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Double indemnity

Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death--and then push him from train. Insurance inspector Edward G. Robinson becomes obsessed with the case. A film classic based on the James M. Cain suspense thriller.

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  • "Dvojno zavarovanje"
  • "Double indemnity"
  • "Pacto de sangre"@es
  • "Double Indemnity"
  • "Fiamma del peccato"@it
  • "Barbara Stanwyck"
  • "Doble indemnización"
  • "Three of a kind"
  • "Assurance sur la mort"
  • "Indemnity in Three of a Kind"
  • "DVDR 5008 Double indemnity"@en

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  • "When Walter Neff, a smooth-talking insurance salesman, calls to renew the Dietrichson family insurance, he falls for the beautiful wife Phyllis. Together, the two cook up a scheme to murder the husband for his life insurance money - which pays double in the event of unexpected death. But Neff's office smells a scam and sets about investigating."
  • "Un agente de seguros intenta estafar a su propia compañía, al ser seducido por una bella mujer."
  • "Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death--and then push him from train. Insurance inspector Edward G. Robinson becomes obsessed with the case. A film classic based on the James M. Cain suspense thriller."@en
  • "When Walter Neff, a smooth-talking insurance salesman, calls to renew the Dietrichson family insurance, he falls for the beautiful wife Phyllis. Together, the two cook up a scheme to murder the husband for his life insurance money - which pays double in the event of unexpected death. But Neff's office smells a scam and sets about investigating."@en
  • "Unsuspecting Mr. Dietrichson becomes increasingly accident prone after his icily calculating wife encourages him to sign a double-indemnity policy proposed by a smooth talking insurance agent. Against a backdrop of distinctly Californian settings, the partners in crime plan the perfect murder to collect on the insurance. Perfect until a claims manager gets a familiar feeling of foul play and pursues the matter relentlessly. Tension soars as the would-be lovers find themselves plotting against each other. Based on an actual case, this malevolent thriller was expertly directed by Billy Wilder and received six Academy Award nominations."@en
  • "Classic adaptation of James M. Cain's hardboiled noir novel by director Billy Wilder and writer Raymond Chandler. Insurance salesman Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) calls at the house of femme fatale Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck) in order to renew her husband's insurance policy. An immediate attraction sparks between the two, and gradually Phyllis seduces Walter into conspiring with her to murder her husband, now provided with a double indemnity insurance clause. The murder is carried out as planned, but the couple then fin."@en
  • ""Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray), naive insurance man, falls for the seductive charms of his beautiful client Phyllis Dietrichson (Barbara Stanwyck). Together they plot to get rid of her dull husband and collect on the "double indemnity" life policy."--Container."
  • "Un agent d'assurances assassine le mari de celle qu'il aime."
  • "An insurance salesman and an unhappy wife conspire to murder her husband and collect his insurance policy."
  • "An insurance salesman and an unhappy wife conspire to murder her husband and collect his insurance policy."@en
  • "A TV remake of Billy Wilder's film classic (1944) about a scheming wife who inveigles an insurance agent into helping her bump off her husband and of the dogged investigator, the agent's boss, who stalks them after deciding that the man's death was not accidental."
  • "A TV remake of Billy Wilder's film classic (1944) about a scheming wife who inveigles an insurance agent into helping her bump off her husband and of the dogged investigator, the agent's boss, who stalks them after deciding that the man's death was not accidental."@en
  • "Walter Neff is a smooth talking insurance salesman who meets the very attractive Phyllis Dietrichson when he calls to renew her husband's automobile policy. The couple are immediately drawn to each other and have an affair. They scheme together to murder Phyllis' husband for life insurance money with a double indemnity clause. Unfortunately, all does not go as planned. Barton Keyes is the wily insurance investigator who must sort things out."@en
  • "Walter Neff is a smooth talking insurance salesman who meets the very attractive Phyllis Dietrichson when he calls to renew her husband's automobile policy. The couple are immediately drawn to each other and have an affair. They scheme together to murder Phyllis' husband for life insurance money with a double indemnity clause. Unfortunately, all does not go as planned. Barton Keyes is the wily insurance investigator who must sort things out."
  • "When an insurance man with commission on his mind meets a suburban blond with murder in her heart, it's lust at first site. The two conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death then push hin from a train without leaving any traces."@en
  • "When an insurance man with commission on his mind meets a suburban blond with murder in her heart, it's lust at first site. The two conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death then push hin from a train without leaving any traces."
