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Le procès Paradine

Titre original : The Paradine Case
  • 1947
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 5min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
13 k
MA NOTE
Gregory Peck, Ann Todd, and Louis Jourdan in Le procès Paradine (1947)
A happily married London barrister falls in love with the accused poisoner he is defending.
Lire trailer1:41
1 Video
65 photos
CriminalitéDrameRomanceThriller

Un avocat de Londres heureux dans son couple tombe amoureux de l'empoisonneuse accusée qu'il défend.Un avocat de Londres heureux dans son couple tombe amoureux de l'empoisonneuse accusée qu'il défend.Un avocat de Londres heureux dans son couple tombe amoureux de l'empoisonneuse accusée qu'il défend.

  • Réalisation
    • Alfred Hitchcock
  • Scénario
    • Robert Hichens
    • Alma Reville
    • David O. Selznick
  • Casting principal
    • Gregory Peck
    • Ann Todd
    • Charles Laughton
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    13 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Alfred Hitchcock
    • Scénario
      • Robert Hichens
      • Alma Reville
      • David O. Selznick
    • Casting principal
      • Gregory Peck
      • Ann Todd
      • Charles Laughton
    • 128avis d'utilisateurs
    • 44avis des critiques
    • 64Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 6 victoires et 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:41
    Trailer

    Photos65

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 59
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    Rôles principaux43

    Modifier
    Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck
    • Anthony Keane
    Ann Todd
    Ann Todd
    • Gay Keane
    Charles Laughton
    Charles Laughton
    • Judge Lord Thomas Horfield
    Charles Coburn
    Charles Coburn
    • Sir Simon Flaquer
    Ethel Barrymore
    Ethel Barrymore
    • Lady Sophie Horfield
    Louis Jourdan
    Louis Jourdan
    • Andre Latour
    Alida Valli
    Alida Valli
    • Maddalena Anna Paradine
    • (as Valli)
    Leo G. Carroll
    Leo G. Carroll
    • Sir Joseph
    Joan Tetzel
    Joan Tetzel
    • Judy Flaquer
    Isobel Elsom
    Isobel Elsom
    • Innkeeper
    Patrick Aherne
    • Police Sgt. Leggett
    • (non crédité)
    Gilbert Allen
    • Undetermined Role
    • (non crédité)
    John Barton
    • Courtroom Spectator
    • (non crédité)
    Leonard Carey
    Leonard Carey
    • Courtroom Stenographer
    • (non crédité)
    Steve Carruthers
    Steve Carruthers
    • Courtroom Spectator
    • (non crédité)
    Constance Cavendish
    • Minor Role
    • (non crédité)
    Russell Custer
    • Barrister in Courtroom
    • (non crédité)
    Jack Deery
    • Juror
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Alfred Hitchcock
    • Scénario
      • Robert Hichens
      • Alma Reville
      • David O. Selznick
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs128

    6,513K
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    Avis à la une

    rmax304823

    Lives up to its reputation

    Why does this movie seem so dull? The acting isn't bad once you get past Gregory Peck's British accent. None of the performances are outstanding, they're just not bad. The roles restrict the performers' range. I think Alida Valli smiles once. Louis Jourdan seems to have only one expression, a bitter, barely controlled anger. If he tried to smile he might crack. The actor given the best lines is Charles Laughton, who hams it up and brings a bit of life to the screen. "Remarkable how the convolutions of a walnut resemble those of the human brain." And that flabby, sweaty palm as he takes the hand of Peck's wife, squeezes it lasciviously, and places it on his thigh.

    Well, I can think of three reasons why it's dull.

    (1) It's overwritten. The script needed somebody like Daryl F. Zanuck to hack out some of the underbrush. Peck is questioning Valli in court. It goes something like this: Peck: "What did you say to Latour." Valli: "I told him to leave the room." Peck: "But why did you tell him to leave?" Valli: "Because I no longer wanted him present." Peck: "And why did you no longer want him present?" Valli: "His presence was disturbing." And so on. How did the jury stay awake? Some of the scenes are pointless. Not the sort of interesting meanders you might find in other Hitchcock movies. Just pointless. Peck visits a country house to talk to Latour, who promises to show him the garden and then beats it pronto. An hour or two later Latour shows up banging on the window of Peck's room at the inn, having changed his mind for no apparent reason. The five-minute conversation that follows could have been condensed into half that time and benefited from some supplementary bits of business. Instead the two adversaries sit there like mahogany idols hiding information from one another. That's a poor script for you.

