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IMDbPro

La maison du bourreau

Titre original : Hangman's House
  • 1928
  • Passed
  • 1h 11min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
592
MA NOTE
Victor McLaglen in La maison du bourreau (1928)
DramaRomanceThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langue"Citizen" Hogan, an exile Irish patriot, risks his life by returning to Ireland and helping a young couple."Citizen" Hogan, an exile Irish patriot, risks his life by returning to Ireland and helping a young couple."Citizen" Hogan, an exile Irish patriot, risks his life by returning to Ireland and helping a young couple.

  • Réalisation
    • John Ford
  • Scénario
    • Philip Klein
    • Marion Orth
    • Malcolm Stuart Boylan
  • Casting principal
    • June Collyer
    • Larry Kent
    • Victor McLaglen
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    592
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • John Ford
    • Scénario
      • Philip Klein
      • Marion Orth
      • Malcolm Stuart Boylan
    • Casting principal
      • June Collyer
      • Larry Kent
      • Victor McLaglen
    • 9avis d'utilisateurs
    • 7avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos7

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    Rôles principaux13

    Modifier
    June Collyer
    June Collyer
    • Connaught O'Brien
    Larry Kent
    Larry Kent
    • Dermot McDermot
    Victor McLaglen
    Victor McLaglen
    • Citizen Hogan
    Earle Foxe
    Earle Foxe
    • John D'Arcy
    Hobart Bosworth
    Hobart Bosworth
    • Lord Justice O'Brien
    Joseph Burke
    Joseph Burke
    • Neddy Joe - Dermot's Servant
    • (non crédité)
    Mike Donlin
    Mike Donlin
    • Racetrack Informant
    • (non crédité)
    Mary Gordon
    Mary Gordon
    • The Woman at Hogan's Hideout
    • (non crédité)
    Brian Desmond Hurst
    • Horse Race Spectator
    • (non crédité)
    Eric Mayne
    Eric Mayne
    • Colonel of Legionnaires
    • (non crédité)
    Jack Pennick
    Jack Pennick
    • Man Bringing Dermot to Hogan
    • (non crédité)
    Belle Stoddard
    • Anne McDermott
    • (non crédité)
    John Wayne
    John Wayne
    • Horse Race Spectator
    • (non crédité)
    • …
    • Réalisation
      • John Ford
    • Scénario
      • Philip Klein
      • Marion Orth
      • Malcolm Stuart Boylan
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs9

    6,6592
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    Avis à la une

    8davidmvining

    A Hidden Gem

    This is a hidden gem of a film from Ford's silent period. Much of Ford's output often feels somewhat erratic, with different narrative pieces introduced and never quite fitting together, but Hangman's House is a shockingly well put together film. At only 70 minutes, it feels stuffed with detail, but that detail never feels like a distraction here. Instead, everything works in tandem, revolving around everything else with a solid narrative core. It's got so much of what animated Ford (horse racing, Ireland, the underdog everyman against the traitorous outsider), and it ends up working wonderfully well together.

    In Algeria, in the French Foreign Legion, is an Irish man, Denis Hogan (Victor McLaglen) who receives news and immediately declares that he must go home to Ireland, even though he has a price on his head there. We do not learn the reasons for his return until much later, though. Back home, the elderly judge, Lord Justice O'Brien (Hobart Bosworth), the hangman's judge as he's called, is nearing death and trying to arrange for the advantageous match of his daughter, Connaught (June Collyer), at the same time. She's in love with the local Dermot McDermot (Larry Kent), but Father has his eyes on the wealthy socialite John D'Arcy (Earle Fox), who should be able to open doors for her future. Because he is dying, Conn gives into her father's demands and marries D'Arcy.

    Lord Justice O'Brien is haunted by the people he sent to the gallows, though. There's a wonderful little moment where O'Brien looks into the fire and sees flashbacks (including an uncredited John Wayne) of his victims. Beset by guilt, when Hogan appears outside his window in a hood, resembling Death to a certain degree, O'Brien has a heart attack and dies on the night of his daughter's wedding. Conn, though, is trapped in a loveless marriage with the unappealing D'Arcy while Dermot promises to be her friend no matter what.

