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L'auberge fantôme

Titre original : The Halfway House
  • 1944
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
1,4 k
MA NOTE
L'auberge fantôme (1944)
DramaFantasyHorrorMysterySci-Fi

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA group of travellers, all with something to hide in their past, take shelter from a storm in an old inn. The inn-keeper seems a little mysterious...A group of travellers, all with something to hide in their past, take shelter from a storm in an old inn. The inn-keeper seems a little mysterious...A group of travellers, all with something to hide in their past, take shelter from a storm in an old inn. The inn-keeper seems a little mysterious...

  • Réalisation
    • Basil Dearden
    • Alberto Cavalcanti
  • Scénario
    • Denis Ogden
    • Angus MacPhail
    • Diana Morgan
  • Casting principal
    • Mervyn Johns
    • Glynis Johns
    • Tom Walls
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    1,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Basil Dearden
      • Alberto Cavalcanti
    • Scénario
      • Denis Ogden
      • Angus MacPhail
      • Diana Morgan
    • Casting principal
      • Mervyn Johns
      • Glynis Johns
      • Tom Walls
    • 30avis d'utilisateurs
    • 9avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos15

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    Rôles principaux23

    Modifier
    Mervyn Johns
    Mervyn Johns
    • Rhys
    Glynis Johns
    Glynis Johns
    • Gwyneth - Rhys' Daughter
    Tom Walls
    Tom Walls
    • Captain Meadows
    Françoise Rosay
    Françoise Rosay
    • Alice Meadows
    • (as Francoise Rosay)
    Esmond Knight
    Esmond Knight
    • David Davies
    Guy Middleton
    Guy Middleton
    • Captain Fortescue
    Alfred Drayton
    Alfred Drayton
    • William Oakley
    Valerie White
    Valerie White
    • Jill French
    Richard Bird
    • Squadron Leader Richard French
    Sally Ann Howes
    Sally Ann Howes
    • Joanna French - Richard and Jill's Daughter
    Philippa Hiatt
    • Margaret
    Pat McGrath
    • Terence
    C.V. France
    C.V. France
    • Mr. Truscott - Solicitor
    Roland Pertwee
    Roland Pertwee
    • Prison Governor
    Eliot Makeham
    Eliot Makeham
    • George - Davies' Valet
    John Boxer
    • The Doctor
    Rachel Thomas
    • Miss Morgan - the Landlady
    Joss Ambler
    Joss Ambler
    • Pinsent
    • Réalisation
      • Basil Dearden
      • Alberto Cavalcanti
    • Scénario
      • Denis Ogden
      • Angus MacPhail
      • Diana Morgan
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs30

    6,61.3K
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    Avis à la une

    8hitchcockthelegend

    The end or the beginning?

    Britain, World War II.

    A symphony conductor who has a few months to live.

    A war profiteer.

    A husband and wife coming to the end of their marriage, their daughter desperate to keep them together.

    An elderly couple conflicted over the death of their son in the line of duty.

    All of them wind up together at the Halfway House, a beautiful, yet strange Welsh country inn. Their hosts are Rhys and Gwyneth, the place appears to be stuck in a time warp, all the visitors here are here for a reason, a reason that will changed all their respective lives for ever.

    Based on the Denis Ogden play, The Halfway House is brought to us from the wonderful Ealing Studios, it is, all things considered, an under seen gem from that particular Studio. There really is no great surprises as regards how the film unfolds, the makers, by way of Mervyn Johns first appearance, are not trying to bluff the viewer in any way, this is a halfway house after all. What drives the picture on is the unflinching stubbornness of the characters, despite the overwhelming evidence available to them, they all refuse to accept the mysterious hammer hitting them over the head. This makes the film a highly enjoyable piece, the mixture of comedy and mystery going hand in hand with it's fantasy led core, come the final reel the viewers should be in a state of warmth because in my honest opinion the film has undoubtedly done its job.

