User Reviews (8)

Add a Review

  • This film is strictly camp. The only way to watch it is as unintentionally humorous. The first half moves slower than molasses then it just explodes in every direction (or should I say VOMITS).

    Lots of gowns, lots of pretty people and a marvelous drunken scene with Shelley Winters - after which she hits the skids.

    Be glad the plot is unbelievable as well as the situations. It would be depressing otherwise.
  • Before they started streaming into New York from Minnesota, they used to come from Kansas (or, in this case, its neighbor to the north). Wide-eyed Colleen Miller gets off the Big Dog from Grand Island, Nebraska to try her hand at the modeling game; she batches it with an old hometown friend, now a nightspot shantoozie (Shelley Winters, who forebodingly sings the old Sophie Tucker number `There'll Be Some Changes Made').

    Winters has all the right connections, both high and low (or so she thinks). She's having an affair with the married publisher (Barry Sullivan) of a photomag, Glitter, and can set Miller up for dates with any number of high-rolling but penniless scions of old-money families. But it's Sullivan who finds Miller more enchanting than the needy Winters, who ends up throwing a drunken wingding in which a pistol plays an inopportune part. Though cleared of murder charges, the two gals from the Great Plains, now mortal enemies, find that nobody wants them anymore, either for torch songs or fashion layouts (Winters confides that she spends her days `breaking phonograph records and emptying ice-cube trays').

    There's a lot more plot (and many more characters, most of them generic) in this cautionary melodrama about the snares of the Big Town - maybe too much of both (though it's unfair to judge from a showing cut down to fit a commercial television slot). And It's not clear whether the playgirl of the title is Winters or Miller, or if it even matters. Joseph Pevney seems to be reworking material about the interface between show business and crime that he had done two years earlier, and much more successfully, in Meet Danny Wilson (where Winters also appeared). The movie comes off as unfocused and strident. But then that's the price to be paid for unloosing Winters.
  • Colleen Miller comes from Nebraska to New York. She stays with her cousin, showgirl Shelley Winters while she makes her way as she knows not what. She gets a couple of lucky breaks, and then the boyfriends, money, luxury apartments, and bullets start flying in this tawdry cheap-girls-in-mink soap opera.

    It's not the sort of story I enjoy, but director Joseph Pevney handles it well enough, thanks to a good cast -- Miss Miller got the best reviews of her career for her role -- and Universal's ability to put all the men in dinner jackets and the women in slinky dresses and mink stoles. Pevney started out as a child performer in vaudeville. By 1936, he was an actor on Broadway. After the Second World War, he moved to Los Angeles, where he acted in Paul Muni's theater troupe and had tiny roles in movies. He became a movie director in 1950, but that faded out towards the end of the decade, and he worked until 1985 as a TV director -- tied with Marc Daniels for directing the most episodes of the original STAR TREK. He died in 2008 at the age of 96.
  • evanston_dad6 September 2022
    You know you're among your own kind when Shelley Winters' name appears in the opening credits and the entire movie theater bursts into applause.

    I saw this at Chicago's Noir City film festival at the Music Box Theatre. I had low expectations, because host Alan K. Rode had warned us that's it's not really a true noir by most people's measures, but rather is "noir stained." So I was pleasantly surprised to find that the film is a hoot, and gives Winters all kinds of things to applaud her for: saucy one liners, vampy innuendos, drunk scenes by the score, a slap across the face, and the opportunity to murder someone. What more could a girl ask for?

    Grade: B+
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Naive girl Colleen Miller from Nebraska comes to New York City to make her mark as a model. Moves in with old friend Shelly Winters and starts meeting "the right people" very quickly. Too quickly.

    Nobody in this film is really a "good guy," or girl. Everyone has their own self-interest at heart. Gregg Palmer as Tom Bradley, the upstairs neighbor of Shelly Winters, comes the closest to good guy status. Winters is a nightclub singer (and she sings great) in an affair with a married glamour magazine publisher, Barry Sullivan, who is leading her on about leaving his wife. Richard Long is a young "playboy" hanger on who owes too much money to the wrong people and ends up being the precipitator of a lot of the chaos that ensues.

