screaming Mimi - brief
user-142-63262529 November 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Despite mostly bad reviews, what the hey, I loaded this up. Early on, voluptuous Ekberg emerges from the surf and hurries to take a shower outside the shack. Nearby is a mental institution, along with a handy escapee clutching a big ole knife. Two screams later, she's in the nuthouse herself, traumatized outta her unnecessary mind. Inside, she falls under the analytical spell of a possessive psychiatrist. Next thing, they're both gone, and she's gyrating her assets, along with chains and ropes, as an exotic dancer.

Anyway, murder and attempted murder bolster this trashy Noir. Swear, I'm not making this up. Still undecided? The Red Norvo combo is the nightclub band, Gypsy Rose Lee is the owner. Oh yeah, Miss Ekberg has a vicious Great Dane watchdog, but anyone can get past him if they softly recite the Gettysburg Address.
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10/10
"Missing Link" found in an over-the-top Frederic Brown pulp
melvelvit-131 May 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Murder and madness hound an exotic dancer (Anita Ekberg), her dog Devil, and a macabre statuette she fetishizes...

I love this sordid little Columbia "B" which plays a key role in the evolution of the American Film Noir into the Italian Giallo cycle and helped (along with 1957's THE GIRL IN BLACK STOCKINGS) pave the way for Alfred Hitchcock's PSYCHO a few years later. The Hitchcock also has a surprise ending concerning the star and a shower stabbing isn't so new, after all. Like Gerd Oswald, Dario Argento used the same lurid Fredric Brown pulp novel as source for his THE BIRD WITH THE CRYSTAL PLUMAGE and was actually more faithful (in spirit) to the novel: MIMI grabs the viewer by the throat in the opening scene but the movie would have been more shocking if it hadn't been told in linear fashion. The fact Yolanda was attacked by a maniac years before was one of many surprises and revealed half-way through the novel (as it is in the Argento). Here's how Brown's novel opens:

"The protagonist of Brown's novel, William Sweeney, is also a writer, a newspaperman. Walking the streets of nighttime Chicago in the grip of an alcoholic binge, Sweeney sees an amazing thing. Trapped by a giant dog between the double glass doors of her apartment building, a beautiful woman writhes; she has been stabbed by an unknown assailant. She appears to be the fourth victim of a ripper (as Sweeney's paper has dubbed the killer), and she is the only one to have survived. Bewitched by the beautiful victim Yolanda Lang -a stripper who's act includes the dog, Devil -Sweeney begins his own investigation of the crimes. His first lead is a mass-market statuette of a terrified woman, the screaming mimi, sold by the first victim the day she was murdered... Argento changed many details in the process of turning "The Screaming Mimi" into The Bird With The Crystal Plumage, but the most important is this: flawed and weak though he may be, Brown's protagonist is afraid of the universe of madness glimpsed when he gets close to Yolanda Lang. Argento's is drawn to it like a moth to the flame. The American pulp novel "The Screaming Mimi" was passed along to Argento for an opinion by Bertolucci, who intended to buy the rights for himself. Captivated by the novel's central idea, Argento resolved to borrow it and spin off a new story. In fact, he borrowed quite a bit more..."

I saw SCREAMING MIMI as a kid on daytime TV and it reely scared the pants off me! I was very upset over the way Ekberg's dog got killed and found the crime scene photos of the other murdered strippers frightening. There was a lot of "adult content" that didn't get by my young mind, either: fetishes, an intense relationship between Yolanda and her dog ...along with lesbianism and dope! When Phil Carey tries to barge in on nightclub owner Gypsy Rose Lee and a young chick, their repartee ("Sorry, I didn't know it was tea for two") leaves no doubt that Gypsy is a dyke and marijuana, in the 50's, was called "tea". I love the "El Madhouse" nightclub -if the Red Norvo Trio's xylophone doesn't drive you nuts, nothing will and sex goddess Anita Ekberg's somnambulistic acting style perfectly suits a stripper with a couple of mental screws loose. Fetish-driven Yolanda Lang, writhing around in rags on ropes (in chains!), caters to the S&M in all of us and I wish there were more films like SCREAMING MIMI and THE GIRL IN BLACK STOCKINGS from the schizophrenic 1950's. I didn't have long to wait, tho: PSYCHO (and later the giallo) were just around the corner! In between were THE NAKED KISS, WHO KILLED TEDDY BEAR?, and...
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4/10
Not Film Noir
arfdawg-126 November 2019
Not a true film noir. More like a crime drama.

You sit more than half the movie to see Anita naked. She had one kick ash body back in the day. She finally does her strip -- a bondage scene that she's not all that good at. But ooo baby look at that cleavage. Unfortunately there's way more bad dancing than strip.

And WTF! Gyspy Rose Lee was like 45 in this film but looks 70.

It's very slow and hot so interesting. Ekberg was not such a good actress.
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Scintillating Anita
carolynpaetow28 June 2004
Bodacious, gloriously-maned Ekberg and her magnificent dog Devil (dubbed a great dame and a Great Dane)are the goodies in this fifties pop-psych piece with its is-she/isn't-she-crazy scenario. Looking like a gorgeous amazonian goddess (purportedly only 5'7" without heels), the mighty Ekberg makes all the human males in her orbit look mousy and malleable as she sashays from loony bin to gin den, her emotions and motivations as mysterious as the titular statuette around which it all revolves. The movie has an offbeat tone and texture and a tendency to unbalance the viewer with the unexpected:

asylum-escapee Ekberg doing her shackled-slave dance routine in El Madhouse nightclub; Gypsy Rose Lee putting the blame on Mame in an awkward, abortive fringe-dress shimmy; the famed stripster's shacked-up status with a cute little hipster. Fans of such censor-bound lesbian depictions should love this cinematic morsel, as will devotees of no-budget noir!
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