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Maigret stellt eine Falle

Originaltitel: Maigret tend un piège
  • 1958
  • 18
  • 1 Std. 59 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
2376
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Maigret stellt eine Falle (1958)
CrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Ein Serienmörder hat es in dem kriminellen Viertel Montmartre auf Frauen abgesehen.Ein Serienmörder hat es in dem kriminellen Viertel Montmartre auf Frauen abgesehen.Ein Serienmörder hat es in dem kriminellen Viertel Montmartre auf Frauen abgesehen.

  • Regie
    • Jean Delannoy
  • Drehbuch
    • Georges Simenon
    • Jean Delannoy
    • Rodolphe-Maurice Arlaud
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Jean Gabin
    • Annie Girardot
    • Olivier Hussenot
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    2376
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Jean Delannoy
    • Drehbuch
      • Georges Simenon
      • Jean Delannoy
      • Rodolphe-Maurice Arlaud
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Jean Gabin
      • Annie Girardot
      • Olivier Hussenot
    • 22Benutzerrezensionen
    • 21Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Nominiert für 3 BAFTA Awards
      • 1 Gewinn & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Fotos32

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    Topbesetzung51

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    Jean Gabin
    Jean Gabin
    • Le commissaire divisionnaire Jules Maigret
    Annie Girardot
    Annie Girardot
    • Yvonne Maurin
    Olivier Hussenot
    Olivier Hussenot
    • Lagrume
    Jeanne Boitel
    • Louise Maigret
    Lucienne Bogaert
    Lucienne Bogaert
    • Madame Veuve Adèle Maurin
    Jean Debucourt
    Jean Debucourt
    • Camille Guimard - le directeur de la Police Judiciaire
    • (as Jean Debucourt de la Comédie Française)
    Guy Decomble
    Guy Decomble
    • Mazet
    Paulette Dubost
    Paulette Dubost
    • Mauricette Barberot
    Jacques Hilling
    Jacques Hilling
    • Le médecin légiste
    Hubert de Lapparent
    Hubert de Lapparent
    • Le juge Coméliau
    Jean-Louis Le Goff
    • Goudier
    • (as Jean-Louis Le Goff, de la Comédie Française)
    Pierre-Louis
    • Rougin - un journaliste
    • (as Pierre Louis)
    Gérard Séty
    Gérard Séty
    • Georges "Jojo" Vacher
    • (as Gérard Sety)
    Jean Tissier
    Jean Tissier
    • Le journaliste de Paris-Presse
    André Valmy
    • L' inspecteur Lucas
    Lino Ventura
    Lino Ventura
    • L'inspecteur Torrence
    Amédée
    • L' inspecteur Alfonsi
    Louis Bugette
    Louis Bugette
    • Simoni, un policier du commissariat du 4ème arrondissement
    • (as Bugette)
    • Regie
      • Jean Delannoy
    • Drehbuch
      • Georges Simenon
      • Jean Delannoy
      • Rodolphe-Maurice Arlaud
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen22

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    8adrianovasconcelos

    Great acting, production values

    Belgian-born writer Georges Simenon created the quiet pipe-smoking Jules Maigret, and wrote no less than 75 novels featuring the Parisian inspector, always with the background of the Quai des Orfevres police station, and his team of assistants who sift through all types of clues and evidence in the streets of the French capital, redolent with dark atmosphere.

    The Quai des Orfevres office often provides the ideal setting for psychological interrogation, and this film takes full advantage of the Spartan simplicity of the station's interiors.

    Director Jean Delannoy does a creditable job with the material at hand. He certainly gets Jean Gabin to reproduce many of the mannerisms that emerge in the character of Maigret in those 75 novels, but I do not rate MAIGRET TEND UN PIÈGE one of the famous detective's better showpieces. Gabin does particularly well when he keeps silent, and just conveys quiet menace, determination, or love for his homely wife with his eyes.

    The beautiful and young Annie Girardot suddenly appears among the inquisitive crowd surrounding a dead female, and attracts the attention of one of Maigret's aides. Why exactly I could not fathom, as it was clear that the killer was a male, and witnesses correctly identified him as such.

