Gilda

Removing a glove has never been so sexy.

Ballin Mundson: Gilda, are you decent?
Gilda: Me? [long pause] Sure. I'm decent.

Gilda is a 1946 Film Noir about the epynomous Femme Fatale, a nightclub singer named Gilda, starring Rita Hayworth, Glenn Ford and George Macready. The film is notable for its excellent cinematography, music and particularly Hayworth's stunningly sexy performance.

The story takes place in Argentina where a dice gambler called Johnny Farrell ends up becoming the right-hand man of Ballin Mundson, the owner of an illegal casino, who is constantly under the watchful eye of local authorities. The situation becomes more complicated when Johnny meets Ballin's wife, the nightclub singer Gilda, who was once his lover.

Struggling between his loyalty to Ballin and his hatred for Gilda, Johnny grows increasingly conflicted, which isn't helped when on the night he kisses Gilda, the event is witnessed by Ballin who flees only to seemingly plummet to his death in an exploding airplane. Saddened by his friend's demise, Johnny begins controlling Gilda's goings even more rigorously while the local authorities question him about details of certain cartel plans which Ballin has presumably been involved with.

Despite all of this, Johnny can't forget what he once felt for Gilda, but he can't be sure if Gilda shares his feelings. To make things worse, a shadow of the past still looms over them...

The movie was named to the National Film Registry in 2013.


Tropes used in Gilda include:
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