  • "An insurance agent connives with the glamorous wife of a client to kill her husband and collect the insurance that pays double for accidental death."@en
  • "Extras: Å‚ Exclusive new high-definition restoration, officially licensed from Universal PicturesÅ‚ Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hearing-impairedÅ‚ Audio commentary by film historian Nick Redman and screenwriter Lem DobbsÅ‚ Shadows of Suspense a 2006 documentary featuring film historians, directors, and authors discussing the making of Double IndemnityÅ‚ 1945 Screen Guild Theater radio adaptation of Double Indemnity, starring Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurrayÅ‚ The original theatrical trailerÅ‚ Isolated music and effects trackÅ‚ 36-PAGE BOOKLET featuring a 1976 interview by John Allyn with Billy Wilder; an extract from a 1976 interview with James M. Cain comparing his original serial with Wilders film adaptation; documentation of novelist and Double Indemnity co-screenwriter Raymond Chandlers attitude toward working within the Hollywood studio system; an extract from the original screenplay depicting the excised "death chamber" ending; a note on the restoration; and rare archival imagery."
  • "A woman seduces an insurance agent and convinces him to kill her husband so they can collect the insurance money. Also includes the 1973 TV movie, Shadows of Suspense documentary, and audio commentaries with film historians."
  • "The archetypal "film noir", nominated for six Academy Awards. Told in flashback, the story is related by a dying Walter Neff, starting with his first meeting with Phyllis Dietrichson during a routine renewal of her husband's car insurance. As their attraction deepens, Neff finds himself contemplating the murder of Phyllis' husband in such a way as to make it appear an accident. The two are soon willing accomplices, but after Dietrichson is dispatched, Neff learns more about Phyllis' unsavoury past than he would like, and is soon concerned too about his boss who has taken over the case ..."
  • "Insurance salesman Walter Neff calls at the house of femme fatale Phyllis Dietrichson in order to renew her husband's automobile insurance policy and an immediate attraction sparks between the two, Phyllis gradually seducing Walter into conspiring to create a secret accident life insurance policy and then to murder her husband. Neff knows all the tricks of his trade and devises a plan to make the murder of her husband appear to be an accidental fall from a train that will trigger the "double indemnity" clause and pay out twice the policy's face value. The murder is carried out as planned, but the couple then find themselves growing increasingly suspicious of each other as they get closer to collecting the money and, when Walter's boss, relentless insurance investigator Barton Keyes, starts to look into the policy, Walter and Phyllis' steely resolve begins to falter."
  • "A 'ride to the end of the line' for an insurance salesman who gets caught up in a web of intrigue and murder when he plots with a femme fatale to kill her husband to collect the insurance. A classic noir thriller which pioneered the use of narration in the style of the hardboiled school of American writing."@en
  • "A calculating wife encourages her wealthy husband to sign a double indemnity policy proposed by smitten insurance agent Walter Neff. As the would-be lovers plot the unsuspecting husband's murder, they are pursued by a suspicious claims manager. It's a race against time to get away with the perfect crime."@en
  • "A calculating wife encourages her wealthy husband to sign a double indemnity policy proposed by smitten insurance agent Walter Neff. As the would-be lovers plot the unsuspecting husband's murder, they are pursued by a suspicious claims manager. It's a race against time to get away with the perfect crime."
  • "When a widow tries to collect on the double indemnity clause in her husband's insurance policy, an investigator within the insurance firm becomes suspicious of what seems to be the perfect crime, and begins to doubt that her husband's death was an accident."@en
  • ""A wife and an insurance agent plot together to murder the husband and collect his accident insurance" - BFI website."
  • "In 1938, the experienced salesman of the Pacific All Risk Insurance Co. Walter Neff meets the seductive wife of one of his client, Phyllis Dietrichson, and they have an affair. Phyllis proposes to kill her husband Dietrichson to receive the prize of an accident insurance policy and Walter plots a scheme to receive twice the amount based on a double indemnity clause. When Mr. Dietrichson is found dead on the trails of a train, the police accepts the evidence of accidental death. However, the insurance analyst and Walter's best friend Barton Keyes does not buy the version and suspects that Phyllis has murdered her husband with the help of another man."@en
  • "Un vendedor de seguros y una esposa infeliz conspiran para asesinar a su marido y cobrar la póliza de seguros."@es
  • "Walter Neff, employé d'une compagnie d'assurances, est séduit par sa cliente, la froide et machiavélique Phyllis Dietrichson, avec laquelle iléchafaude un plan pour supprimer son mari encombrant et partager ainsi avec elle l'assurance-accidents de ce dernier."
