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Someone mentioned that Phyllis Dietrichson would have had a different story
to tell if she had had her way in Double Indemnity. I agree. It would have
changed the course of film noir! As an experiment, I tried to tell her story in my
book on Wilder (McFarland, 2000). And I still believe the film does offer
some space for a fresh reading. I was fed up with how misogynistic that film, and
much other Wilder, is. My reading gained considerable impetus from Ruth
Prigozy's 1984 piece for Literature/Film Quarterly. Both of us were doubtless
inspired by 70s books like E. Ann Kaplan's Women in Film Noir.

Another unreliably narrated Wilder film is Witness for the Prosecution, which
expends a considerable amount of breath demonizing Phyllis' namesake Marlene
Dietrich, before letting the slimy Tyrone Power character take the fall.
Richard