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IMDbPro

Le masque de Dijon

Titre original : The Mask of Diijon
  • 1946
  • Approved
  • 1h 13min
NOTE IMDb
5,6/10
296
MA NOTE
Erich von Stroheim and Jeanne Bates in Le masque de Dijon (1946)
Film noirDrameHorreurMystère

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA stage illusionist's comeback attempt results in his humiliation. He plots to revenge himself by hypnotizing people into committing murders for him.A stage illusionist's comeback attempt results in his humiliation. He plots to revenge himself by hypnotizing people into committing murders for him.A stage illusionist's comeback attempt results in his humiliation. He plots to revenge himself by hypnotizing people into committing murders for him.

  • Réalisation
    • Lew Landers
  • Scénario
    • Arthur St. Claire
    • Griffin Jay
  • Casting principal
    • Erich von Stroheim
    • Jeanne Bates
    • William Wright
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,6/10
    296
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Lew Landers
    • Scénario
      • Arthur St. Claire
      • Griffin Jay
    • Casting principal
      • Erich von Stroheim
      • Jeanne Bates
      • William Wright
    • 13avis d'utilisateurs
    • 15avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos4

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux13

    Modifier
    Erich von Stroheim
    Erich von Stroheim
    • Diijon
    • (as Erich Von Stroheim)
    Jeanne Bates
    Jeanne Bates
    • Victoria
    William Wright
    William Wright
    • Tony Holiday
    Denise Vernac
    • Denise
    Edward Van Sloan
    Edward Van Sloan
    • Sheffield
    Hope Landin
    Hope Landin
    • Mrs. McGaffey
    Mauritz Hugo
    Mauritz Hugo
    • Danton
    Shimen Ruskin
    Shimen Ruskin
    • Guzzo
    Antonio Filauri
    • Alex
    • (as Antonio Filauiri)
    George Chandler
    George Chandler
    • Diner Counterman
    • (non crédité)
    Roy Darmour
    • Mark Lindsay
    • (non crédité)
    Robert Malcolm
    Robert Malcolm
    • Fleming
    • (non crédité)
    Anthony Warde
    Anthony Warde
    • Hold-up Man
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Lew Landers
    • Scénario
      • Arthur St. Claire
      • Griffin Jay
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs13

    5,6296
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    4
    5
    6
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    8
    9
    10

    Avis à la une

    6BA_Harrison

    I mustard-mit - I quite enjoyed this one.

    World famous stage magician Diijon (Erich Von Stroheim) has retired, having performed the greatest trick of his career: getting babe Victoria (Jeanne Bates) to marry him. Diijon now dedicates his time to studying the power of suggestion and hypnotism, but treats his wife like dirt, which leads to the poor woman leaving, becoming a singer and teaming up with dashing musician Tony Holiday (William Wright).

    Consumed with jealousy, and having finally perfected his powers of mind control (testing his ability by disarming a stick-up artist and commanding a man to commit suicide), Diijon hypnotises Vickie into shooting Tony in front of an audience at the Romany Gardens restaurant.

    A poverty-row B-movie from PRC, The Mask of Diijon is a rather routine potboiler lifted somewhat by a commanding performance by Von Stroheim, who lives up to his nickname 'The Man You Loved to Hate': Diijon is dour, cruel, menacing and thoroughly unlikeable, which makes the film's finalé, in which the miserable mesmerising magician meets a grisly fate, suitably satisfying.

    5.5/10, rounded up to 6 for IMDb.
    4oldblackandwhite

    Cheap Production, Lurid Script Mask Von Stroheim's Talent

    The year 1946 was one of the best for great movies, giving us such winners as The Best Years of Our Lives, The Strange Loves of Martha Ivers, and Canyon Passage. Unfortunately The Mask of Diijon was not one of these.

    Bizarre actor-director Eric Von Stroheim had his triumphs in a long career, which dated back to the early silent era -- as a director, Foolish Wives (1922), The Merry Widow (1925) -- as an actor, The Grand Illusion (1937), Sunset Blvd. (1950). Unfortunately The Mask of Diijon was not one of these.

    Showing up in Hollywood just before World War I, Stroheim excelled playing cruel German officers with his trademarked shaved head and monocle. He passed himself off as an Austrian aristocrat and a military expert, claiming he had served as an officer in an elite cavalry regiment. In reality he was from a respectable Jewish lower middle class family, and the closest he got to the cavalry was a brief stint as a mounted mail carrier. Never mind, the self-made legend was born, and it stuck to him all his life. He was billed as "the Hun" and "the man you love to hate." His career as a director was over by the late twenties. After several expensive flops, studio bosses were tired of his extravagant ways and his egotistical, abrasive personality. He continued on as an actor though, on occasion rising out of mediocrity with such as The Grand Illusion (1937) and Five Graves to Cairo (1943), in the latter of which he played German Field Marshal Erwin Rommel!

    The Mask of Diijon is a long way down from those days, possibly Stroheim's darkest pit with the light of Sunset Blvd four years distant. This is a very cheap production. No-name actors, except for "the Hun", cheap sets, bad lighting, and awful script. The use of many dark scenes that some people may mistake for arty noir style is obviously just the result of not wanting to spend the dough for bright lights. Murky was the word all the way through. The acting was uninspired but not terrible, especially considering the cast got maybe 20 seconds per scene to rehearse in a budget-minded number like this. The story was the real killer though. Disturbed, paranoid magician uses hypnotism to get innocent victims to do his will, including suicide and murder. His hokey method of hypnotizing these clucks is simply reflecting off a shiny lighter into their eyes and mumbling something like, "You vill do vatefer I say!" And get this -- he learns this evil, occult skill simply by reading some books with self-help type titles something like How to Control People with Your Mind. Puleazee!!! If it were that easy to hypnotize people, I would have my grouchy old wife packed and down the road tonight, and by tomorrow night I would have a half-dozen young babes cavorting about my house! Come to think of it, I would have to hypnotize myself into being able to cavort. Never mind.

