The Letter is a 1940 American film noir directed by William Wyler. The screenplay by Howard Koch is based on the 1927 play of the same name by W. Somerset Maugham, originally filmed in 1929. On a moonlit, tropical night, the native workers are asleep in their outdoor barracks. A shot is heard; the door of a house opens and a man stumbles out of it, followed by a woman who calmly shoots him several more times, the last few while standing over his body. The woman is Leslie Crosbie , the wife of a British rubber plantation manager in Malaya; the man whom she shot her manservant recognizes as... Geoff Hammond , a well-regarded member of the European community. Leslie tells the servant to send for her husband Robert , who is working at one of the plantations. Her husband returns, having summoned his attorney and a British police inspector. Leslie tells them that Geoff Hammond "tried to make love to me" and that she killed him to save her honor.
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| Release date: | November 22, 1940 |
| Directed by: | William Wyler |
| Runtime: | 95 Minutes |
| Producer: | Samuel Marx, Hal B. Wallis |
| Editor: | George Amy, Warren Low |
| Music by: | Max Steiner |
| Cinematography: | Tony Gaudio |
| Screenplay by: | Howard Koch |
| Adapted from: | The Letter |