  • "L'assicuratore Walter Neff, travolto dalla passione per una sua cliente, Phyllis Dietrichson, diventa suo complice nell'assassinio del marito, ma viene smascherato dal collega Barton Keyes, meticoloso e pedante responsabile dell'ufficio contenziosi. (Mereghetti)."@it
  • "A 'ride to the end of the line' for an insurance salesman who gets caught up in a web of intrigue and murder when he plots with a femme fatale to kill her husband to collect the insurance. A classic noir thriller which pioneered the use of narration in the style of the hardboiled school of American writing. Also available on 16mm, VHS and on VHS in Film Noir Study Packages."
  • "An insurance salesman gets caught up in a web of intrigue and murder when he plots with a femme fatale to kill her husband to collect the insurance."@en
  • "An insurance salesman gets caught up in a web of intrigue and murder when he plots with a femme fatale to kill her husband to collect the insurance."
  • "Barbara Stanwyck and Fred MacMurray star in this gripping film noir from Academy Award-winning director Billy Wilder. A calculating wife encourages her wealthy husband to sign a double indemnity policy proposed by smitten insurance agent Walter Neff. As the would-be lovers plot the unsuspecting husband's murder, they are pursued by a suspicious claims manager (Edward G. Robinson). It's a race against time to get away with the perfect crime in this heart-racing Academy Award-nominated masterpiece."@en
  • "When a widow tries to collect on the double indemnity clause in her husband's insurance policy, an investigator becomes suspicious of what seems to be the perfect crime and begins to doubt that her husband's death was an accident."
  • "A 'ride to the end of the line' for an insurance salesman who gets caught up in a web of intrigue and murder when he plots with a femme fatale to kill her husband to collect the insurance. A classic noir thriller which pioneered the use of narration in the style of the hardboiled school of American writing. The flashback narration predates other classic film noir, such as Out of the past, The killers, and Criss-cross."@en
  • "An insurance man and a suburban wife conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death-- then push him from a train. It's an almost perfect crime."
  • "An insurance man and a suburban wife conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death-- then push him from a train. It's an almost perfect crime."@en
  • "When a widow tries to collect on the double indemnity clause in her husband's insurance policy, an investigator becomes suspicious of what seems to be the perfect crime, and begins to doubt that her husband's death was an accident."
  • "When a widow tries to collect on the double indemnity clause in her husband's insurance policy, an investigator becomes suspicious of what seems to be the perfect crime, and begins to doubt that her husband's death was an accident."@en
  • ""On a dark Los Angeles night in July 1938, insurance agent Walter Neff is bleeding from a gunshot wound and slips into his office at the Pacific All Risk Insurance Co. Walter records his murder confession on the dictaphone, addressing his boss and friend, Barton Keyes, a meticulous and intuitive claims agent. Walter thinks back to May when it all started: Walter visits an expensive Spanish-style house in Los Feliz to follow-up an automobile insurance renewal for Mr. Dietrichson. He is immediately attracted to Dietrichson's wife Phyllis, who first appears clad only in a towel. Walter flirts with Phyllis, whose interest is piqued, nevertheless, she rebuffs him and the next day changes his appointment to meet with her husband. When Walter arrives that day, he and Phyllis are alone and she inquires about getting an accident policy for her husband without his knowledge. Upset by her implications, Walter leaves, but his expectation that he has not seen the last of Phyllis is fulfilled when she appears at his apartment. Walter soon gives in to his longing and kisses Phyllis, after which she reveals that she has been abused and neglected by her husband. Phyllis admits to having fantasies of killing Dietrichson, but his life insurance beneficiary is his mature daughter Lola, who hates her. Walter is repulsed by, and at the same time, strangely drawn to Phyllis's fantasy, and his thoughts linger on how to accomplish an undetectable crime. Agreeing to help Phyllis kill her husband, Walter meets with Dietrichson and, in Lola's presence, tries