La vie de Rose, une femme au foyer dans l'East End londonien, est bouleversée lorsque son ancien amour, récemment évadé de prison, tente de se protéger de la police en se cachant chez elle.La vie de Rose, une femme au foyer dans l'East End londonien, est bouleversée lorsque son ancien amour, récemment évadé de prison, tente de se protéger de la police en se cachant chez elle.La vie de Rose, une femme au foyer dans l'East End londonien, est bouleversée lorsque son ancien amour, récemment évadé de prison, tente de se protéger de la police en se cachant chez elle.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 nomination au total
- Alfie Sandigate
- (as David Lines)
Avis à la une
Several plot lines run through the film. An escaped convict--scarred after being flogged with a cat-o-nine-tails--turns up at the home of a woman he once loved, and who loved him. Rose Sandigate, played by the talented and beautiful Googie Withers, has since entered into a practical marriage with a man 15 years older than she is. We enter into her life, along with the lives of her two step-daughters, her son, three petty criminals trying to get rid of stolen roller skates, and some Jewish good guys, bad guys, and not-so-bad guys.
The production values aren't great, and the lower class accents sometimes call for subtitles. Nevertheless, the central plot element of an escaped convict, who returns to find that the woman he loves has married while he was in jail, is as compelling now as it was 60 years ago.
Finally, the powerful scene of detectives chasing a man through the train yards in the dark, was surely known to Carol Reed when he directed "The Third Man." Reed's scene, set in the sewers of Vienna, took place miles away from Hamer's London. Even so, in compelling action and suspense, they have a great deal in common.
This film uses the claustrophobic interiors of the terraced house to great effect. The noir style of long shadows, oblique angles, becomes more evident in the final climax, not really needed early on since the interiors work effectively without lighting effects. Melancholia drips through this like the rain of the title, Googie Withers is terrific, her face a mask of dreams, desires pushed away, disappointment etched over her features through her hard make up. How different she is in appearance to the femmes fatales of the U.S movies, bustling round the kitchen in her pinafore, then later on the almost military smartness of her utility dress when she attends Tommy. As a character shes every bit as strong however as her American counterparts. Like Mildred Pierce, she's strong in a domestic setting, when the usual convention for women in noir is to take them out of the domestic, placing them typically as nightclub singers or gangsters molls. In details I ll acknowledge this is on occasions cheesy and dated. Scratch at the surface however and its a fascinating exploration of the social tensions emerging after World War Two. How were people to adjust to life in peacetime? Were they able to return to the rigidly prescribed roles they d had prior to the war? Ealing studios produced a number of films which now can be seen to share many affinities with American Film Noir, this is one of the most interesting and rewarding.
There is a certain amount of caricature in the writing (and perhaps in the playing too) of a couple of roles, but on the whole the script succeeds in delineating personalities rather than types, unusual in a film of the period presenting a mainly working- and lower-middle-class milieu, a good deal of it filmed (by the great Douglas Slocombe) on location.
Director Hamer's final reel is a daring chase followed by a strangely affecting coda. The chase is slightly marred by the intrusion of a couple of model shots which the sequence could easily have done without. But it says something about the power of Hamer's vision that he imagined long shots at those points: it was just unfortunate that the only way to achieve them was by using miniatures.
Highly recommended.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesGoogie Withers, who played Rose Sandigate, and John McCallum, who played Tommy Swann, met on this movie and were married the next year. They were married for 62 years, until his death.
- GaffesTommy Swan is imprisoned and his girl, Rose marries George Sandigate so he wouldn't know where she lives when he escapes from prison.
- Citations
Joe: We don't cater to the criminal classes.
Detective Sergeant Fothergill: Turned over a new leaf?
Joe: There's such a thing as a law of libel.
Detective Sergeant Fothergill: There's such a thing as ham, but there's none in this sandwich.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- It Always Rains on Sunday
- Lieux de tournage
- 64 Clarence Way, Camden, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Exterior of the Sandigates' house)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 14 276 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 7 177 $US
- 9 mars 2008
- Montant brut mondial
- 38 313 $US
- Durée1 heure 32 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1