    Miller gets a fast "career" as a top model for the glamour magazine overnight, and Winters gets jealous fast. Borrowing Long's car and gun, she threatens Sullivan and accidentally kills him. Winters and Miller end up in the big scandal that ruins both their careers, while Long trying to get out of his money trouble gets them involved in a gangland hit on top of everything else.

    There is sort of a happy ending but not before we lose Sullivan, and everybody else (except maybe Long) learns their lesson. New York "society" is a tough place in the 1950s and a naive girl from Nebraska better beware of a life that seems too good to be true, because it is.
  • brinkus-225 December 2021
    For the first 50 minutes, Playgirl is nothing but cliches and cardboard characters. Finally, Shelley slaps Colleen and all hell breaks loose. Shelley goes on a reign of terror and this film was brought to life. There is entertainment in Playgirl, but the wait was much too long.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    It's ironic that on Broadway, Shelley Winters replaced Celeste Holm as Ado Annie in "Oklahoma!", a role played on screen by the equally melodramatic Gloria Grahame. in a stretch of just over a decade, all three of these supporting players won Academy Awards and while Holm played mostly effervescent characters, they were all ladies. Winters and Grahame seem to be fighting for who would play the biggest tart and here, Winters goes in for the kill in making her hard boiled dame 10 times as brassy as Grahame could ever hope to big, even at her most deadly. Winters does not play a main character. She's basically just a far too perky small town girl who has made it in the big city and intends to retain what she has achieved since leaving Indiana.

    Then along comes calling Miller, an old friend of hers whom Winters agrees to show the ropes and pretty soon, Winters' married lover (Barry Sullivan) is doing his best to and things with Winters and begins something with Miller. A fight over a gun leave Sullivan dead as well as Miller and Winters' friendship. But there's more bad luck to come for the two females, one of home decides that perhaps the big city isn't really the best place for her after all.

    This old story has been done many times and as a film noir, it has the potential to feature some interesting characterizations and situations. But other than watching Shelley chew the scenery and sing a couple of songs (including a very acidic version of "There'll Be Some Changes Made" some directly to Miller as a warning), it's pretty standard and predictable B movie fare. In spite of the threat of being chewed up and spit out by Shelley, Miller comes off as a pretty strong heroine and gets sympathy basically because of her subtlety. Still there's no denying that Shelly commands (and demands) the majority of attention even though after a while, listening to her brings on the desire for ear plugs.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Tag-line: "There's a price-tag on her kisses ...and trouble was never so cheap!"

    This over-plotted Universal-International pot-boiler supposedly exposes the dark side of glamor & fame. It was released the same year as IT SHOULD HAPPEN TO YOU (which had a "Shelley-similar" Judy Holliday), but any comedy in PLAYGIRL is purely unintentional.

    Shelley Winters plays a sexy city chanteuse who takes childhood chum Colleen Miller under her wing when Miller boards a bus from Nebraska to make it in "The Big Apple". Winters' married lover, publisher Barry Sullivan, takes a shine to Colleen and puts her on the cover of "Glitter" magazine -turning her into the country's top model almost overnight. Colleen and Shelley tussle over Sullivan and a gun ...and he's shot dead. The scandal rocks both Shelley and Colleen's worlds, making them antagonistic adversaries. Worldly-wise Winters hits the bottle and dewy Colleen (who had a hint of "Eve Harrington" about her) becomes a play-for-pay party girl -but when Miller gets set up for a gangster's murder, Shelley's decency shines through. It's an eventual "sadder but wiser" bus trip back for one of them -and nearly too late for the other.

    PLAYGIRL is a highly enjoyable film with Shelley Winters at her sexiest and enough sub-plots for 2 of these type films. Shelley even sings a few songs in strapless gowns for jaded nightclub habitués, with "Lie To Me" being the best of them.

    Pairing PLAYGIRL with the same year's MAMBO would make a nice "sleeper" double-feature. In the latter, Shelley Winters is very "butch" as Silvana Mangano's manager. MAMBO is actually a musical/melodrama mishmash that looks a lot like THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA combined with PLAYGIRL. I'd like to see it un-cut sometime as the U.S. release print just barely makes sense. The visuals -and Silvana Mangano's production numbers- are still impressive, however.

    All highly recommended!