If I Should Die Before I Wake (1952) Poster

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8/10
suspenseful and engaging thriller
myriamlenys14 August 2022
Warning: Spoilers
In primary school, two classmates - a boy and a girl - become friends, mainly through a shared love of sweets. In their naivety, they don't realize that the adult providing the little girl with treats is a cunning predator. Then the little girl disappears...

"Si muero antes de despertar" is a good, concise thriller about a schoolboy trying to stop a dangerous criminal. The direction is assured and the acting is good, even by the various child actors. At times the movie takes on an almost archetypal quality about the battle between innocence and corruption. This quality is further reinforced by the deliberate use of fairytale motifs such as the sinister sweets-adorned house in the woods. Sadly enough the image quality of this fine black-and-white thriller has deteriorated through ageing. High time for a careful restoration...

Deserves far more critical attention than it's currently getting on imdb.
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10/10
one of the better Cornell Woolrich adaptations
todmichel28 November 2000
This film has a great reputation in Argentina as one of the better from its director, Carlos Hugo Christensen. As an adaptation of the nice Cornell Woolrich short Story, "If I Should Die Before I Wake", it has all the elements generally found in the works of this author: suspense, interesting characters, atmosphere. It is - in this reviewer's opinion - the Argentinian counterpart of the best American adaptations of Woolrich: Hitchcock's Rear Window, Ted Tetzlaff's The Window, Robert Siodmak's Phantom Lady. Curiously, due to a letter published many years ago in a monster-magazine, this movie is sometimes listed in reference books as "El vampiro acecha / The Lurking Vampire" (perhaps its Mexican title ?) and generally with a wrong cast (Abel Salazar and German Robles). Neither Robles nor Salazar are in this film, but ALL you can like in Woolrich's novel and short stories ARE in it. The same year, Christensen made another Woolrich adaptation, "No abras nunca esa puerta", also a superior movie with two parts. The adapted stories were "Somebody on the Phone" and "Hummingbird Comes Home". Other Woolrich stories were adapted in Argentina, Mexico, and of course in France where ALL the books of this author are regularly reprinted.
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