to sell him accident insurance. Dietrichson refuses the accident insurance, but enrolls for auto insurance, and is unaware that Walter has given him an accident insurance form to sign as well. Walter secretly advises Phyllis to book a train for Dietrichson's business trip, as a double indemnity clause in the policy will award her double the stated $50,000 if Dietrichson dies from an unlikely cause, such as a train accident. Phyllis and Walter begin to meet surreptitiously every morning in a local market. Dietrichson breaks his leg just after the accident policy comes through, and the lovers are delayed in carrying out their plan. In mid-June, as Keyes offers to hire Walter as his assistant, Phyllis telephones and informs Walter that Dietrichson is leaving that night on the train. Walter turns down Keyes' offer and after leaving the office, calculates his every move to avoid future suspicion, then hides in the Dietrichsons' car. After Phyllis uses a pre-arranged signal, Walter sits up from the back seat and strangles Dietrichson to death. Dressed as Dietrichson, Walter then boards the train and heads for the observation car. Walter is dismayed to find another passenger, Jackson, sitting on the deck, but when he leaves to get Walter a cigar, Walter jumps off the back of the train. After leaving Dietrichson's body on the tracks, Phyllis and Walter leave together in her car. The police declare Dietrichson's death accidental, but Norton, the president of All Risk, is reluctant to pay out the $100,000 and meets with Phyllis. Phyllis pretends to be bereaved and is genuinely shocked at Norton's suggestion of suicide. After she leaves, Walter is delighted when Keyes assures Norton that he will have to pay out the claim. At his apartment later that night, Walter is surprised by a visit from Keyes, who has developed indigestion due to an incongruity in the case: Dietrichson never filed a claim for his broken leg, even though he had just purchased accident insurance, in addition to which, the train was going so slowly that suicide is unlikely. Keyes concludes that Dietrichson was ignorant of the policy, and he is suspicious of Phyllis. A nervous Walter rushes Keyes out, as Phyllis hides behind the door to escape notice. The next day, Lola confides in Walter that she suspects that Phyllis, who was her mother's nurse, killed her mother six years earlier and now has done the same to her father. In order to distract Lola, Walter spends the next few days with her, and learns that she has broken up with her college drop-out boyfriend, Nino Zachette. During this time, Keyes becomes convinced that Dietrichson was murdered, and sends for Jackson. Jackson confirms that the man on the train does not match photographs of Dietrichson, and Keyes subsequently has Phyllis followed by detectives. Walter urges Phyllis not to sue for the claim, which is now being withheld, as Keyes will oppose it, but she is determined to get the money, and insists that the murder was all his doing. Walter is now suspicious of Phyllis, as Lola has told him that Nino is seeing her stepmother, and Walter thinks about killing her. Phyllis files suit for the insurance money, and Keyes tells Walter that her partner-in-crime has shown himself. Worried that Keyes is on to him, Walter listens to Keyes's dictaphone and hears that Keyes suspects that Nino is Phyllis' partner-in-crime, after which he arranges to meet with Phyllis late that night. Unknown to Walter, Phyllis has prepared for his visit by hiding a gun under a seat cushion. Walter confronts Phyllis and tells her that he knows she has used him and that he intends to frame Nino for the murder. Phyllis then shoots Walter, but is unable to kill him. Admitting that she has never loved him, Phyllis now embraces him, and Walter shoots her twice, killing her. As he leaves the house, Nino walks up, and Walter urges him to go to Lola, who truly loves him. By 4:30 a.m., Walter finishes his confession as Keyes makes his presence known, having been called by the janitor who noticed Walter trailing blood. Walter walks out, intending to escape to the border, but collapses before he gets to the elevator. Keyes, disappointed, nevertheless reveals his affection for Walter, and Walter reciprocates, as Keyes lights Walter's final cigarette. ... Contemporary reviews suggested that author James M. Cain was inspired to write this story after the 1927 murder of Albert Snyder, who was murdered by his wife, Ruth Brown"--AFI catalog, 1941-1950."
