Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueUSAF vet Ben Brown is charged with killing Cole Clinton, a leading Durango County citizen who was making time with Brown's wife Laura. An unwinnable case is given to young D.A. Dave Mitchell... Tout lireUSAF vet Ben Brown is charged with killing Cole Clinton, a leading Durango County citizen who was making time with Brown's wife Laura. An unwinnable case is given to young D.A. Dave Mitchell, who asks expert lawyer Art Harper for help.USAF vet Ben Brown is charged with killing Cole Clinton, a leading Durango County citizen who was making time with Brown's wife Laura. An unwinnable case is given to young D.A. Dave Mitchell, who asks expert lawyer Art Harper for help.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 2 Oscars
- 3 nominations au total
- Judson Elliot
- (as Donald Barry)
- Courtroom Spectator
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Gregory is trying to ride the publicity surrounding the trial to a high political office, and there seem to be a lot of people willing to railroad the kid into the gas chamber. The case has several curious aspects. Adams has signed two different confessions but both of them have omitted large parts of his story. Adams also has a tramp for a wife (Joey Heatherton) who turned him in for the reward!
Into this media circus of lies and hype comes young Chamberlain who must battle the system ((including a judge who clearly favors the prosecutor). He relies on advice from a wily old lawyer (Claude Rains) who's been sidelined by ill health. Rains also has a comely daughter (Joan Blackman) who has eyes for Chamberlain.
Can the young lawyer navigate the complicated legal waters and fight the corruption to save his client?
All the actors are fine. Chamberlain (currently starring on TV as Dr. Kildare) gets the star build-up here from MGM. Rains steals all his scenes and Gregory and Adams are solid performers (Adams won an Oscar nomination). Heatherton makes her film debut here.
Cast includes Jeanette Nolan as the widow, Linda Evans as her daughter, Edgar Stehli as the judge, Arch Johnson as the bartender, Robin Raymond as Heatherton's ma, and Pat Buttram as the victim.
Much of the film is told in flashback, but the overall storyline suffers by being a tad too close to the classic Autopsie d'un meurtre (1959). Still worth a look.
Chamberlain plays a young attorney and widower, David Mitchell who's assigned a rotten case, that of an unstable soldier accused of murdering one of the small New Mexico town heroes, and he's confessed - twice. The special prosecutor (Gregory) is hoping to sweep into political office with the case, and the judge sides with him through most of the trial. Mitchell turns to the distinguished attorney and his friend, Art Harper, who is ill but nonetheless is full of fire and gives Mitchell some guidance. The defense is a New Mexico law that allows a man to kill because of adultery, something the victim's widow (Jeanette Nolan) and his friends would like to keep quiet.
Joey Heatherton plays the slutty wife of Nick Adams, and she gives a very overt performance. Nick Adams, who would die of an overdose five years later, has a good role and does an excellent job; it earned him an Oscar nomination, and he allegedly spent over $8,000 advertising to win it. He lost to Melvyn Douglas. Jeanette Nolan is lovely and serene as the victim's wife. Claude Rains in one of his last films is marvelous. He looks unwell but his acting is wonderful. Richard Chamberlain even then had a strong enough talent to hold his own against the more experienced actors. As David, he's passionate and determined. Although in the last 46 years, he's had a decent film career, certainly it doesn't compare to his King of the Miniseries crown or some wonderful stage work, including Night of the Iguana and My Fair Lady, both of which I saw and loved. As a baby boomer, he has a special place in my heart.
This film was probably intended for the teen crowd, Chamberlain's fan base, which is why there's a lot of talk about sex but no real action.
Twilight of Honor does have the potential for a television series. Claude Rains is the older and wise lawyer mentor here, just as Raymond Massey was on television for Chamberlain. Rains also has an attractive young daughter in Joan Blackman who aids both of the men in her life.
The real acting honors go to among others Nick Adams as the poor dumb hick of an Air Force veteran who is arrested for the murder of one of the town's leading citizens. The whole small New Mexican town is quite stirred up by the homicide and there's a lynch mob mentality brewing. A lot of very influential folks want to see Adams given a death sentence with at most a perfunctory trial. Adams is quite touching in his performance and was given an Oscar nomination for his performance.
Two other cast members worthy of note are James Gregory as the smarmy ambitious special prosecutor brought in for the judicial lynching. And the real surprise to me is Pat Buttram who plays the deceased and who's story gets told in flashback. For those of you who remember Pat from Green Acres, Hee Haw, or as Gene Autry's sidekick on his television series, this is quite a revelation. He's quite good in a serious role as a man going through a midlife crisis. But I'm sure the public just didn't accept him in a serious part, I can't recall him ever getting another one.
I'm sure MGM had a problem with this one. A few years later when made for TV movies started, Twilight of Honor would have been one of the best acclaimed. It sort of slipped in and out of the theaters before real notice was paid attention. That's a pity because it is a good film and catch it the next time TCM runs it.
This film is Richard Chamberlain's first starring role in a movie, though he'd done TV before this. He plays a young and very inexperienced lawyer who is set to defend a rather dim man for murder....and the town's atmosphere is definitely hostile towards him. On top of this, the state has brought in a cocky special prosecutor (James Gregory). All the young lawyer has is his idealism and some advice from his mentor (Claude Rains). Can he possibly get a light sentence or a verdict of not guilty with so many things working against him?
This is a very intelligent and well written drama...one that never was dull and managed to get the viewer to care about the dumb schnook on trial for his life. All in all, a nice little film well worth your time.
The supporting cast is lots of fun. It runs the gamut from -- OK, ready? Pat Butram .... to Joey Heatherton ... to Claude Rains. Yes, in the middle of this tale of a poor low class kid (Nick Adams, suitably confused looking) caught in the midst of a class-conscious small Southern town, Rains is the patriarchal retired lawyer. Yes, Claude Rains.
He looks frail and certainly doesn't seem especially Southern. But here was a man who never turned in a bad performance.
Chamberlain is good, too, and Jeanette Nolan is touching as the wife of the man Adams is accused of murdering.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFirst feature film roles for Linda Evans and Joey Heatherton.
- GaffesIn the flashback of Ben and Laura Mae hitchhiking along the lonely road in New Mexico miles from town, Cole Clinton drives up in his Imperial convertible and offers them a ride. The convertible has a rear view mirror clearly showing attached to the front windshield in the camera's wide shot point of view. In the next closeup scene with the point of view from the front of the car and the windshield centered in the frame, the rear view mirror is missing. In the next scene, a wide shot of the car driving into the hotel parking lot, the rear view mirror is mysteriously re-attached back onto the windshield.
- Citations
Judge James Tucker: Mr. Mitchell, examine the witness, don't undress her.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Censura: Alguns Cortes (1999)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Twilight of Honor?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 44 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1