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Daybreak (1948)

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Daybreak

20 commentaires
8/10

Beauty and the Barge

An extraordinary, bizarrely cast melodrama which not surprisingly encountered censorship problems at the time.

Reminiscent of prewar French cinema but perfectly capturing the morose mood of a postwar Britain in which barrel organs were still heard in the street, Battersea power station still belched smoke and murderers were still woken at eight for their date with the hangman. Eric Portman was still young and dashing enough to play one of his flawed leads, waifs didn't come more chic than Anne Todd, and bad boys more saturnine than Maxwell Reed in the equivalent to the role played by Dan Duryrea in 'Scarlet Street'.
  • richardchatten
  • 15 déc. 2020
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7/10

Daybreak

I reckon this has to be the best outing for Ann Todd ("Frankie") that I've seen. Here she plays the girlfriend of Eric Portman ("Eddie") who is really a hangman, but who doesn't want her to know so pretends to be a salesman to explain his frequent, and often overnight, absences from their home on a barge he has inherited. It's during one of those absences that she finds herself the focus of the unwarranted attentions of the rather uncouth "Olaf" (Maxwell Reed) and... Compton Bennett has created a clever piece of cinema here; we are given much of the bones of the story but have to come to a few of our own conclusions as tragedy ensues. According to the BBFC, the film wasn't cut at the time but it doesn't look like it - there are gaps that sort of make sense, but there are quite a few that clearly don't and that disjoints the narrative and occasionally spoils what is otherwise a complex tale. Well worth a gander.
  • CinemaSerf
  • 4 janv. 2023
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7/10

Stuck in my mind a long time

I happened across this film on TV years ago (when they used to show decent, obscure old movies) and I remember while I was watching, I spent most of my time wondering if it was brilliant or if it was terrible - or what was it really all about. There seemed to be a lot unsaid (possibly/ likely due to censorship, as others here have said), but this added to its appeal too, maybe - it left much to the viewer's imagination and this only improved the movie. I will have to see it again. I'd LIKE to see it again. But where? There should be an option on imdb that shows if a movie is available on streaming/ cinema/ tv - and if not, to notify someone when it comes up. I'd add this one. My rating (7/10) is possibly unfair in either direction and likely to change after I see it again, but the fact that it stayed in my mind for over 20 years alone deserves a number of stars.
  • desibeo
  • 24 janv. 2021
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A gutting human tragedy. Memorable, but dreadfully hard to take.

  • rick_7
  • 29 août 2007
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6/10

Downbeat

Eddie (Eric Portman) is a hangman, who makes a confession when he comes face to face with his final victim, Olaf, (Maxwell Reed). He tells the story of how he knows the victim to the Governor (Milton Rosmer). We learn of Eddie's double life - he uses an alias and has a share in a hairdresser business with Ron (Bill Owen). We follow the story as he inherits a fleet of barges and meets with Frankie (Ann Todd). They marry and settle down on a barge where Eddie hires Olaf as a workman...

The cast are quite good despite some appalling accents. Eric Portman delivers a mish-mash of a southern/northern accent and God knows what planet Maxweel Reed thought Danish people come from! My favourite in the cast is actually Jane Hylton who has a small role as "Doris" the barmaid. It's a shame that more of a role wasn't given to her.

With regards to the relationships between the characters, why didn't Eddie and Frankie just come clean with each other? He doesn't tell her of his role as a hangman and she doesn't mention anything to him about her fear of Olaf. This leads us to believe that maybe she had a previous job as a prostitute and maybe she loves it. She certainly has an independent streak as we see this on her first meeting with Eddie. I also felt that Eddie is too old for Frankie and his marriage proposal to Frankie and her acceptance after their 3rd meeting is laughable.

The film has a very downbeat ending and my girlfriend cried - not because of any affiliation to any particular character but purely because of the film's atmosphere. It's bleak.
  • AAdaSC
  • 19 avr. 2011
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6/10

Small People, Big Tragedy

Eric Portman answers an advertisement in the newspaper. His estranged father has died without a will, so he has inherited his fleet of 15 barges. Now that he has some money, he gives his half of the barber shop to Bill Owen. His other job, as a hangman, will take him about six months to work off his current obligations.