    There were a few good moments in The Mask of Diijon, but I found myself continually praying the 70 minutes would finally drag to an end (I'm one of those masochist types who can't just turn one off). This movie is a stinker -- only for Von Stroheim devotees or desperate insomniacs.
    6Bunuel1976

    THE MASK OF DIIJON (Lew Landers, 1946) **1/2

    Erich von Stroheim's acting career often saw him playing some kind of variety-act performer: in THE GREAT GABBO (1929), which I own but have yet to watch, he was a ventriloquist; in THE GREAT FLAMARION (1945), an expert marksman; and here, as in the French-made L'ALIBI (1937; which I have now acquired), he dabbles in mind-reading (though, in this case, he starts out as a magician who 'trips up' in front of an unforgiving audience and is humiliated – to the consternation of his heavy-set promoter, who has no qualms about receiving guests at home while slumped on a bed in his tank top undershirt!). Incidentally, most sources give the film's title as THE MASK OF DIJON, so that I was surprised to notice the extra "i" in the credits! While the script makes no particular exertion on the star's immense talent, his commanding presence and accented delivery of lines is more than enough for him to create a memorable character nonetheless (making good the publicists' dubbing of the former auteur as "The Man You Love To Hate"!); interestingly, just as he had been flanked by Dwight Frye in THE CRIME OF DR. CRESPI (1935), this time around Edward van Sloan is on hand to evoke that distinct Universal Horror flavor (the director having previously helmed THE RAVEN [1935] for that studio, despite the film under review itself bearing the low-rent PRC logo)! The one other strong point here, in fact, is the atmosphere (aided by alternately odd and menacing camera angles, expressive night-time lighting and even fast cuts during an especially tense and paranoid moment for Stroheim's character). While the remaining supporting cast is weak – fatally, the young leads whose innocuous romance sends the unbalanced yet egomaniacal protagonist off the deep end – it does include Denise Vernac, the star's current real-life partner, as another down-on-her-luck entertainer. Throughout, Stroheim hypnotizes a number of people – among them driving Vernac's associate/husband to suicide and a stick-up man at a diner who immediately returns the dough to the befuddled proprietor – but his efforts to dispose of his amorous rival (again, and much like in the afore-mentioned CRESPI!) ends in disaster, and death for himself…here meted out in unforgettable, and most ironic (given the film's opening sequence), fashion: let me just say it involves a guillotine and a playful kitty and leave it at that!
    3bkoganbing

    Rusty magic act gets a new twist

    It is rather well known that you cannot force anyone to do anything under hypnosis that they will not be willing to do themselves when of their own free will. Unfortunately that bit of reality which audiences in 1946 knew well that keeps The Mask Of Dijon from becoming a top flight melodrama. The cheapness of a PRC production also doesn't help.

    They combine to defeat the incomparable Erich Von Stroheim who is playing a formerly great magician with an insane jealous streak that makes Othello look well adjusted. His Desdemona is Jeanne Bates a nightclub singer who runs into her old accompaniest William Wright who persuades her to come back and take Von Stroheim's rusty magic act as a package deal.

    What both don't know is that Von Stroheim has been studying the art of Mesmer and he's going to use that to settle old scores, real and imagined. I can't say much more, but I will agree with another reviewer who did love the ending that Von Stroheim met.

    Would that the rest of the film was that good.
    blanche-2

    Whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make mad

    Erich von Stroheim stars in The Mask of Diijon from 1945, directed by Lew Landers.

    Diijon is a former magician who is studying the power of the mind, to the dismay of his partner and wife Victoria (Jeanne Bates). She can't find a job, and he refuses to work. When her ex-accompanist Tony (William Wright) shows up, he arranges for them to work at his club. It's a disaster, but Victoria stays on as a singer.

    Thoroughly jealous of Tony, Dijjon tries a hypnosis technique out, then hypnotizes Victoria so her song will end in a spectacular manner.

    Lousy cheap production but von Stroheim is always effective. And of course learning hypnosis from a book and convincing people tondo all manner of things is ridiculous.

    However, as others have pointed out, the finale is not to be missed! Total genius. Splendid performance by Sheba the cat.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in Le grand sommeil (1946)
    Film noir
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drame
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horreur
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystère

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Because of a faulty identification by a non-professional researcher, some modern sources list Mickey Daniels as the uncredited newsboy. Daniels does not appear in this film.
    • Gaffes
      Diijon is overcome by tear gas fired into the magic shop, but the cat inside with him is unaffected.
    • Citations

      [Diijon has hypnotized Victoria and told her to shoot Tony, her piano player]

      Victoria: You'd better play "Hearts and Roses" because I'm going to kill you.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Erich von Stroheim (1979)
    • Bandes originales
      White Roses
      Written by Carroll K. Cooper and Lee Zahler

      Sung by Jeanne Bates

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 mai 1949 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Mask of Diijon
    • Société de production
      • Producers Releasing Corporation (PRC)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 13min(73 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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