    There's a big horserace in the county, and Conn has placed her own horse, The Bard, in the race. When the jockey mysteriously disappears, Dermot offers to ride for her, an offer she happily takes. However, D'Arcy fights the idea, having put all the money he could borrow on another horse (and presumably being responsible for the disappearance of the jockey). The race is the kind of well-filmed spectacle Ford demonstrated he could handle in The Shamrock Handicap with exciting jumps and falls as the horses race over fences and walls, ultimately leading to the expected outcome of Dermot winning.

    D'Arcy is broken, his dreams of fleeing Ireland with his winnings dashed, and Dermot and Conn begin to hope that they might be able to find a way to be together. Dermot flings his wallet at D'Arcy with a promise to kill him if Dermot ever sees him again, and Dermot goes to find Citizen Hogan, having heard that Hogan might know something about D'Arcy's past. Hogan, having been captured by the English soldiers at the race and escaped at the hands of his Irish loyalists, finally offers up his reasons for returning to Ireland. D'Arcy had married Hogan's sister in Paris, abandoning her, an action that led to her death.

    Without a plan on what to do in the future, Dermot returns Conn home, to her father's large house, and goes home himself. However, D'Arcy has come back and he's trying to sell everything in the house. Dermot and Hogan return for a final showdown, and it's the amalgamation of elements into an exciting conclusion that Ford had already become well-practiced at.

    Why did I enjoy this movie so much? Because despite its short runtime and rather large set of characters, elements of setting, and crisscrossing motives, everything ends up coming together in a satisfying way. Like a series of cogs fitting together perfectly to create the smooth motion of a single machine with a single purpose. Every character is there supporting the central story of justice being visited upon those who have escaped it. Every action is in support of it. And, more importantly, the characters and their motivations feel real, avoiding sensations of contrivance. It's a very good movie, a real hidden gem.
    Michael_Elliott

    Good Silent

    Hangman's House (1928)

    *** (out of 4)

    John Ford directed this melodrama about an infamous hangman judge who's on his death bed when he asks his daughter (June Collyer) not to marry the man she loves (Larry Kent) but instead marry a man (Earle Foxe) who isn't any good but carries a certain social flame. As it turns out, this man is responsible for the suicide of a woman who just happens to have a brother (Victor McLaglen) who sets out for revenge. Once again Ford perfectly captures the mood, feel and atmosphere of the Ireland settings and makes a very fast paced film. The movie is mainly melodrama but there's an added touch of what would eventually become known as Gothic Horror. The creepy house used in the film is something you'd expect to see in a Euro Horror film as it really becomes its own vital character. The visuals are great throughout and really add to the dread of the situations and the entire cast shines in their roles. Foxe makes for a great villain with Kent a likable and sympathetic character. McLaglen steals the show as the brother who will stop at nothing to get vengeance. The finale contains some great stunts with the climax clearly being the highlight of the film. There's a scene here, which Ford would later use in The Quiet Man and we also get a clear view of a young John Wayne during one scene.
    6Steffi_P

    "Such a little place, to be so greatly loved"

    Hangman's House is one of a number of sentimental slices of rural European life to come out of Fox Studios in the late-silent era. This time round the focus is on dear old Ireland, and so who better to produce and direct than renowned blarney-merchant John Ford? Ford's approach to this one is very uncluttered, in that there are none of the improvised comedy diversions that decorated (or bogged down) many of his features. This is perhaps not surprising, since the story and characters being as they are, Ford probably saw no need to inject any further twee "oirishness". Ford's directness is helpful, because the plot is a bit of a muddle as it is. It's not entirely clear whose story we are supposed to be following, as equal weight (albeit different emphasis) is given to three different arcs. Ford probably didn't regard this as a problem though – for him the main character is simply the Irish people, and he photographs each individual as if they were the protagonist.

    Ford's economy of expression is much in evidence. A typical Ford shot is the introductory one of Hobart Bosworth, he of the eponymous house. In the centre of the frame we see the man as he is now, elderly and frail. The portrait on the wall behind him shows us what he was, whereas the flames that underline the image hint symbolically at where he may soon end up. This is not to say Ford's shot compositions were overly complicated. For most of the picture he uses simple, delicate arrangements that focus us on the important elements. This is often achieved with soft-focus photography, which also adds to the sweet, romantic look of the images.

