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Crime passionnel

Titre original : Fallen Angel
  • 1945
  • Approved
  • 1h 38min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
7 k
MA NOTE
Dana Andrews, Linda Darnell, and Alice Faye in Crime passionnel (1945)
Trailer for this black and white, dramatic classic
Lire trailer2:26
1 Video
99+ photos
CriminalitéMystèreRomanceFilm noir

Un escroc habile, qui cherche à gagner de l'argent, arrive dans une petite ville, mais il obtient bientôt plus que ce qu'il attendait.Un escroc habile, qui cherche à gagner de l'argent, arrive dans une petite ville, mais il obtient bientôt plus que ce qu'il attendait.Un escroc habile, qui cherche à gagner de l'argent, arrive dans une petite ville, mais il obtient bientôt plus que ce qu'il attendait.

  • Réalisation
    • Otto Preminger
  • Scénario
    • Harry Kleiner
    • Marty Holland
  • Casting principal
    • Alice Faye
    • Dana Andrews
    • Linda Darnell
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,0/10
    7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Otto Preminger
    • Scénario
      • Harry Kleiner
      • Marty Holland
    • Casting principal
      • Alice Faye
      • Dana Andrews
      • Linda Darnell
    • 109avis d'utilisateurs
    • 35avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 3 victoires au total

    Vidéos1

    Fallen Angel (1945)
    Trailer 2:26
    Fallen Angel (1945)

    Photos144

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 137
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux41

    Modifier
    Alice Faye
    Alice Faye
    • June Mills
    Dana Andrews
    Dana Andrews
    • Eric Stanton
    Linda Darnell
    Linda Darnell
    • Stella
    Charles Bickford
    Charles Bickford
    • Mark Judd
    Anne Revere
    Anne Revere
    • Clara Mills
    Bruce Cabot
    Bruce Cabot
    • Dave Atkins
    John Carradine
    John Carradine
    • Professor Madley
    Percy Kilbride
    Percy Kilbride
    • Pop
    Dorothy Adams
    Dorothy Adams
    • Stella's Neighbor
    • (non crédité)
    Robert Adler
    Robert Adler
    • Coroner at Murder Scene
    • (non crédité)
    Herbert Ashley
    Herbert Ashley
    • Reporter
    • (non crédité)
    Matthew 'Stymie' Beard
    Matthew 'Stymie' Beard
    • Shoeshine Boy
    • (non crédité)
    Betty Boyd
    Betty Boyd
    • Bank Clerk
    • (non crédité)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Man in Drug Store
    • (non crédité)
    Paul E. Burns
    Paul E. Burns
    • News Vendor
    • (non crédité)
    Chick Collins
    • 2nd Bus Driver
    • (non crédité)
    Jimmy Conlin
    Jimmy Conlin
    • Walton Hotel Clerk
    • (non crédité)
    Franklyn Farnum
    Franklyn Farnum
    • Man Leaving Drugstore
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Otto Preminger
    • Scénario
      • Harry Kleiner
      • Marty Holland
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs109

    7,07K
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    Avis à la une

    9Piafredux

    Dark Lustrous Gem

    Sure, 'Fallen Angel's' plot is full of holes and improbabilities - but what noir isn't full of them?! Indeed much of the appeal and frisson of the genre stems from its tales' and characters' nightmarish, inexplicable irrationality.

    The almost always underrated Dana Andrews is superb here in a brilliantly understated performance: by posture, tilt of head, and deft deployment of his eyes he communicates more than most actors manage to tell with their whole scenery-chewing bodies; and Alice Faye kept me guessing: was her June the "still water runs deep" character whodunit? Most of all there's 'Fallen Angel's peerless camera-work and direction that raise it a notch or two above the rather overrated 'Laura' - whose plot sometimes drags and which is chiefly rescued by the literate, finicky presence of Clifton Webb; and Gene Tierney's mannered, diffident, and albeit mysterious Laura isn't half the hard-boiled noir femme fatale that Linda Darnell's Stella is in 'Fallen Angel.' There's another lovely, understated effort here from Bruce Cabot and still another from Percy Kilbride; but in the supporting cast Anne Revere stands out for moving the plot along, for creating tangible suspense, and for two solid moments of palpable nape-prickling foreboding.

    'Fallen Angel' is just one of the most underrated noirs. Period.

