Impressionné par la dévotion d'une mère pour son fils qu'elle croit innocent du meurtre d'un policier à Chicago, 11 ans plus tôt, un journaliste entreprend une enquête sur les circonstances ... Tout lireImpressionné par la dévotion d'une mère pour son fils qu'elle croit innocent du meurtre d'un policier à Chicago, 11 ans plus tôt, un journaliste entreprend une enquête sur les circonstances qui ont mené à la condamnation.Impressionné par la dévotion d'une mère pour son fils qu'elle croit innocent du meurtre d'un policier à Chicago, 11 ans plus tôt, un journaliste entreprend une enquête sur les circonstances qui ont mené à la condamnation.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 4 victoires et 2 nominations au total
- Helen Wiecek
- (as Joanne de Bergh)
- Taxicab Driver
- (non crédité)
- Warden of Stateville Prison
- (non crédité)
- Police Photographic Technician
- (non crédité)
- Jan Gruska
- (non crédité)
- Narrator
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
- Secretary
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
On orders from editor Lee J. Cobb, Stewart checks out the source behind a small personal advertisement in the Chicago Sun-Times where he works. The ad is placed by Richard Conte's mother who works as a cleaning woman and saved enough money to offer a reward of $5000.00 for information clearing her son.
Back during the last days of Prohibition, Conte and another man were sent up for killing a Chicago policeman in a grocery store that fronted for a speakeasy. Conte was convicted mainly on the eyewitness testimony of the owner of the establishment Betty Garde.
Stewart gradually comes to believe in Conte's innocence and works tirelessly on his behalf. The best single performance in this film is by Betty Garde. A real portrait in evil that one is.
This has always been a film I've had an identity with. I had a similar situation in my former job with NYS Crime Victims Board. I had a case where a man sustained multiple injuries including the loss of a leg when a car drove up on a sidewalk and hit him. The report was never written up as any kind of crime, just an accident. The driver was given a summons and that was that.
I did a lot of work to prove the police were wrong in their action and it took two years, but I gathered enough evidence and my claimant was declared a crime victim and received the benefits from my former agency. The perpetrator was never charged with anything, but that was not in my mandate. Nevertheless I know exactly what Jimmy Stewart had to prove and how hard it is. The police even more than most of us do not like to admit they are wrong.
Call Northside 777 is a nicely done documentary style feature which is a great lesson in what a man with determination can accomplish.
Frank Wiecek (Richard Conte) has been convicted of a cop killing and sentenced to 99 years in prison. Convinced of her son's innocence, Frank's mother, an elderly and lowly cleaning lady, takes out an ad in the newspaper for information that will help free her son. McNeal grudgingly looks into the case, but doubts Wiecek's innocence. As the film moves along, McNeal slowly changes his perception of Wiecek.
Some viewers consider this to be a film-noir. To me, it is more of a docudrama, a staging of a real life story. The dialogue seems realistic. And the acting is low-key and credible. The film also highlights the technology of the era, including the use of the printing press, the polygraph, and a miniature camera.
But what impressed me most was the use of the Chicago locations where the real life story took place. Further, the B&W visuals are appropriately drab, dreary, and depressing, which reflects the tone of the actual events. There's very little background music, which also adds authenticity to the film. The only downside is the matter-of-fact procedural style in which the story is told, especially relative to the fatherly VO narration at the film's beginning and end. The film comes across at times as dry, and lacking emotional depth.
Devoid of cinematic hype, and told in a straightforward and plodding manner, "Call Northside 777" will appeal to people who seek realism in films. And, of course, the film's basis in fact, vis-a-vis fiction, adds to its credibility.
Stewart is at first uninterested but as he thinks out loud and asks questions, Cobb urges him to investigate and see what he can come up with. Stewart starts with meeting the owner of the classifieds ad, who turns out to be the mother of one of the men put in prison for the murder. She is adamant that her son is innocent, and has scrubbed floors since his imprisonment to save up the reward money and pay for the ad.
As Stewart interviews more people investigated in the case, and reviews more news stories and documents related to the case, he realizes that the man in jail for this crime may really be innocent. Noir mainstay Richard Conte stars as the (allegedly) wrong-fully convicted man. Helen Walker has a small but effective role as Stewart's devoted wife whom he confides in when he's trying to figure out the case. They also work on a jigsaw puzzle together throughout the film, which very skillfully acts as a metaphor for what Stewart is trying to do in his work life.
Betty Garde plays the eyewitness whose inconsistent ability to pick out the murderer in the lineup comes into question by Stewart. She is very bitter and uncooperative towards Stewart, and obviously afraid of something or someone unnamed, so he's forced to undermine her credibility and go without her assistance in clearing the man whom he feels was wrongfully convicted.
I thought Stewart was excellent in his role as the everyday man whose work could affect the lives of many people associated with the case. Lee J. Cobb was authentic in the role of Stewart's boss who urges him to keep going in his investigation. I do get the sense though that Cobb is just trying to increase readership in the newspaper, and that he couldn't care less about Conte's character. But Stewart is the one with a little more humanity who is more about solving the crime than increasing readership of his newspaper.
One thing I thought was interesting about this film was that the man who administers the lie detector test to Conte is the actual inventor of the lie detector test.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe man administering the polygraph test to convict Richard Conte was the inventor of the polygraph or lie detector machine, Leonarde Keeler. He played himself in the movie.
- GaffesWhen McNeal is interviewing Helen Wiecek Rayska, prior to the arrival home of Mr. Rayska, Helen indicates that she only divorced Frank Wiecek AFTER Mr. Rayska had met and began loving her and her son, Frank Jr. However, when Mr. Rayska and Frank Jr. arrive home after that point in the interview, Mr. Rayska tells McNeal with certainty that he never even met Helen and Frank Jr. until after the divorce was finalized, and that he could provide proof of that.
Frank's ex-wife says that Frank asked her to divorce him for over a year. In the next sentence she says then she met her new husband which can be interpreted as after she finally acted and got the divorce. Her story and her new husband's agree.
- Citations
[McNeal is trying to get Zaleska to name his real partner in the crime and get a chance at parole]
P.J. McNeal: What have you got to lose? You're in for life now. C'mon, tell us the truth.
Tomek Zaleska: Sure, I could say I did it. Then maybe have a chance of getting out, like you say. But if I confessed, who would I name as my partner, Joe Doakes? I couldn't make it stick for one minute. That's the trouble with being innocent. You don't know what really happened. I didn't do it. Me and Frank had nothin' to do with it.
- Crédits fousOpening credits are printed on the pages of a book; it is also stated that this is a true story.
- ConnexionsEdited from L'incendie de Chicago (1938)
- Bandes originalesChicago (That Toddlin' Town)
(1922) (uncredited)
Music by Fred Fisher
Played during the Prohibition montage
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Yo creo en ti
- Lieux de tournage
- Stateville Correctional Center - 16830 South Broadway Street, Joliet, Illinois, États-Unis(Illinois State Penitentiary: panopticon & cells interiors; entrance exteriors)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 52 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1