1. The Snake Pit (Ost) [1948] - Album by Alfred Newman ... - Apple Music
Jul 25, 2013 · The Snake Pit (Ost) [1948] ; Main Title. 1 · 1:49 ; Virginia. 2 · 1:08 ; Shock Treatment. 3 · 2:48 ; Confusion. 4 · 0:44 ; Hysteria. 5 · 2:59.
Album · 2013 · 16 Songs
2. The Snake Pit (Ost) [1948] - Album by Alfred Newman ... - Apple Music
Jul 25, 2013 · The Snake Pit (Ost) [1948] ; 1. Main Title · 1:49 ; 2. Virginia · 1:08 ; 3. Shock Treatment · 2:48 ; 4. Confusion · 0:44 ; 5. Hysteria · 2:59.
Album · 2013 · 16 Songs
3. The Snake Pit (1948) - Turner Classic Movies - TCM
1h 48m 1948 The Snake Pit Brief Synopsis Read More A young woman tries to recover her sanity in a corrupt mental institution.
A young woman tries to recover her sanity in a corrupt mental institution.
4. The Snake Pit: Fox Studio Classics (1948) - DVD Movie Guide
May 31, 2004 · In 1948's The Snake Pit, we get a look at psychiatric care circa the late Forties. We meet Virginia Cunningham (Olivia de Havilland), an ...
Reviewed by Colin Jacobson: The Snake Pit itself seems like something of a dud. It offers a decent snapshot of psychiatric care circa the late Forties, but it fails to create an engaging story or a coherent presentation. Starring Olivia de Havilland, Mark Stevens. Fox, $14.98, 6/1/2004.
5. Psychiatry Films from AMHF: "The Snake Pit" (1948)
Feb 18, 2013 · Psychiatry Films from AMHF: “The Snake Pit” (1948). by Evander Lomke ... song with its poignant lyrics. Spontaneously they all begin to ...
See AlsoIcue Wont OpenI feel unusually close to The Snake Pit, personally, if not intimately and daily, working with one of the writers, Millen Brand, during my early days in book publishing. This, the tenth film out of…
6. “Uneasy Threshold”: The Snake Pit (1948), Shock Treatment and a ...
Missing: song | Show results with:song
I had misgivings about screening The Snake Pit (1948) as part of a festival of gothic films that included chestnuts such as The Cat and the Canary and The Old Dark House, m…
7. Whether the song fit or did not... - The Snake Pit (1948) Discussion
MovieChat Forums > The Snake Pit (1948) Discussion > Whether the song fit or ... The tune is the Largo movement from Dvorak's New World Symphony: I don't know ...
This movie had me glued to it from the first shot almost all the way to the end. I felt I was witnessing a slice of genius, a movie ahead of its time, daring cinema, but then that song came on, and I felt like I was watching a regular dated old smarmy Hollywood musical. Then the last scenes were perfect again. Maybe the musical number made the happy ending more palatable? For some reason I think the movie would have been stronger without the song. Why do so many people seem to be in love with it? Am I missing something? Or is it simply a matter of personal preference?
*This is a place to write anything I think is important or smart or cute. It ends all my comments.*
8. The Snake Pit (1948) directed by Anatole Litvak • Reviews, film + cast
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Virginia Cunningham is confused upon finding herself in a mental hospital, with no memory of her arrival at the institution. Tormented by delusions and unable to even recognize her husband, Robert, she is treated by Dr. Mark Kik, who is determined to get to the root of her mental illness. As her treatment progresses, flashbacks depict events in Virginia's life that may have contributed to her instability.