    Just one question I'd like to put: when Dana Andrews enters the hotel auditorium during the spook show, is the blonde woman, seated on the aisle one row behind the brunette (Adele Jergens, uncredited) woman Andrews asks to shift over, his future 'The Best Years Of Our Lives' co-star Virginia Mayo? She sure looks like Mayo.

    By the way, the recent 'Fallen Angel' DVD release commentary track by noir maven Eddie Muller is gracefully enhanced by his pairing with with Dana Andrews' daughter Susan Andrews.
    7hitchcockthelegend

    Then love alone can make the fallen angel rise.

    Fallen Angel is directed by Otto Preminger, with cinematography by Joseph LaShelle, who also worked with Preminger on the film Laura the year before. The film stars Alice Faye, Dana Andrews, Linda Darnell & Charles Bickford. Seen as something of a lesser entry in film noir and on Preminger's CV (he claimed to not even remembering the film when quizzed about it once!), the piece is famous for being the last film Faye made as a major Hollywood actress. Disappointed at how studio boss Darryl F. Zanuck and Preminger cut her role out of the picture (they were all about Darnell), Faye left the studio the day after a preview screening, and did not make another film for 16 years.

    The plot sees Andrews as press agent Eric Stanton, who down on his luck gets turfed off the bus some 150 miles from San Francisco and finds that he is in the small coastal town of Walton. Here he meets sultry waitress Stella (Darnell) and frumpy recluse June (Faye). The former he is very attracted too, so is everybody else it seems, the latter has just come into a lot of inheritance money, something else that catches Eric's eye. Pretty soon his life will be surrounded by love, infatuation, jealousy and worst of all - murder.

    More a mystery whodunit than an overtly dark venture into the realm of film noir, Fallen Angel is still a tidy and atmospheric movie. One where we can never be fully sure everything is as it at first seems. Especially the three main protagonists, where Preminger, in spite of not remembering doing so, misdirects the audience about the character's make ups. This greatly aids the whodunit structure where the killer is well disguised until the end reveal. Its also nicely shot by LaShelle, where the lighting is key for scenes involving the more vixen like Darnell and the more homely Faye, the difference, and what it says, is quite striking. It be a nice narrative line to follow on revisits to the film.

    The acting is safe, with Darnell leaving the red blooded men amongst us happy and wanting more. And in spite of some uneven threading of the plot in the last quarter, the end is a triumph and a genuine surprise. 7/10

    Footnote: The source novel the movie was adapted from was written by Marty Holland. Also the author of "The File on Thelma Jordan" (1949), Marty was actually a she named Mary, of who little or nothing else is known about because after 1949 she upped and vanished never to be heard of again!
    7csteidler

    Dark tale of deception and disappointment

    Drifter Dana Andrews hops off a bus on a lonely night in a little coastal town. He walks into a diner called Pop's and makes himself at home. It's not long before Andrews encounters two women:

    Sultry Linda Darnell is Stella, a waitress at Pop's. She is hot stuff--every man who meets her instantly falls in love. Andrews catches Stella's attention pretty easily but she's not interested in a man with only one dollar in his pocket. He tells her he knows where he can get $12,500--and starts hanging around...

    Prim Alice Faye, who lives with her sister in a large house that their father has left them. Andrews has discovered that Faye and sister share a $25,000 estate just waiting to be cashed in. He befriends and pursues her, planning to marry her, grab her money, and run off with Darnell.

    Dana Andrews is kind of a rat in this story. The men he meets at Pop's are equally unsavory: Salesman Bruce Cabot, who seems to be Stella's current boyfriend; former policeman Charles Bickford, crotchety and vaguely menacing; and Pop himself, Percy Kilbride, who is even more obsessed with Stella than everybody else.

    Darnell is outstanding as Stella, and it helps that she gets the best close ups and dialog. Alice Faye, on the other hand, has a role that is just not convincing....why does she fall for such an obvious crook as Andrews? We just don't know. (The theory that studio brass insisted on boosting Darnell's role at Faye's expense seems to make sense, though--if Faye's part was cut way down, no wonder she seems like such a dolt.)

    Andrews gives a good performance as the scheming, dreaming, irresistible drifter...his sometimes-despicable character is indeed almost sympathetic. Anne Revere has a small but important role as Faye's not-so-gullible sister.

    The plot includes not only Andrews's wicked plans but other characters' jealous schemes as well, leading up to an eventual murder. The picture's pace is deliberate but never boring; it seems like no matter which combination of characters is on screen, we are watching them do their best to deceive and dissemble.