Quietly celebrating, he meets Ann Todd. They chat and a timid, misused creature is revealed. They marry and move onto one of the barges. She doesn't like his business trips out of town -- he claims it's for barge contracts; he never tells anyone what it's actually for, except Owen. She likes it even less when Scandinavian Maxwell Reed takes an interest in her that is considerably less avuncular than Edward Rigby.

With a title like this one has, you can tell it's going to be a rather heavy-handed drama, an English Shomin-Geki, and that's what you get. Both leads are acting outside their comfort zones; Portman speaks in clipped monosyllables, and Miss Todd uses a Cockney accent that fades out by the end. Still, there's some heavy-duty acting chops involved, and it works pretty well.
  • boblipton
  • 1 août 2019
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6/10

Sad....quite sad.

When the story begins, the executioner at a British prison refuses to carry out the sentence on a main awaiting his maker. To explain why, he describes a series events which make up the rest of the film.

It seems that Eddie (Eric Portman) has just inherited a barge business from his estranged father. A bit later, he meets and falls in love with Frankie (Ann Todd) and they soon marry. However, one of Eddie's employees, Olaf (Maxwell Reed), is a creepy guy who has designs on Frankie....and wherever Eddie goes out of town on business, Olaf shows up and creeps out Frankie. Eventually, he ends up attacking her. Eddie finds out but assumes she was Olaf's lover and a huge fight breaks out. What happens next...well...see the film for yourself.

While this is generally a very good film, I wish that the characters hadn't hemmed and hawed about Olaf. Frankie keeps telling her husband not to go away on business and that she doesn't like Olaf...but no more. And, oddly, Eddie doesn't even ask WHY! These seem a bit odd. Now I am not saying it's a bad film....but odd in how it handles this situation. And no, I am not victim blaming....just that the folks' actions seemed odd.

Overall, a very sad film. Well made, generally, but a real downer in most every way.
  • planktonrules
  • 1 févr. 2021
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6/10

Blacker than black

  • Leofwine_draca
  • 25 févr. 2019
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9/10

Bleak, but totally absorbing.

If you prefer films that are upbeat, positive and have a feel good air, then best to avoid this at all costs. However, for anyone who looks for a good storyline, with excellent casting and production values, then "Daybreak" is a rare gem. The story is both simple, and yet convoluted, but does break away from a lot of run of the mill stuff from that era of the late-40's. The only glaring problem, which detracts from making this film something of a minor classic, is the fact that it is obviously quite heavily censored. This simply results in some scenes becoming disjointed, and the flow of the film disrupted. However, this does not serve to spoil the film, but is a definite irritant. The ensemble playing by the cast is uniformly excellent. Eric Portman was always well worth watching, and Ann Todd probably produces her finest performance on screen. Edward Rigby and Bill Owen provide fine support, and that master of suppressed menace, Maxwell Reed, gives a typically dark and brooding performance, despite the dodgy Scandinavian accent! The film is not always easy to find, but is a rewarding experience for those that do find it. Just don't expect a joyous outcome!
  • ronevickers
  • 14 août 2008
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7/10

Barging into their life.

  • ulicknormanowen
  • 10 mars 2021
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5/10

A good example of what the trade calls "a difficult film!"

  • JohnHowardReid
  • 28 nov. 2017
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10/10

One of the saddest films I've ever seen

Daybreak is totally fascinating - the kind of movie you can stare at, open mouthed, for the full hour and a half. Ann Todd as always is wonderful, but this has to be one of her best performances by far. Apparently a lot of the movie was cut by the censors upon its release leaving gaps in the story, and you do get this sense at least with Todd's character - there's a slight hint that she may have been a prostitute but this isn't followed through and is just forgotten.

Without spoiling the ending - and don't read the plot summary before you see the film! - this is one of the most heartbreaking shows of misunderstanding ever. Todd lives with husband Eric Portman on a barge and his business sends him away for long periods of time, leaving her along with the very seedy Norwegian "Olaf", and leaving it up to the audience to guess what he does to her. One night she begs her husband to stay, or take her with him, but he can't, and yet she won't tell him why. He comes home and finds Olaf present, but unfortunately gets the wrong idea about why he is there.