    It's one of those films that wouldn't be out of place on Rod Serling's Twilight Zone show that aired some 15 years later, so enjoy the fantasy and the mystery unfolding, The Halfway House is a lovely little picture. 8/10
    8planktonrules

    House of the Dead....it isn't just a video game!

    "The Halfway House" is one of the strangest films from the 1940s I can recall having seen. This is not a bad thing, as it abounds with originality and is well worth seeing.

    The story is set during WWII and the film consists of many stories and characters who all share one thing in common...they all have gone to the same quaint Welsh inn to take their vacations. But most of these people are carrying burdens of one sort or another...such as broken marriages, sons killed in the war, ill health and much more. What none of them realize for some time is that this house is somehow back in time...and it's somehow a year earlier! Why and what all this means, you'll just have to see for yourself.

    The film has exceptional writing and very nice acting. Stick with it, as it does start slowly and a few of the characters are at first rather annoying.
    8Spondonman

    Well worth a visit

    This was the first Ealing film I saw, knowing it was an Ealing film, because it was shown as part of a long Ealing film series on UK BBC2 from May 1977. I thoroughly enjoyed it, although then at 18 years old the wartime propaganda element of it paradoxically irritated much more than it does forty years later. Is it blood running cooler or a more resigned luxury of perspective in operation? I feel I have to repeatedly point out with British films made in wartime that present day allowances must be made: if the people in this movie had lost the war they were fighting I wouldn't be here writing this nor you reading it. But if the people who made the film could come back would they think their efforts then were worthwhile is another matter though… Every week during that TV series my admiration and awe grew until I realised that British cinema would never again match the art and craft displayed by Ealing at their peak in the '40's and '50's; and by now I've watched some of their classics over a dozen times. However I find that I've seen The Halfway House for only the fourth time - maybe it was meant to be revisited only once in a while, like the ghostly inn itself.

    A group of relatively unhappy temporal travellers find themselves drawn to and ensconced in a weird country inn in Wales complete with an unsettling landlord and his daughter who cast no shadows but end up casting large ones over the guests (and us), and for their own good. They were all fighting their own battles and problems but I admit! the biggest problem was that mine host Mervyn Johns was so firmly robotic in his anti-Nazi propaganda and posturing that his imperiousness ultimately became unconvincing and tiresome. It's a very gentle ghost story but at least it wasn't a musical like Brigadoon. Rather moralistic too and there's an array of familiar faces in here to back it all up: Tom Walls, more taciturn now; Alfred Drayton, Joss Ambler and rakish Guy Middleton, all as sharp as ever; Esmond Knight, in rural Wales one year before he memorably played a village idiot and a psycho in rural England; Sally Ann Howes, so posh you realise what today's inclusive society has lost or gained depending on your own prejudices. Sure that's not Wylie Watson playing one of the Welsh porters? There's plenty of beautiful atmospheric photography amid some lovely country and excellent sets. Favourite bits: Johns in a remarkably underplayed scene of mirror-trickery and his daughter Glynnis – like Peter Pan, in a clever for the time scene of shadow-trickery; the extended dinner conversation.

    There's a few trite moments mainly involving the belief in the afterlife and the acting is rather stagey at the best of times but all in all it's still great escapist entertainment, which has imho er withstood the test of Time. And to hopefully echo back to the cast Glynnis's gentle farewell: good night to you all, see you in the morning.
    7damiller85

    Importance of spiritualism in war time

    I guess most reviewers are too young to remember the mind set of people at home during war. This film IMO reflects a very present concern of many people in coming to terms with grief. Spiritualism had always been important from the mid 19th century with a falling off towards the end of the century. But with a major resurgence in 1914 and WW1. The young men of whole communities in England died because of recruiting ploys like the "Pals Brigades". With this in mind, the central theme of this 1944 film (fifth year of WW2 for England) will have struck chords with many in the audience. Only 20 years separated the two WWs - not long enough to forget.