    (2) Hitchcock's imagination seems to have been asleep during the shooting. Perhaps the director himself was asleep. (It happened from time to time.) It isn't necessary for every Hitchcock film to have a bravura shot in it. The camera needn't always swing down from an upper story and wind up with a closeup of the key in someone's hand. But there is, maybe, one shot in this flick that bespeaks Hitchcock. When Andre Latour is first called into the courtroom as a witness, Hitchcock keeps the camera focused on Valli's face in the defendant's chair and circles it slowly around her so that we see Jourdan walking slowly into the room past her, behind her, and can almost feel her incandescent desire to turn around and look directly at him.

    (3) Hitchcock had a great sense of humor and it's entirely absent from this movie. It must in fact rank among the least humorous films he's ever made. And it's surprising, because he was usually able to insert some piece of business into even his most serious works. (Not including "Vertigo.") Often the humor centers around meals. A dowager stubs out a cigarette in a jar of cold cream, or the yolk of a fried egg. A police inspector is forced to eat fancy dishes that a Kurdish camel driver would turn up his nose at. Or the humor lies in montage, as in "The Man Who Knew Too Much," when Jimmy Stewart escapes from a clumsy set-to with the staff at a taxidermist's and the scene ends with a shot of a stuffed lion's head gaping at the slammed door. SOMEthing, anyway, to lighten things up. But not here.

    Put it all together and you have a pretty dull movie, one of the several serial flops that Hitchcock ground out in the post-war period. It isn't exactly painful to sit through. It's just that it's not very enjoyable.
    9johngiovannicorda

    Alida Valli: Hitchcok before Visconti

    I'm crazy about Alida Valli. I'd seen every film she's ever done except "The Paradine Case" until today that is. Today I met Mrs Paradine for the first time. Strangely enough it doesn't feel like Hitchcock it feels more like Carol Reed the director who gave her a major International hit with "The Third Man" a couple of years later. I fell in love with Alida Valli in the 1954 Luchino Visconti's tragic romantic epic "Senso". Now having seen "The Paradine Case" I see a glimpse of the woman in "Senso" where her actions, are also atrocious but govern by love. A love who will only lead to tragedy. Visconti showed us an Alida Valli that other than a great beauty was also a great actress. Hitchcock introduced her as VALLI in this film, a gimmick with very short legs. Here she plays the widow of a blind man that "allegedly" she killed. The casting of Gregory Peck is a major problem, maybe not for the box office in 1947, but it certainly detrimental to the suspension of disbelief, so needed in a thriller. Charles Laughton is superb in his few, short scenes. I wonder if Hitchcock himself was the inspiration for his role. A judge, a lascivious man with an roving eye for young pretty women. Ethel Barrymore plays his wife, to absolute perfection. Then, Louis Jourdan, beautiful of course, Charles Coburn, Ann Todd but, it is Alida Valli who gives this film that extra something. Considered a "minor" Hitchcock by most but not by me. 9/10
    8plato-11

    Actually, Pretty Good

    I liked this one, even though most people don't. It's a fascinating tale, and it seems very much Hitchcockian. Sure, it seems to drag at times, but the plot, directing, and the acting is good. Louis Jourdan is probably the best actor in this whole production. And to think this is his first English-speaking film. Gregory Peck is pretty good, also. I liked at the beginning when the cops arrested Alida Valli, and the audience isn't really sure why that is. Andre Latour's (Jourdan) little breakdown (I use breakdown for want of a better word) in the courtroom is terrific. I really love this movie, and I don't care how boring other people say it is. I would recommend this movie to anyone who thinks they can appreciate it.
    patrick.hunter

    The Selznick/Hitchcock Touch

    I wish some other star rather than Gregory Peck had played the lead role. Someone like a Ronald Coleman (whom Hitchcock wanted) or Laurence Olivier (whom Selznick wanted). I personally would have loved Robert Donat, but any of the above would have served better. I like Peck normally, but in this film, he's too young and never convincingly English, despite his accent. Even without the accent, he doesn't suggest someone who is passionately and irrationally swept away, as the role calls for.

