The Seventh Victim (1943) Queer Film (C)

Woman in fur coat, black and white.

DIRECTOR: MARK ROBSON

The Seventh Victim (1943) is an uneven, plot‑heavy, yet blessedly brief noir‑horror hybrid about a missing woman, a Satanic cult, and the ache of repressed identity. More overtly than in Cat People, gay screenwriter DeWitt Bodeen threads a queer subtext through the film—subtle but unmistakable—rooted in themes of isolation, coded desire, and existential despair.
Produced by Val Lewton for RKO, with shadow‑soaked cinematography by Nicholas Musuraca and a score by Roy Webb, the film marked the screen debut of Hunter and the directorial debut of Mark Robson.
The film’s offscreen history is as haunted as its narrative. Isabell Jewell died by suicide in 1972, while Jean Brooks and Tom Conway both struggled with alcohol abuse disorder; their careers cut short, they both died young. The melancholy that clings to The Seventh Victim feels, in retrospect, almost prophetic.
CINEMATOGRAPHY
Nicholas Musuraca
RKO

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https://thebrownees.net/85-queer-films-made-under-the-hays-code-1934-1968/
https://thebrownees.net/85-queer-films-from-the-new-hollywood-1968-1980/
https://thebrownees.net/the-great-cinematographers-of-hollywoods-golden-age/
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