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Midnight

  • 1934
  • Passed
  • 1h 16min
NOTE IMDb
5,5/10
1,3 k
MA NOTE
Humphrey Bogart, Sidney Fox, O.P. Heggie, Henry Hull, and Lynne Overman in Midnight (1934)
Film NoirCrimeDramaRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThe foreman of a jury asks questions that send a woman to the electric chair for a murder committed in the heat of passion. On the night of the execution, his actions come back to haunt him.The foreman of a jury asks questions that send a woman to the electric chair for a murder committed in the heat of passion. On the night of the execution, his actions come back to haunt him.The foreman of a jury asks questions that send a woman to the electric chair for a murder committed in the heat of passion. On the night of the execution, his actions come back to haunt him.

  • Réalisation
    • Chester Erskine
  • Scénario
    • Paul Sifton
    • Claire Sifton
    • Chester Erskine
  • Casting principal
    • Humphrey Bogart
    • Sidney Fox
    • O.P. Heggie
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,5/10
    1,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Chester Erskine
    • Scénario
      • Paul Sifton
      • Claire Sifton
      • Chester Erskine
    • Casting principal
      • Humphrey Bogart
      • Sidney Fox
      • O.P. Heggie
    • 47avis d'utilisateurs
    • 14avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Rôles principaux14

    Modifier
    Humphrey Bogart
    Humphrey Bogart
    • Gar Boni
    Sidney Fox
    Sidney Fox
    • Stella Weldon
    O.P. Heggie
    O.P. Heggie
    • Edward Weldon
    Henry Hull
    Henry Hull
    • Nolan
    Margaret Wycherly
    Margaret Wycherly
    • Mrs. Weldon
    Lynne Overman
    Lynne Overman
    • Joe Biggers
    • (as Lynn Overman)
    Katherine Wilson
    • Ada Biggers
    Richard Whorf
    Richard Whorf
    • Arthur Weldon
    Granville Bates
    Granville Bates
    • Henry McGrath
    Cora Witherspoon
    Cora Witherspoon
    • Elizabeth McGrath
    Moffat Johnston
    • Dist. Atty. Plunkett
    • (as Moffat Johnson)
    Henry O'Neill
    Henry O'Neill
    • Ingersoll
    • (as Henry O'Neil)
    Helen Flint
    Helen Flint
    • Ethel Saxton
    Charles Halton
    Charles Halton
    • Jury Member
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Chester Erskine
    • Scénario
      • Paul Sifton
      • Claire Sifton
      • Chester Erskine
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs47

    5,51.3K
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    Avis à la une

    6paparay

    Worth watching for more than just early Bogart

    I have recently watched this film again. This time I realized that there is a lot in the movie besides just seeing Bogart in one of his early films. This movie makes a very strong statement about capital punishment. Equally as strong is its statement on who you know if you want to beat a rap. The whole movie takes place during a few hours before the scheduled execution of a woman who killed her lover who was going to leave her. Except for the beginning court scenes, and prison scenes, and a couple of scenes where Bogart is in a room somewhere, and when he and Sidney Fox are in his car, the movie takes place at the home of the jury foreman who found the woman guilty. A news reporter gets into the house with a radio and a surprise at the end so that the public can witness what it's like for that foreman as the scheduled execution time approaches. What you may think is a surprise ending really isn't the end at all. Keep watching for the twist involving the district attorney who has his eye on the governorship. This film, like Bogart and Huston's Beat The Devil, is in the public domain.
    7AlsExGal

    A psychological philosophical and experimental film...

    ... which is very odd for its time.

    It opens with a woman testifying on her own behalf, talking about what led up to her killing her husband. She is a well dressed, what you would call "credible" looking 30 something woman, and it looks like maybe things are going to go her way, with it sounding like she was under terrible duress, just not wanting her husband to leave her. And then the jury foreman, Edward Weldon, asks a question that when answered by the accused, makes the entire thing suddenly sound premeditated. She is found guilty of first degree murder and sentenced to death. Meanwhile, watching the trial, is a gangster (Humphrey Bogart) and the foreman's daughter, Stella (Sidney Fox). They start up a romance.