It's a shame so much was cut from this fine film, but what is left is sufficient to garner it a 10/10. The scene especially where Todd and Portman meet is an utter delight!
  • calvertfan
  • 22 sept. 2002
  • Permalien
6/10

A triangle ends in tragedy

  • blanche-2
  • 28 mai 2025
  • Permalien
5/10

Good story - marred by censorship.

The acting in this film noir is mostly wooden - Ann Todd apart. The best parts were probably left on the cutting room floor,courtesy of the censor. What's left is just the husk of a compelling story from Monckton Hoffe. The fight scene was atrocious and unconvincing, but the film is saved from itself because of the eeriness of the rain-soaked scenes, presumably shot at Hammersmith near the Riverside Studios. Shots of the Palais De Danse and the Rialto seem to give credence to this assertion. Bill Owen is his usual matter-of-fact self, and ends this sad story. The sound quality has suffered over the years - the opening music especially. All the criticism apart, the life on-board a barge and views of Gravesend riverfront before demolition to make way for soulless housing development are good reasons to buy the DVD (if you can find one)- and keep a strong drink handy for the ending. You have been warned.
  • r_d_marchant
  • 19 févr. 2012
  • Permalien

Good in parts

  • lucyrfisher
  • 22 sept. 2011
  • Permalien
10/10

Barge drama with Eric Portman and Ann Todd married for good and for worse

Although Eric Portman never makes a sympathetic character, never is likeable and usually makes crooks and villains, if not murderers, he always makes a lasting impression, and he is at his best in tragedies, the darker the better. This is a typical barge drama, you have seen it innumerable times before, an intimate marriage disturbed by a third part leading to inevitable disaster, but here the dreadfulness of the business is augmented by superb acting, espcially by Ann Todd, who makes a perfect character in all her simplicity and sincerity. She really loves Eric and wastes his tenderness on him, while he has to attend to his business, which is very questionable, while a third part naturally sees his opportunity, a very base fellow, of which you can't expect anytting good in ihis constant impertinence.

The film begins with Eric's final confrontation with him, leading to obligatory flashbacks, leading to the inevitabvle catastrophe. Compton Bennett earlier made "The Seventh Veil", another advanced psychological drama of higher wits and intelligence than this one, but nevertheless this one is on the same level, if not even more interesting by the very suggestive cinematography. . You have to admit it: this is a film that will stay in your mind forever.
  • clanciai
  • 5 août 2019
  • Permalien
4/10

Dull and implausible

  • johnshephard-83682
  • 6 sept. 2020
  • Permalien
10/10

I hope the hangman finally found his peace?

Reading some reviews I am astonished that this masterpiece of film noir has been perceived/received by them as awful?

Yes it is awful insofar that this is a riveting, dreadful, awful story. Take in the period setting of the old River Thames. The wonderful acting of Eric Portman, Ann Todd and dear old Compo Simmonite (Bill Owen). Yes the character Olaf is overplayed but other than that this is an incredible film, that the Censor fatefully delayed.

A masterpiece? Quite possibly if they can find the film removed by those real criminals - the British Board of Film Classification. I love the fact that the lead hides a terrible secret and has a double life and that old London Thames is found deep within the fabric of the celluloid. It's poignant insofar that it is a forgotten time, of recent past. Love bound within the confines of the hangman's noose. Intrigued enough to want to see it? I hope so.

I AGREE WITH THOSE GIVING IT TEN.
  • ouzman-1
  • 5 mai 2019
  • Permalien
4/10

Hanging Around

According to Quinlan this film was held back from release for 2 years because of problems with the censor.Since producers normally worked in co operation with the BBFC this does seem rather strange.Watching the film now and comparing it say with No Orchids For Miss Blandish it is difficult to understand what problems might have arisen.A more likely reason is the sheer grimness of this film.If it was made in 1945 it was hardly likely to appeal to an audience who had only recently been under attach from V2 weapons.So presumably the producers put it on the shelf waiting for a more appropriate moment to show.The film starts with Portman as the hangman approaching the cell of a condemned man and the mood goes down from there,if that is possible.The story is rather a mess and the pairing between Portman and Todd unlikely in the extreme.The ending is about as downbeat as you will ever find.Definitely not a film I would ever wish to see again!
  • malcolmgsw
  • 22 sept. 2014
  • Permalien
5/10

Don't go into this expecting something happy and peppy and bursting with love.

  • mark.waltz
  • 4 juin 2022
  • Permalien

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