    One of the characteristics of the late-silent period is the freeing up of the camera, with pictures such as Sunrise having the lens whiz about all over the shop. By contrast Ford wisely limits himself in this respect, and there are only two significant camera moves in the whole of Hangman's House. The first is at the end of the opening scene, a version of the much-imitated pull-back-across-a-long-table shot that was originally done in 1925 Valentino vehicle The Eagle. This is mirrored towards the end with a dolly in on villainous Earle Fox. Besides these examples the camera is "invisible", in that it only moves to follow an actor or an action. Ford would maintain this pattern of camera movement throughout his career, throwing in just one or two noticeable moves per pictures to draw attention to a key moment.

    It's a pity the auteurists focused so much on Ford's "themes", because they draw attention away from his restrained and to-the-point command of cinematic technique. To be honest, there is far more going on on that front than there is in the story of Hangman's House, which is clichéd, unfocused and above all boring. Ford's tender shot compositions for the intimate scenes compensate for the so-so acting, and his imaginative coverage of the horse race provides us with a rousing mid-film high point. But pretty though the imagery may be, Ford's pictures of this period were not very interesting. He is one filmmaker whose style would be revitalised by the coming of sound.
    Single-Black-Male

    Working During the Summer Holidays

    Having worked as a 'grip' during his summer holidays between terms at the University of Southern California, John Wayne was given the opportunity to rub shoulders with John Ford in this film as an extra. When Wayne sustained an injury to his shoulder, Ford suggested to him to work full-time in films.
    7AlsExGal

    Maybe you have to be Irish to get this one entirely

    Citizen Hogan ( Victor McLaglen) is an Irish expatriate, wanted by the British, hiding out in the French Foreign Legion. He gets a message and says he must return to Ireland to kill somebody.

    From the title and what goes on during the first part of the film, I was thinking that he came back to kill Lord Justice O'Brien (Hobart Bosworth), the titular hangman but actually a judge. Maybe the judge sentenced a friend or relative to hang? And although Ford builds this judge up as a very bad guy, haunted by the people he sentenced to death, I can never see what exactly he did that was wrong in the line of duty considering capital punishment was routine at the time. He wasn't said to take bribes. He wasn't convicting anybody, just sentencing them. Would the townspeople like him to just let murderers go? Would they prefer they be paroled in their house, in the bedroom next to their teen daughter's room? Since the townspeople hate him so, the only thing I can figure is that because he is an Irishman cooperating with the British system of justice, they just consider everybody executed by said British as a martyr and thus the judge as a traitor, even if the people he hanged would wreak chaos on normal people if freed. But I digress.

    But the judge dies pretty quickly into the film, and yet Hogan hangs around, risking capture. So it turns out the judge was never his actual target, but the actual target is associated with the "Hangman's House".

    This seems like a warm up for The Quiet Man in several ways. The tormented lovers kept apart by family, the crowd cheering at a horse race, the odd superstitions of the people, and so on. Even some small bits of dialogue are the same as in The Quiet Man. The only rather laughable bit is that the villain looks SO MUCH like a villain, especially a silent era villain.

    This film is probably best remembered as having a bit part for John Wayne in it as he goes crashing through a fence at the end of the horse race, and you probably will not spot him unless you know he is there. But it is worth a look in its own right.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Production began in January 1928 and took seven weeks.
    • Gaffes
      When the horses jump over some of the apparently dry stone walls, their feet knock into some of them. The impact causes the obviously inauthentic walls to move forward and fall back again.
    • Citations

      Citizen Hogan: Aren't you the D'Arcy who just left Paris?

      John D'Arcy: [shakes his head] I've never been to Paris in my life.

      Citizen Hogan: [nods] You haven't been to Hell yet, either... have you?

    • Versions alternatives
      The version shown on the American Movie Classics channel was a Museum of Modern Art preservation print. It had an uncredited piano score and ran 71 minutes.
    • Connexions
      Referenced in Ethel & Ernest (2016)

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 mai 1928 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Hangman's House
    • Société de production
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 11 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Silent
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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    Victor McLaglen in La maison du bourreau (1928)
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    By what name was La maison du bourreau (1928) officially released in Canada in English?
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