    This is where things get odd. Apparently everybody is blaming the jury foreman for the woman's conviction, when he simply asked a question. The news media is blaming him. Even his own family is questioning what he did. The night of the execution, several months later, he is beginning to buckle under the pressure, but he says the law is the law, the same for everybody, that an execution is hard, but then so is murder. He talks about the D. A. being the best and most just D. A. the city has had for years. That same night, his daughter Stella is very upset that her gangster boyfriend is going to collect a "hard debt" and then take the train to Chicago, maybe leaving her forever. And strangely these two events - the woman's execution and Stella's hearbreak, intertwine.

    The film is one of the earliest mainstream films - made by Universal - I've seen to debate the morality and fair application of the death penalty. It also has lots to say about the power of suggestion, and what ambitious people will do to make sure their climb up the ladder is not impeded. It has lots of interesting intercuts and the cinematography will at times focus on what peoples' hands are doing as they are speaking, to reflect their mood.

    Yet it seems like lots of people don't care for this one. Maybe it is because it fell into the public domain and it was probably falsely advertised as "starring Humphrey Bogart" when, if there is any central figure, it is probably O. P. Heggie as the jury foreman. The fact that he has rather wild looking hair and resembles a thin version of the ghoul in Carnival of Souls doesn't help his sex appeal, if in fact dealers of VHS and DVD copies of this film were trading on that. Then look at the original lobby card - it has Humphrey Bogart and Sidney Fox in a romantic embrace. That and the title had to have misled 1934 audiences too.

    I'd recommend it for all of the reasons I've mentioned. Just don't expect Bogie to have lots of screen time. Also starring Lynn Overman as a very ungrateful son-in-law and Henry Hull as a lying yet pontificating reporter.
    7peter-cossey

    Early Bogart bit part

    This early Bogart movie is only available on DVD/video in a reissue print entitled "Call it Murder". This print lists Bogart above the title instead of 8th in the cast as in the original release, and was obviously resurrected to cash in on Bogart's post 1930's fame. He is adequate in a small part, but the film is a slow-moving filming of a 1930 play that is interesting enough as a moral melodrama, but also mercifully short. The interest lies in the sequences in the courtroom and death chamber, which eschew the stage-bound grouping, and ponderous delivery of the body of the film, and uses the camera in an imaginative and cinematic way. Worth a look as a 30's melodrama, but don't expect a Bogart movie.
    7lugonian

    Crime of Passion

    MIDNIGHT (Universal, 1934), directed by Chester Erskine, based on a stage play, is reproduced as such in this screen adaptation reportedly filmed and produced in New York City. Headed by Sidney Fox, in one of her final screen roles and last for Universal, she plays Stella, the daughter of Edward Weldon, a jury foreman (O. P. Heggie, the actor most famous today for his role as the blind hermit in THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN (1935)) at a trial where a woman, Ethel Saxon (Helen Flint) is accused of murdering a man who betrayed her. Because Weldon is solely responsible for the verdict that convicts Saxon to be later executed at midnight in the electric chair, his personal life changes dramatically. Weldon is not only hounded by reporters after the trial, particularly one named Nolan (Henry Hull, the future WEREWOLF OF London also in 1935) who manages to be a guest at his home on the night of Saxon's execution, but he must stand firm with his decision regardless. Stella, who had become acquainted with a man at the trial named Gar Boni (Humphrey Bogart), becomes interested in him, unaware that he is a gangster, but learns about him later on in the story when she notices that he carries a gun. When Gar Boni finds himself having to be forced to leave town, Stella wants to go away with him, but he refuses to let her do so, but agrees on meeting her one last time before he goes. On the very night of Ethel Saxon's execution, Stella and Gar Boni have a farewell meeting in his car. As the switch is being pulled on Saxon, a gun shoots off on Gar Boni. Returning home to her father with the gun in her hand, Stella admits to shooting Gar Boni, which puts the old man into a real predicament as to what to do. Should he stand by his own merits and have his own daughter arrested for the crime, or find a way to violate the law and shield her?

    Although the story premise is very interesting, especially the subject about a man who feels a murderer must pay the price, only to have his own daughter commit the same kind of crime of passion, MIDNIGHT fails to deliver mainly because of stiff, stagy production with not so convincing dialog. Under capable hands of a more suitable director, for instance, William Wyler, for example, MIDNIGHT might have worked as a tense and moving drama. Sidney Fox, who usually gives a satisfactory performance, seems to be the weakest link here, talking somewhat shaky at times for no reason. She's not very convincing, especially during her emotional scenes. Occasionally the camera shots moving at different angles keeps the pace moving, but not enough to hold one's interest at 73 minutes.