    Spiritualism was never in "conflict" with science. Many 19th C. scientists studied spiritualism with the same avidity as electricity or radio waves. A couple of years ago, I went along with a friend to a spiritualist meeting in an English provincial town. I was surprised by some of what I saw and heard but most striking was the attempt by the spiritualist to give comfort to the people there. A comfort that was gratefully received.

    I am not advocating spiritualism just as I would not advocate the use of placebos to the exclusion of doctors. But I have lived long enough in many countries and cultures to have experienced some pretty strange things. Keeping open a little window of uncertainty and doubt in a PC world where many know all the answers.

    This tongue-in-cheek film is interesting from a number of aspects. The spiv (still reviled in my youth in England), the war-split couple, the lost child, the spiritualist seeking solace... They may seem quaint today but will have struck chords with many in the audience which is what cinema is all about.

    Even the RAF father of one of the reviewers may have been unhappy with the film because it did not delve deeply enough into what was an everyday reality for him and his colleagues. Death for him was just around the corner, very real, and no theatrical imitation could possibly approach that reality.

    This film taught me a few things and reinforced other things about what it was like for my parents generation.
    7BA_Harrison

    Ealing with feeling.

    Ealing Studio's The Halfway House is a heartwarming supernatural wartime parable intended to raise morale in its blitzed British audience with the message that, despite such troubled times, the United Kingdom shall prevail, whilst at the same time lifting the spirits of the bereaved by suggesting that death isn't the end. There's also time to bash those who remain neutral during wartime or who try to profit from the conflict.

    These messages are hammered home rather heavily, but do not stop the movie from being an enjoyable time; if anything, the film's status as wartime propaganda only makes it more interesting. Of course, a cracking cast doesn't hurt, and this one's got great performances to spare: Mervyn Johns plays Rhys, the ghostly landlord of the titular inn, and his real-life daughter Glynis plays his on-screen daughter Gwyneth (whose husky Welsh lilt is particularly appealing). Support is given by a range of reliable character actors, including Tom Walls and Françoise Rosay as a couple who are struggling with the loss of their son, Esmond Knight as terminally ill conductor David Davies, Guy Middleton and Alfred Drayton as a couple of racketeers, and Valerie White and Richard Bird as an estranged couple whose daughter (played by a young and very plummy Sally Ann Howes ) tries to get her parents back together.

    Before the halfway mark of The Halfway House, I had guessed that the visitors to the inn were dead (victims of an air raid), but I was wrong, and glad to be so. Instead of taking this trite route, the film treads another path, with a Twilight Zone-style time twister plot and an ending that sees each person finding redemption and leaving with hope in their hearts. It's the kind of feel-good finalé that makes the film ideal for a rainy Sunday afternoon.

    6.5 out of 10, rounded up to 7 for lovely Glynis.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Although it is nominally based on the unsuccessful 1940 play "The Peaceful Inn" (which makes no mention of World War II), this film is chiefly inspired by a real incident of the war which had attracted some attention at the time. The Welsh village of Cwmbach had only one bomb dropped on it by the Luftwaffe during the entire course of the war; it fell on a local inn and killed the landlord and his daughter (no-one else). It has never been satisfactorily explained why this incident should have occurred. It had not been part of an air raid; there were none in this remote rural area.
    • Gaffes
      The action takes place on 21 June 1943 exactly one year after the inn was destroyed on the same day Tobruk fell. The calendar in the ghostly inn shows 21 June 1942 as a Thursday. In fact 21 June 1942 was a Sunday.
    • Crédits fous
      Opening credits prologue: CARDIFF
    • Connexions
      Remade as The Peaceful Inn (1957)
    • Bandes originales
      Die Zauberflöte
      ("The Magic Flute")(uncredited)

      composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

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    FAQ13

    • How long is The Halfway House?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 février 1952 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Ghostly Inn
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Barlynch Farm/St Nicholas' Priory, Barlynch, Dulverton, Somerset, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Halfway House)
    • Société de production
      • Ealing Studios
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 35 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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