  • ""On a dark Los Angeles night in July 1938, insurance agent Walter Neff is bleeding from a gunshot wound and slips into his office at the Pacific All Risk Insurance Co. Walter records his murder confession on the dictaphone, addressing his boss and friend, Barton Keyes, a meticulous and intuitive claims agent. Walter thinks back to May when it all started: Walter visits an expensive Spanish-style house in Los Feliz to follow-up an automobile insurance renewal for Mr. Dietrichson. He is immediately attracted to Dietrichson's wife Phyllis, who first appears clad only in a towel. Walter flirts with Phyllis, whose interest is piqued, nevertheless, she rebuffs him and the next day changes his appointment to meet with her husband. When Walter arrives that day, he and Phyllis are alone and she inquires about getting an accident policy for her husband without his knowledge. Upset by her implications, Walter leaves, but his expectation that he has not seen the last of Phyllis is fulfilled when she appears at his apartment. Walter soon gives in to his longing and kisses Phyllis, after which she reveals that she has been abused and neglected by her husband. Phyllis admits to having fantasies of killing Dietrichson, but his life insurance beneficiary is his mature daughter Lola, who hates her. Walter is repulsed by, and at the same time, strangely drawn to Phyllis's fantasy, and his thoughts linger on how to accomplish an undetectable crime. Agreeing to help Phyllis kill her husband, Walter meets with Dietrichson and, in Lola's presence, tries to sell him accident insurance. Dietrichson refuses the accident insurance, but enrolls for auto insurance, and is unaware that Walter has given him an accident insurance form to sign as well. Walter secretly advises Phyllis to book a train for Dietrichson's business trip, as a double indemnity clause in the policy will award her double the stated $50,000 if Dietrichson dies from an unlikely cause, such as a train accident. Phyllis and Walter begin to meet surreptitiously every morning in a local market. Dietrichson breaks his leg just after the accident policy comes through, and the lovers are delayed in carrying out their plan. In mid-June, as Keyes offers to hire Walter as his assistant, Phyllis telephones and informs Walter that Dietrichson is leaving that night on the train. Walter turns down Keyes' offer and after leaving the office, calculates his every move to avoid future suspicion, then hides in the Dietrichsons' car. After Phyllis uses a pre-arranged signal, Walter sits up from the back seat and strangles Dietrichson to death. Dressed as Dietrichson, Walter then boards the train and heads for the observation car. Walter is dismayed to find another passenger, Jackson, sitting on the deck, but when he leaves to get Walter a cigar, Walter jumps off the back of the train. After leaving Dietrichson's body on the tracks, Phyllis and Walter leave together in her car. The police declare Dietrichson's death accidental, but Norton, the president of All Risk, is reluctant to pay out the $100,000 and meets with Phyllis. Phyllis pretends to be bereaved and is genuinely shocked at Norton's suggestion of suicide. After she leaves, Walter is delighted when Keyes assures Norton that he will have to pay out the claim. At his apartment later that night, Walter is surprised by a visit from Keyes, who has developed indigestion due to an incongruity in the case: Dietrichson never filed a claim for his broken leg, even though he had just purchased accident insurance, in addition to which, the train was going so slowly that suicide is unlikely. Keyes concludes that Dietrichson was ignorant of the policy, and he is suspicious of Phyllis. A nervous Walter rushes Keyes out, as Phyllis hides behind the door to escape notice. The next day, Lola confides in Walter that she suspects that Phyllis, who was her mother's nurse, killed her mother six years earlier and now has done the same to her father. In order to distract Lola, Walter spends the next few days with her, and learns that she has broken up with her college drop-out boyfriend, Nino Zachette. During this time, Keyes becomes convinced that Dietrichson was murdered, and sends for Jackson. Jackson confirms that the man on the train does not match photographs of Dietrichson, and Keyes subsequently has Phyllis followed by detectives. Walter urges Phyllis not to sue for the claim, which is now being withheld, as Keyes will oppose it, but she is determined to get the money, and insists that the murder was all his doing. Walter is now suspicious of Phyllis, as Lola has told him that Nino is seeing her stepmother, and Walter thinks about killing her. Phyllis files suit for the insurance money, and Keyes tells Walter that her partner-in-crime has shown himself. Worried that Keyes is on to him, Walter listens to Keyes's dictaphone and hears that Keyes suspects that Nino is Phyllis' partner-in-crime, after which he arranges to meet with Phyllis late that night. Unknown to Walter, Phyllis has prepared for his visit by hiding a gun under a seat cushion. Walter confronts Phyllis and tells her that he knows she has used him and that he intends to frame Nino for the murder. Phyllis then shoots Walter, but is unable to kill him. Admitting that she has never loved him, Phyllis now embraces him, and Walter shoots her twice, killing her. As he leaves the house, Nino walks up, and Walter urges him to go to Lola, who truly loves him. By 4:30 a.m., Walter finishes his confession as Keyes makes his presence known, having been called by the janitor who noticed Walter trailing blood. Walter walks out, intending to escape to the border, but collapses before he gets to the elevator. Keyes, disappointed, nevertheless reveals his affection for Walter, and Walter reciprocates, as Keyes lights Walter's final cigarette. ... Contemporary reviews suggested that author James M. Cain was inspired to write this story after the 1927 murder of Albert Snyder, who was murdered by his wife, Ruth Brown"--AFI catalog, 1941-1950."@en
  • "An insurance man and a suburban wife conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death -- then push him from a train. It's an almost perfect crime."
