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The film for which the term “gaslighting” is named, Gaslight is actually better than the myriad references to it in articles about psychological torment would have you believe. Ingrid Bergman gives a tour de force performance as the naive wife whose husband, played by Charles Boyer, tortures her into questioning her own reality, with Joseph Cotton and Angela Lansbury turning in memorable supporting roles.
By Suzan Eraslan and David Daw4
3030 ratings
The film for which the term “gaslighting” is named, Gaslight is actually better than the myriad references to it in articles about psychological torment would have you believe. Ingrid Bergman gives a tour de force performance as the naive wife whose husband, played by Charles Boyer, tortures her into questioning her own reality, with Joseph Cotton and Angela Lansbury turning in memorable supporting roles.