    The movie takes on another dimension with Girardot's presence but the finest piece of acting comes courtesy of Jean Desailly, Girardot's impotent, jealous, and hysterical husband, who has not managed to sever the umbilical cord with his domineering mother, played with considerable verve and venom by Lueienne Bogaert.

    The young Lino Ventura keeps appearing in the background, and speaks but a few lines, but cuts a convincing Detective Torrence.

    Maigret applies massive psychological pressure on all whom he interrogates and finally comes up with the results, but Gabin sometimes takes his Maigret to shouting and emotional levels that rather exceed the character emanating from Simenon's novels. Not that it reduces believability, but having read some of those novels I felt that this Maigret had a touch of the excessive... perhaps to stay in tune with Desailly?

    Wonderful photography of the dark streets of Paris. Good adaptation of the novel to the screen by the irrepressible Michel Audiard and Director Delannoy himself.

    Certainly worth watching.
    8ElMaruecan82

    M like Maigret...

    It's a hot summer in Paris while a mysterious killer is plaguing the serene joie de vivre of Montmartre district making victims out of women who have in common (besides the misfortune of being at the wrong place at the wrong moment of the night) to be young and plump brunettes. The film opens with a murder that recalls the beginning of the mother of all psychological thrillers: "M" and there's more that justifies the comparison.

    Jean Delannoy's "Maigret Sets a Trap" is a fine example of a police procedural film that gets three things right: first, it perfectly conveys the atmosphere of an impending danger whose motivations -we rapidly suspect- are rooted in the mire of human psyche, secondly, the villain isn't just an antagonist but the subject of a character study that unveils the sleaziest and most sordid expressions of hubris and finally, the film lies on the broad shoulders of a great and iconic protagonist in the person of Jules Maigret, the 'French' Sherlock Holmes, created by Belgian writer George Simenon.

    A few words about Maigret: the Chief Inspector is a robust-looking, well-built man with a reassuring physique and a sort of detached attitude that allows him to be more perceptive of little details surrounding him, he's a man who takes his time, follows his instinct, and tries to identify hints about the assassin's profile as insistently as if they were tangible evidence. He's a man who can nonchalantly wonders across a busy street to test the waters and gather clues from the mere sight of playful kids or noisy vendors. He's not alone in this job, he has various subordinates (one is played by Lino Venture) whose mission can consist of walking in the screen and fishing potential suspects out of shoals of onlookers.

    I make his approach methodical but it isn't, Maigret built enough experience not to let himself distracted by bureaucracy, he can enter a house without a warrant considering it's up to the suspect to know the rules. He handles information as if they're no big deal, encouraging the suspect to go on without arousing any suspicion on his side, "may I see your wardrobe?" "did you have a key?" innocent questions whose purpose is to grab facts that can eventually be contradicted by subtle cross-examinations. There's something fascinating in the way Maigret handles the investigation, even when we suspect he's not fooled by the criminal's identity, let alone his psychological profile, he still acts with the potential killer as a simple civil servant concerned by red tape issues.

    There's no doubt in my mind that Gabin was born to play Maigret, the actor, in the second part of his career, had the quiet strength of the experienced man, who knows when to speak, when to listen and when to let his authoritarian voice erupt in a few occasions. Gabin was perfect to play characters who didn't need to rise their voice to obtain what they wanted and knew when to use it to finally get the confession, a man in total control of the situation even when it could get out of control. Gabin trusts his competence and knows that his instinct would only half fool him and half the way to the killer goes through the fatal weakness he'll be able to spot. He can tell from an anonymous letter that there's a big ego behind the assassin, one that would bite on the right bait.