  • "An insurance man and a suburban wife conspire to trick her husband into a policy that pays double for accidental death, then push him from a train. It's an almost perfect crime."@en
  • "Double Indemnity is the dazzling, quintessential film noir whose enormous popular success and seven Oscar nominations catapulted Billy Wilder (Some Like It Hot, Sunset Boulevard, The Apartment) into the very top tier of Hollywood's writer-directors. Adapted from a novella by James M. Cain (The Postman Always Rings Twice), co-written by Wilder and Raymond Chandler (The Big Sleep, The Long Goodbye), Double Indemnity remains the hardest-boiled of delectations. Insurance hawker Walter Neff (Fred MacMurray) gets seduced by some other mans wife: a bored, sex-starved Barbara Stanwyck done up in lorry-grille wig and a pair of lips like wine grapes smashed in candle-wax. She wants to off her better half and collect on his policy, but spitfire claims-adjuster Barton Keyes (Edward G. Robinson) smells a rat Ń or at least the cheap perfume all over that Dietrichson file. Neff himself ties up the twisting plot in a neat bow: "We were talking about automobile insurance, only you were thinking about murder. And I was thinking about that anklet." The Masters of Cinema Series is proud to present Billy Wilder's Double Indemnity for the first time anywhere in the world on Blu-ray. (Eureka)."
  • "An insurance man and a suburban wife conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death--then push him from a train. It's an almost perfect crime."@en
  • "An insurance man and a suburban wife conspire to trick her husband into signing a policy that pays double for accidental death--then push him from a train. It's an almost perfect crime."
  • ""A calculating wife encourages her wealthy husband to sign a double indemnity policy proposed by smitten insurance agent Walter Neff. As the would-be lovers plot the unsuspecting husband's murder, they are pursued by a suspicious claims manager. It's a race against time to get away with the perfect crime in this heart-pounding Academy Award-nominated masterpiece"--Container."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Thriller"@en
  • "Feature"
  • "Fiction television programs"
  • "Fiction"
  • "Film adaptations"@en
  • "Film adaptations"
  • "Fiction"@en
  • "Thrillers (Motion pictures, television, etc.)"@en
  • "Psychological fiction"
  • "Made for TV movies"
  • "Made for TV movies"@en
  • "Gangster films"
  • "Mystery films"
  • "Mystery films"@en
  • "Mystery"
  • "Features"@en
  • "Directors suite"
  • "Drammatico (Genere)"@it
  • "Thrillers (Motion pictures)"
  • "Thrillers (Motion pictures)"@en
  • "Detective and mystery films"
  • "Detective and mystery films"@en
  • "Film noir"@en
  • "Film noir"
  • "Video recordings for the hearing impaired"@en
  • "Video recordings for the hearing impaired"
  • "Fiction films"@en
  • "Fiction films"
  • "Video recordings"
  • "Drama"@en
  • "Drama"
  • "Melodramas (Motion pictures)"@en
  • "Crime films"@en
  • "Crime films"
  • "Made-for-TV movies"
  • "Detective and mystery stories"
  • "DVD"
  • "fiction policière (fiction)"
  • "Advertising"
  • "DVD-Video"
  • "Crime"@en
  • "Suspense films"@en
  • "Feature films"@en
  • "Feature films"

http://schema.org/name

  • "Double indemnity - kvinden uden samvittighed"
  • "Double indemnity"@it
  • "Double indemnity"@en
  • "Double indemnity"
  • "Double indemnity"@es
  • "Double indemnity = La fiamma del peccato"@it
  • "Double indemnity (Motion picture)"@en
  • "Double indemnity (Motion picture)"
  • "Double indemnity [videorecording]"
  • "double indemnity"
  • "Double Indemnity"
  • "Double indemnity. [Trailer]"
  • "Double indemnity (Motion picture : 1973)"
  • "Double indemnity : two-disc special edition"
  • "Assurance sur la mort"
  • "Double indemnity Doble indemnización"
  • "Double indemnity (Película de cine)"@es
  • "Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck, Edward G. Robinson in Double indemnity Frau ohne Gewissen"
  • "Double Indemnity **"
  • "Double indemnity (Pel·lícula cinematogràfica : 1944)"
  • "Double indemnity (TV movie)"
  • "Double indemnity (film)"
  • "Double indemnity (TV movie)"@en
  • "Double Indemnity [video]"

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