    That said, I still love the film. Some Hitchcock films I love more--as I guess we all do--but I prefer this one over others. View THE PARADINE CASE and then compare it with the master's three movies that followed, those he directed without Selznick (ROPE, UNDER CAPRICORN, STAGE FRIGHT), and you'll see the touch that pervades those he made with Selznick. All the Selznick/Hitchcock flicks are wonderful; they are the director's most glamorous and romantic movies.
    7blanche-2

    A different kind of Hitchcock

    "The Paradine Case," released in 1947, is a courtroom drama directed by the master, Alfred Hitchcock, and it's obvious it isn't his thing, or else he didn't care about it. Gregory Peck plays a British attorney and Ann Harding his wife; Alida Valli is Mrs. Paradine, a woman accused of murdering her blind husband, Louis Jourdan is her husband's valet, Charles Laughton is the judge, and Leo G. Carroll is the prosecutor. All that talent, and it's pretty slow going.

    Peck is Anthony Keane, a successful attorney with a very happy marriage to Gay. They are extremely affectionate and loving with one another, which is why it seems strange that five minutes after Keane meets Mrs. Paradine, he falls in love with her. Granted, Alida Valli is exquisite and mysterious, but the woman is accused of killing her husband. She becomes an instant threat to Gay, who tries to remain courageous. Peck's hair is grayed in this, and I was surprised to read in another comment that he had a British accent. I only heard an accent in one scene where he kept saying cahn't - and it sounded really odd.

    Louis Jourdan is Andre La Tour, whom Keane suspects may have committed the murder. Jourdan is so handsome, even Laughton's character comments on it! The story drags on, and the trial is really a McGuffin, because the actual plot involves the Keane's marriage. Harding does her usual excellent job, and Peck, accent or not, is very good.

    It's the kind of film that leaves one flat. There's not too much to say about it except that given Hitchcock and the cast, one would expect a lot more.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      When Sir Alfred Hitchcock delivered the completed movie to the studio, after a Hitchcock record of ninety-two days of filming, it ran almost three hours. This rough cut was initially trimmed to two hours and twelve minutes, which was the version screened for the Academy of Arts & Sciences. In this version, Ethel Barrymore can be seen as the half-crazed wife of Lord Horfield, which explains the Oscar nomination for her performance (there was apparently a brilliant museum scene where Lady Horfield requests Anthony Keane to save Mrs. Paradine, and another scene where Lady Horfield tries to hide her coughing from her husband). Producer David O. Selznick subsequently cut the film to two hours and five minutes, and then to its present length of one hour and fifty-four minutes, in which Barrymore's screen time totals about three minutes. In 1980, a flood reputedly destroyed the original, uncut version, making the restoration of the cut scenes unlikely, although it has been reported that some of these cut scenes reside at the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York.
    • Gaffes
      When Latour appears outside Keane's inn room, the wind is blowing wildly, whipping Latour's hair across his forehead; yet just a split-second later, after Latour has entered the room, his hair is perfectly combed without a hair out of place.
    • Citations

      Judge Lord Thomas Horfield: I do not like to be interrupted in the middle of an insult.

    • Crédits fous
      In opening credits scroll below Ethel Barrymore: "and two new / Selznick Stars / Louis Jourdan / and / Valli". Alida Valli's name is in script form, and Jourdan had been playing leading roles in French films for several years before making "The Paradine Case".
    • Versions alternatives
      Originally released at 132 minutes.
    • Connexions
      Featured in American Masters: Hitchcock, Selznick and the End of Hollywood (1998)

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    • How long is The Paradine Case?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Hedda Hopper Wrote What About "Paradine Case" ?
    • "Paradine," "Rope"---Why Did Hitchcock Film Them As He Did?
    • TV Premiere Happened When?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 21 décembre 1949 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Sites officiels
      • Streaming on "'round midnight ..." YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "alejandro martinez" YouTube Channel (Spanish subtitles)
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Le mystère de l'affaire Paradine
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Lake District, Cumbria, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(on location)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Selznick International Pictures
      • Vanguard Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 4 258 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 6 789 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 5min(125 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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