    Basically, the film is composed of three acts: Maigret sets the trap that fulfills its purpose in extremis, then there's the investigation where Maigret asks questions between Montmartre and Les Rosiers and the film's climax consists of interrogation scenes that are as riveting and absorbing as the classic "Garde à Vue" by Claude Miller: Maigret in his office, Maigret outside and Maigret in the interrogation room. And at that point of the review I must mention that, in her earliest roles, Annie Girardot delivers a great subdued performance as a bourgeois woman bored by her effeminate husband Jean Desailly, equally superb as the Mama's boy who's been so pampered by her mother he developed a strong aversion to the female persuasion. Both actors would be nominated for the BAFTA Awards.

    There's a great study of French manhood in that early urban setting of the 50s that might echo the post-war atmosphere film noir. France was a country that was both defeated at the end of the war and yet had its honor saved by the great De Gaulle, a country whose citizens accepted the patronizing and infantilizing tone of Pétain telling them to surrender to Germany for their own good and yet where a handful of fighters decided to maintain the fight. It's one of France's tragic ironies to have invented the world 'Resistance' and be forever associated with 'surrendering'. In that confrontation between Maigret and the suspect, there's the collision of these two sides of French manhood, the old-school and principled citizen and the wimp who accepts defeat and yet doesn't have the guts to assume it. This is why you can't totally disconnect the film from a certain view of France and the way social classes can condition ethical choices, that the killer is highly educated says a lot about a certain defiance toward the upper class man.

    There's more in "Maigret" than a formulaic police movie: behind the investigation, there's a study on mores of its time, it's a rather disenchanting and heavy-loaded portrait of a moral decadence and the way men have lost their way, and when the film ends with that sudden rain, we feel as relieved as Maigret who chooses to walk alone on the street as if he felt even the police couldn't triumph over all the filth and evil that eat away the people and maybe a good rain will watch some of it.

    The first opus of the "Maigret" saga is a gem of French popular cinema... with an assumed populist undertone.
    Cristi_Ciopron

    Gabin!

    Among the less famous movies made by Gabin in his 50s,there are two I love most:Maigret Lays a Trap and The Baron of the Locks;the two have 4 things in common:Gabin,Delannoy,a Simenon adaptation,and Desailly in a supporting role.Maigret Lays a Trap serves also as an access,an introduction to the young Mrs. Girardot's charm and womanhood.

    Gabin seems in high spirits and very willing to act and to mold a splendor of an ample role:that of a mammoth police inspector.

    The atmosphere is very adequate and fitting.The pace is good,alert,nimbly done.This movie is concise,sharp,practical,each actor is cut out for the part.

    Mrs. Girardot was fresh,appetizing,lustful and extremely sexual,she shows finesse and goes far.(Delannoy tasted the womanhood and knew how to make such portraits of women:in The Baron of the Locks,there is the delicious Blanchette Brunoy.It is obvious he had a taste for portraying women.)

    "Maigret ..." takes pride in its quartet of actors:Gabin,Mrs. Girardot,Desailly (the director Delannoy would use Desailly again in another Simenon adaptation featuring Gabin:"The Baron of the Locks ") and Ventura in a bit,unimportant part.Hussenot is interesting as "Lagrume". Desailly plays an adipose,slippery, faint-hearted youngster with a psychotic air,a queer customer. Mrs. Girardot is very noticeable and lucent, lurid, luminous.

    Maigret tend Un Piège (1958) is the first of the Gabin's "Maigrets",and a relish.Gabin was 54 years when he made this role.Gabin should have made many more such "Maigret" movies,and less trucker roles.The crime movies were seldom honored with an acting so classy.

    Jean Delannoy was a very competent,efficient,very pragmatic, intelligent, capable director,and he made some very pleasing Simenon adaptations with Gabin.Delannoy showed up to be a clear-sighted director.(Contrary to what is said by a few,Gabin worked with many good directors,such as Renoir ,Carné,Duvivier,Ophuls,Becker,some of them now despised by nerds.)

    I don't seek the Gabin's "Maigrets" for the joys only Simenon's novels can offer;the flicks provide joys of their own.The novels' Maigret is a very different one;Gabin's is tough,brusque,authoritarian,sometimes irascible,gives everybody the ha-ha.This movies are on their own.

