Three Secrets (1950)
7/10
The Aftermath
31 August 2021
A plane crashes on a mountain peak. Everyone is dead, except possibly the five-year-old adopted son of two of the passengers. As reporters gather to cover the story of the men preparing to climb to mountain to rescue the child, the movie concentrates on three women present: tough-as-nails reporter Patricia Neal, married, childless housewife Eleanor Parker, and Ruth Roman, convicted of slaying the father of her unborn child. Each had given a child up for adoption on the same day to the same adoption agency, the day the child was adopted.

The situation is remarkably similar to Wilder's mordant ACE IN THE HOLE, but Robert Wise's movie is more about the story of the three women and their suffering. The performances are prime work; even Leif Erickson as Miss Parker's lawyer husband recites his few lines in stalwart tones. 1920s Sennett clown Billy Bevan gets three lines, and other actors like Frank Lovejoy and Larry Keating give good performances, but the emphasis is on the three women: tamped-down Miss Neal, fragile Miss Parker and almost hysterical Miss Roman. I'm not terribly fond of these stories, but this is a well told one.
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