    Not completely satisfying but definitely worthwhile, especially for the beautiful photography and Darnell's breezy command of all these men's emotions.
    7bmacv

    Preminger's follow-up to Laura quite interesting if flawed

    Otto Preminger rarely gets credit for being one of the founding fathers of film noir; in addition to this film, there's of course Laura, and Angel Face, Where the Sidewalk Ends, the Thirteenth Letter, and other films with a heavy noir influence (Man with the Golden Arm). Fallen Angel's least interesting aspect (interestingly) is its murder plot. The tainted, ambiguous relationships that Dana Andrews forges when he drifts into a California coastal village make this film a dark study in romantic pathology. It also features Linda Darnell at her most sultry and mercenary; Alice Faye (her only appearance, I think, in the noir cycle); John Carradine; Charles Bickford (as a policeman with a past); Ann Revere (whom most of us think of as a tenement mom to John Garfield); and even Percy Kilbride before his Pa Kettle days. Andrews' very layered tension between rich good gal Faye and gold-digging bad girl Darnell keeps the viewer off balance all the way through.
    7ilprofessore-1

    Preminger: Con-man or Artiste?

    Those who wish to place Otto Preminger in the pantheon of great film auteurs can certainly point to this stylish film as a splendid example of the director's talent at its prime during his Twentieth Century Fox contract years before he became famous as the self-promoting independent director/producer of controversial, censorship-busting films. Back in 1945, however, he had the good fortune to be surrounded by many of the best technicians Daryl Zanuck had hired --foremost among them here, the staff cinematographer Joe LaShelle (Oscar for "Laura") whose shadowy lighting and inventive long moving camera takes add enormously to the "noir" atmosphere of this film. As always, there is no way to tell whether LaShelle or Preminger came up with these unusual images, but they are exceptionally effective.bWhat's more, the film is perfectly cast down to the smallest role: Linda Darnell is particularly effective as the slutty tough girl who knows what she wants; and middle-aged Alice Faye, having put on a little weight since her Don Ameche musical days, looks and acts exactly like a lonely and desperate small-town woman who can't help loving the wrong man. Unfortunately, the screenplay has even more holes in it than the average swiss-cheese film noir of its day. Andrews enters the scene as an obvious drifter and con man and does nothing from then on to change anyone's opinion of him. Despite his lack of money and sleaziness, we are asked to believe that no woman, however pious or promiscuous, can resist him. If you are willing to suspend lots and lots of disbelief, this film has many wonderful atmospheric moments expertedly staged by the Viennese director Today, lots of people think of Preminger as the consummate cinematic con-artist. In this film, for once, the artist outweighed the con.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      According to Wade Williams in Alice Faye: The Star Next Door (1996), when Alice Faye saw a rough cut of the film and realized that Otto Preminger's editing had diminished the impact of her performance in favor of newcomer Linda Darnell, she got up from the screening, drove off the 20th Century Fox lot, threw her dressing room key to the security guard and vowed never to work for the studio again.
    • Gaffes
      Among the works listed on the church reader board for June Mills's upcoming organ recital are a "Stabat Mater" by Beethoven and a "Requiem" by Brahms. Beethoven never wrote a 'Stabat Mater', and the only 'Requiem' by Brahms is a massive choral work, highly unlikely to be played as an organ solo.
    • Citations

      June Mills: I need you, Eric.

      Eric Stanton: [sarcastically] You need me, right.

      June Mills: You're my husband, and I'm your wife.

      Eric Stanton: Right out of a book, again.

      June Mills: Yes, out of a book: "We were born to tread the earth as angels, to seek out heaven this side of the sky. But they who race above shall stumble in the dark, and fall from grace."

      Eric Stanton: Go on. Sounds good.

      June Mills: "Then love alone can make the fallen angel rise. For only two together can enter Paradise."

    • Crédits fous
      The opening credits appear on the screen as a series of road signs seen through the windshield of a bus driving at night time.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Biography: Linda Darnell: Hollywood's Fallen Angel (1999)
    • Bandes originales
      Slowly
      Music by David Raksin

      Lyrics by Kermit Goell

      Sung by Dick Haymes (uncredited)

      [Continually played on the jukebox at Pop's]

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Fallen Angel?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 5 octobre 1949 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • ¿Ángel o diablo?
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Watson Drug Store - 116 E. Chapman Avenue, Orange, Californie, États-Unis(June stops at a Rexall drug store)
    • Société de production
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 1 075 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 38min(98 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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