-
All our servers are currently overloaded. Please try again later or get our premium subscription.Get PremiumRefresh pageWe are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our servers. We hope to have this resolved soon. This issue doesn't affect premium users.Get PremiumWatch on MixDrop/MyStream
Gilda (1946)
TrailerA small-time gambler hired to work in a Buenos Aires casino learns that his ex-lover is married to his employer.Actors: Rita Hayworth, Glenn Ford, George Macready, Joseph Calleia, Steven Geray, Joe Sawyer, Gerald Mohr, Mark Roberts, Ludwig Donath, Donald Douglas, Robert Board, ...»Director: Charles VidorCountry: United StatesDuration: 110 minQuality: HDRelease: 1946IMDb: 7.60 CommentsSort By- Newest
- Oldest
-
Actors of "Gilda (1946)"
-
Characters of "Gilda (1946)"
Gilda Mundson FarrellPlayed by: Rita HayworthJohnny FarrellPlayed by: Glenn FordBallin MundsonPlayed by: George Macready -
Directors of "Gilda (1946)"
-
Creators of "Gilda (1946)"
-
Critic Reviews of "Gilda (1946)"
Time OutJune 24, 2006One of the great films noirs, softened just a little by the moralising censorship strictures of the time. See it.
Seanax.comJanuary 13, 2017Rita Hayworth's entrance is pure Hollywood starcraft: a perfectly lit close-up as she whips her head into frame, her hair lashing back and revealing her bright face and wide, mischievous grin.
CineVueJune 27, 2016While Gilda's ending perhaps edges towards easy sentimentality, its story is one of emotional complexity, variant readings, and problematic eroticism.
Scene-Stealers.comMay 31, 2016The limitations of the Hays code forced writers and directors to get creative, and so much of what's really happening in Gilda is buried beneath the surface.
ReelTalk Movie ReviewsFebruary 08, 2016'Gilda' is memorable for the minutes of one dubbed song, one dance. But, ah! that one sexually confident shimmy is enough.
Under the RadarJanuary 23, 2016A career-defining performance from the legendary Rita Hayworth.
Daily Telegraph (UK)July 21, 2011Examples of film noir don't come much headier or more perverse than Charles Vidor's sultry little number...
-
Gallery of "Gilda (1946)"