    Maigret was one of the best Gabin roles,and it is fair that all 3 "Maigret" movies are included in the list of Gabin's 17 "Incontournables". Gabin made one of the best policemen in cinema's history.
    8brogmiller

    Who's your favourite Maigret?

    This is the first of three films in which Georges Simenon's marvellous creation Jules Maigret is played by Jean Gabin. Rather plodding initially and resembling a standard 'policier', it takes on a new dimension and becomes totally absorbing with the appearance of Annie Girardot, Jean Desailly and Lucienne Bogaert all of whom are fantastic. In the title role Gabin's screen presence is undeniable but he is far more effective in his quieter moments than when called upon to emote. The ubiquitous Michel Audiard contributes dialogue which is always a plus whilst Louis Page is behind the camera as he was for the two subsequent films. Excellent score by Paul Misraki. At almost two hours it is a wee bit long for a whodunnit but one's interest is sustained by a brilliant cast and superb editing by Henri Taverna. Director Jean Delannoy has served Simenon well by concentrating on the psychological complexity of the characters.. The same director teamed up with Gabin the following year for 'Maigret et L'Affaire Saint-Fiacre' in which Gabin's portrayal is mellower and is ably supported by Valentine Tessier and Michel Auclair. The rest of the cast however is strictly 'B'. Five years were to elapse before 'Maigret voit Rouge' for director Gilles Grangier with whom Gabin made no less than twelve films! Despite some interesting 'types' this is basically one Maigret too far and nothing more than a mediocre gangster movie. We all have our favourite Maigret of course and mine happens to be Harry Bauer. Apparently Simenon himself favoured Rupert Davis!? Oh well, fools give you reasons, wise men never try'!
    9guy-bellinger

    The ultimate Maigret screen adaptation

    Alongside Molinaro's "La Mort de Belle", the best adaptation of a Simenon story for the big screen.

    Helmer Delannoy proves a past master at creating a stifling atmosphere ( night scenes, a hot stormy weather, a heady melody pervading the story ), managing to make the tension rise and swell regularly until it explodes in a triple climax ( Maurice's interrogation, the confrontation of Maurice's wife and mother, the final attempt to murder Mauricette ). So, when the rain finally starts falling in the final seconds of the movie, it does as much good to bulky, weary Gabin as it does to the tense viewer.

    Of course, the film benefits from a great interpretation : Jean Gabin gives life to his determined-shrewd-exhausted "commissaire" while Jean Desailly shines as the poor but dangerous Maurice whose boyhood has been prolonged by the misguided love of his mother ( Lucienne Bogaërt, perfect ). And Annie Girardot plays subtly and with welcome restraint the loving wife of a monster.

    Sure, Misraki's music and song are haunting and the camera-work is sleek, but what actually makes this film a major work is that the authors( R.M.Arlaud, Delannoy and Audiard ) are true to the spirit of Simenon : disillusioned with human nature but sympathetic with those who are its victims, however monstrous they may appear to society.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Underwent a digital 4K HDR Dolby Vision restoration in 2024 by the VDM laboratory.
    • Patzer
      During the shot in Maurin's apartment when Yvonne tells Maigret that her husband is getting dressed and they chat about his work, a dark smudge (presumably on the camera lens) is visible at the center top of the frame.
    • Zitate

      Inspector Jules Maigret: Wow, there IS grey matter working under these rollers.

    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Portrait souvenir: Georges Simenon, part 4: Maigret (1963)
    • Soundtracks
      Ça ne Sert à Rien
      Music by Paul Misraki

      Lyrics by André Hornez

      Performed by Paule Desjardins

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 5. September 1958 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsländer
      • Frankreich
      • Italien
    • Offizieller Standort
      • Newen (France)
    • Sprache
      • Französisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Inspector Maigret
    • Drehorte
      • Place-des-Vosges, Paris 4, Paris, Frankreich(place where the serial killer operates)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Intermondia Films
      • Jolly Film
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    Box Office

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    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 8.528 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 2.556 $
      • 22. Okt. 2017
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 8.528 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 59 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White

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