In Stockholm, Sweden, as Anna Holm
enters a courtroom waiting for her murder trial to begin, witnesses
are sworn in. The first witness, Herman Rundvik, relates the
following testimony. Late one night, at a rural tavern,
aristocrat Torsten Barring hosts a party that includes Vera, the
faithless wife of noted plastic surgeon Gustav Segert. When
the tavern will no longer extend Torsten credit, he charms Anna
Holm, the badly scarred proprietress, into signing his check.
Bernard Dalvik then testifies that he, Anna and Rundvik made most of
their money from blackmail.
One day, just after Torsten visits Anna,
who has fallen in love with him, Vera arrives, begging Dalvik to
help her retrieve letters that she has written to a lover.
Vera then testifies: Anna takes the letters to Vera but hatefully
demands more money because Vera is beautiful. Vera is at first
frightened by Anna, but when Anna becomes lost in thought talking
about love, Vera cruelly shines a light on her face. While
Vera is getting her jewels to pay for the letters, Gustav comes home
unexpectedly and Anna falls as she tries to elude him.
Thinking that Anna is a thief, Gustav wants to call the police, but
Vera pretends to take pity on her and convinces him to let her go.
Gustav becomes intrigued by Anna's scars and caustic manner, and
offers to perform plastic surgery on her.
Anna is sworn in next. After
briefly relating that her childhood scars were caused when her
drunken father accidentally started a fire, she describes her
relationship to Torsten. Because he treats her as if she is
beautiful and charming, Anna suspiciously asks what trouble he is in
and he suggests that he is not now in trouble but might need her
help in the future. Anna then tells the court that she
submitted to twelve operations because she loved Torsten. Two
years after the initial operation, Anna has turned into a beautiful
woman no longer ridiculed by strangers.
After leaving Gustav's Swiss clinic, she
goes to Torsten, who did not know where she was, and he obliquely
tells her that his uncle, Consul Magnus Barring, who is very old and
very rich, is leaving everything to his four-year-old grandson, but
if something happens to the grandson, Torsten will inherit
everything. Although Anna does not want to murder anyone, she
agrees to help Torsten by posing as a governess. Using the
name Ingrid Paulson, Anna is hired by the consul on Torsten's
recommendation and goes to live in his chateau. Despite her
attempts to remain aloof, she finds that she likes the kindly consul
and his sweet natured grandson, Lars-Erik.
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One night, Torsten comes to the chateau
for a party, as does Gustav. Thinking that she has softened
and changed her name to start a new life, Gustav does not reveal her
true identity. The next day, while secretly trying to listen
to a conversation between Torsten and Gustav, Anna leaves Lars-Erik
too long under his sun lamp and her genuine distress makes Torsten
suspicious of her resolve to kill the boy. He gives her an
ultimatum that Lars-Erik must die before the next night, and she
reluctantly agrees because she loves him. As Anna breaks down
on the stand, Gustav is called to testify: He is suspicious of Anna
after the sun lamp accident, especially after seeing her talking
with Torsten at the nearby falls. As she then leads Lars-Erik
to a basket ride across the falls, Gustav catches another basket and
sees her save the child from falling into the water.
Seeing
Anna embrace Lars-Erik, Gustav realizes that she is not a murderer.
Gustav admits to the prosecutor that he is in love with Anna, after
which Emma Kristiansdotter, the consul's housekeeper, testifies that
she later overheard Torsten and Anna talking: Torsten taunts her for
having become soft and frightens her by talking of the power the
Consul's money will bring him.
On the Consul's birthday, just before a
traditional sleigh ride, Anna gives him a portable chess board,
which Emma says she put with the other gifts. Now the Consul
testifies. Anna and Gustav are to ride together with
Lars-Erik, but Torsten races by with the boy in his sleigh.
The others think he is racing with Gustav and Anna as they try
desperately to save the frightened child. Anna confesses
everything to Gustav and says that she now hates Torsten. When
they reach the sleigh, Torsten won't stop until Anna takes out a gun
and shoots him. They save the boy and Torsten's body slips
into the falls. As the Consul continues, Anna interrupts and
says that he knows she is innocent because of the note she left in
the chessboard.
Now Emma comes forward and admits taking
the letter, in which Anna warned the consul about his nephew and
said that she was going to commit suicide. While the judges
adjourn to consider the case, Vera tries to reconcile with Gustav,
but he refuses and goes to Anna. They profess their love for
each other and he proposes, after which the court attendant says
that the judges are ready to give their decision, and suggest that
Gustav might want to come along.
Notes
According to news items in HR,
Anita Louise was tested for the role of "Vera," and snow scenes
were shot on location in Sun Valley, Idaho. Charles Quigley
was borrowed RKO for the film. An HCN article noted
that A Woman's Face was part of a recent "avalanche of
flashback movies" and had a "European" appearance to it.
Francis de Croisset's play was previously filmed in Sweden in 1938
under the title En kvinnas ansikte.
Ingrid Bergman starred in that version, which was directed by
Gustaf Molander.