    Other capable members of the cast include Margaret Wycherly as Mrs. Weldon; future director Richard Wholf as Stella's brother, Arthur; Lynne Overman and Katherine Wilson as Joe and Ada Biggers, tenants of the Weldon household; Granville Bates, Cora Witherspoon, Henry O'Neill, and Moffatt Johnston as a district attorney who is called to the Weldon home to solve the mystery to Gar Boni's murder.

    To capitalize on the success of future film star Humphrey Bogart, MIDNIGHT was later reissued in 1946 as CALL IT MURDER with Bogey being given star billing, the very print available to video cassette and DVD. It's the former Blackhawk Video Company of Davenport, Iowa, that distributed the movie on videotape with it's original "Midnight" title, opening credits headed by Sidney Fox, O. P. Heggie and Henry Hull, with Bogart's name listed eighth in the cast, as initially presented in theaters in 1934.

    MIDNIGHT will never be listed in Hollywood's Top Ten Best list, but it's worth viewing for being an early screen appearance of future superstar Humphrey Bogart or a rediscovery of Sidney Fox, whose movie career (mostly at Universal) lasted only three years. Fox and Bogart had worked together earlier in THE BAD SISTER (1931), which not only became Fox's movie debut, but the future two-time Academy Award winning actress, Bette Davis. (***)
    5JoeytheBrit

    Midnight review

    As the execution of the woman he helped find guilty draws near, the jury foreman begins to question his decision. Chester Erskine's unusual examination of the impact a guilty decision has on a jury foreman and his family is earnest but dull. Sidney Fox is awful as the foreman's daughter, giving an increasingly overwrought performance that has the opposite effect on audience sympathies to that which is intended. Humphrey Bogart stands out in a small role, but that's probably just because he's Bogie.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Based on the flop play, Midnight (1930). Drama. Written by Claire Sifton and Paul Sifton. Directed by Philip Moeller. Guild Theatre: 29 Dec 1930- Feb 1931 (closing date unknown/48 performances). Cast: Maud Allan, Glenn Anders (as "Bob Nolan"), Harold Bolton, Zena Colaer, Josephine Hull (as "Mrs. Weldon"), William R. Kane, Jack La Rue (as "Gar Boni"), Tom H.A. Lewis, Harriet E. MacGibbon (as "Ada Biggers"), Clifford Odets (as "Arthur Weldon"), James Parker, Frederick Perry, Francis Pierlot (as "Richard McGrath"), Charles Powers, Samuel Rosen, Neal Stone, Robert Strange, Fred Sullivan, Royal Dana Tracey, Louis Veda (as "Photographer"), Harold Vermilyea (as "Joe Biggers"), Linda Watkins. Produced by The Theatre Guild.
    • Gaffes
      During Stella and Gar's first meeting in the court room, audible clicks can be heard between their line.
    • Citations

      [first lines]

      Ethel Saxon: You see, I loved him. I mean I loved him when... when he didn't love me anymore, day in and day out watching him get further and further away from me. I could see in his eyes when he looked at me... I could see he hated me, hated me because I needed him. Oh, I was so frightened, so mixed up. It's so horrible to see someone who's become part of you slipping away, slowly. To feel helpless and empty, lonely and frantic, wanting to do something, anything, anything to bring him back! To patch things up, to try to tie together the few remaining bits of happiness... and then, that awful day when he drew the money from the bank and I knew the end I'd been waiting for had come, that all my fears were realized, that he was going away. I went mad... he mustn't go away, he mustn't go! Anything to stop him, anything! That's all I wanted to do

      [starts to weep]

      Ethel Saxon: I didn't mean to kill him, I only meant to stop him, to stop him from going away.

    • Versions alternatives
      In the retitled version, "Call it Murder" Humphrey Bogart's billing is moved to above the title.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Le Psychopathe (1989)
    • Bandes originales
      Nola
      (uncredited)

      Music by Felix Arndt

      Played on the radio as Nolan is demonstrating the set to Joe.

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Midnight?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 7 mars 1934 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Latin
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Minuit
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Biograph Studios, Bronx, New York City, New York, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • All Star Productions
      • Guaranteed Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 1 000 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 16 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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