The Scar (1948)

Originally released as Hollow Triumph, The Scar is a brooding film noir directed by Steve Sekely, starring Paul Henreid and Joan Bennett. Based on the 1946 novel by Murray Forbes, the film explores themes of mistaken identity, psychological manipulation, and the inescapability of fate. It was later reissued under the title The Scar, which refers to both a literal facial mark and the metaphorical damage left by a life of crime.

Plot Summary
John Müller (Paul Henreid) is a recently released convict who masterminds a robbery at a casino run by mobster Rocky Stansyck. The heist goes wrong, and Müller becomes a marked man. While hiding out, he discovers that he is the near-identical double of Dr. Victor Bartok, a psychoanalyst who works in the same building as his brother.

Seeing an opportunity to escape his past, Müller kills Bartok and assumes his identity. To complete the disguise, he carves a scar on his face—only to realize too late that the photo he used was reversed, and the scar is on the wrong side. Despite this mistake, no one notices, and Müller slips into Bartok’s life, including a romantic entanglement with his secretary Evelyn Hahn (Joan Bennett). But as the walls close in, Müller learns that escaping his past may be impossible.

Cast Highlights

  • Paul Henreid as John Müller / Dr. Victor Bartok
  • Joan Bennett as Evelyn Hahn
  • Eduard Franz as Frederick Müller
  • Leslie Brooks as Virginia Taylor
  • John Qualen, Herbert Rudley, and Mabel Paige in supporting roles

Behind-the-Scenes Trivia

  • The film’s original title, Hollow Triumph, was changed to The Scar for its reissue to emphasize the physical and symbolic mark of Müller’s deception
  • Paul Henreid not only starred in the film but also produced it, taking a risk on a darker, more complex role than his usual romantic leads
  • Cinematographer John Alton, a master of noir lighting, gave the film its shadowy, claustrophobic aesthetic
  • The scar mishap—Müller carving it on the wrong side—was inspired by a real-life photographic error and serves as a metaphor for flawed perception and irreversible choices

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