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Demain ce seront des hommes

Titre original : The Strange One
  • 1957
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
1,4 k
MA NOTE
Demain ce seront des hommes (1957)
Official Trailer
Lire trailer2:15
1 Video
29 photos
Drame psychologiqueFilm noirDrame

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueStudents faced with an ethical dilemma about the dehumanization associated with the tradition of hazing, at a military college in the Southern United States, take matters in their own hands.Students faced with an ethical dilemma about the dehumanization associated with the tradition of hazing, at a military college in the Southern United States, take matters in their own hands.Students faced with an ethical dilemma about the dehumanization associated with the tradition of hazing, at a military college in the Southern United States, take matters in their own hands.

  • Réalisation
    • Jack Garfein
  • Scénario
    • Calder Willingham
  • Casting principal
    • Ben Gazzara
    • Pat Hingle
    • Peter Mark Richman
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    1,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jack Garfein
    • Scénario
      • Calder Willingham
    • Casting principal
      • Ben Gazzara
      • Pat Hingle
      • Peter Mark Richman
    • 30avis d'utilisateurs
    • 20avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    The Strange One
    Trailer 2:15
    The Strange One

    Photos29

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    + 22
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    Rôles principaux12

    Modifier
    Ben Gazzara
    Ben Gazzara
    • Jocko De Paris
    Pat Hingle
    Pat Hingle
    • Harold Koble
    Peter Mark Richman
    Peter Mark Richman
    • Cadet Colonel Corger
    • (as Mark Richman)
    Arthur Storch
    Arthur Storch
    • Simmons
    Paul E. Richards
    • Perrin McKee
    Larry Gates
    Larry Gates
    • Major Avery
    Clifton James
    Clifton James
    • Colonel Ramey
    Geoffrey Horne
    Geoffrey Horne
    • George Avery
    James Olson
    James Olson
    • Roger Gatt
    Julie Wilson
    Julie Wilson
    • Rosebud
    George Peppard
    George Peppard
    • Robert Marquales
    Vergel Cook
    • Jo
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Jack Garfein
    • Scénario
      • Calder Willingham
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs30

    6,91.4K
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    Avis à la une

    7bkoganbing

    All the worms turn

    Calder Willingham started a career in Hollywood by writing the book, the Broadway play it was based on and finally the screenplay for his work End As A Man. Now on the screen with the title The Strange One it presents a really nasty picture of a southern military academy and some of the cadets there.

    There's more than one strange individual in The Strange One. But the title refers to protagonist Ben Gazzara who is both charismatic and evil. A good old southern boy he holds the rest of his set in some kind of sway and they're all afraid of him.

    What Gazzara has put in motion is a carefully laid out scheme to embarrass Larry Gates the second in command of the academy by getting his son Geoffrey Horne expelled. With the aid of some lower classmen and a couple of sycophants he gets Horne drunk and leaves him out all night on the parade grounds. Horne is expelled and later Gates loses control when confronting Gazzara.

    But at some points all the worms turn. I suspect in both the novel and the play Gazzara gets worse than what he got here.

    The play ran 105 performances on Broadway during the 1953-54 season and besides Gazzara, Pat Hingle, Paul Richards, Arthur Storch, and Peter Mark Richman all repeat their roles from Broadway.

    Richards is a halfway out of the closet gay man who Gazzara just toys with, catch that deliciously erotic scene as Richards who fancies himself a novelist reads some of his writings to Gazzara as Gazzara plays with his ceremonial sword. The shy and introspective Storch is another closet case who is just crushing out big time on roommate George Peppard who was making his big screen debut as was Gazzara.

    It seemed like half the Actor's Studio got involved in this project. But they all do a fine job especially Gazzara who is terrifying and twisted.

    And these are the guys who will be defending America.
    7masonfisk

    GAZZARA'S DEBUT IS A DOOZY...!

    Ben Gazzara stars (in his film debut) in this military drama about a vicious Alpha male getting his comeuppance from 1957. Gazzara is the big dog at this military academy where he rules w/an iron hand making his fellow cadets cower in his wake. Things take a turn when he messes w/the son of the commander (getting him drunk where in a fit of rage & trickery he ends up beating up another) prompting Gazzara to visit the commander's office where in a turn of events, Gazzara threatens him! Finally the rest of the cadets band together to confront Gazzara where he'll either talk the talk or walk the walk. Adapted from his novel, Calder Willingham (The Graduate) eschews a sadistic hierarchy among the soldiers who are at a point in their careers when they're the most malleable & impressionistic, letting Gazzara hold sway over them like some fascist keeping his underlings beneath the knuckles of his tyranny. There is also (whether intentional or not) an undercurrent of homo-eroticism, since women are almost non-existent on the campus, letting our despot control his minions w/every tool in his arsenal. Also starring Pat Hingle (Commissioner Gordon from Tim Burton's Batman series) as one Gazzara's loyal boys, Clifton James as a military higher up & George Peppard (from the A-Team in his film debut) as one of the cadets who fight back.
    7Handlinghandel

    "Nightboy"

    An interesting look at gay themes from the 1950s. At the time this movie came pout, homosexuality was still a crime in most (maybe all) states. It had another decade and a half to go before being declassified as mental illness.

    This opens with a drawing that looks like Tom of Finland. The people involved in making this may never have heard of Tom of Finland. It was the stylized gay zeitgeist. (I guess. I was not there.) Ben Gazzara plays the central character. He is a horrible, thoroughly unlivable bully. It all takes place at a military academy. A fey student who seems to worship him, despite his cruelty, is writing a novel based on his life. It's called "Nightboy." And John Rechy was still a youngster! It's a worthwhile movie. The acting is good all around. The plot is not entirely plausible. But it's exciting and consistently well done.
    8Lechuguilla

    Night Boy

    Back in the 1950s the movie Production Code in the U.S. censored topics and dialogue that it considered morally offensive or too provocative for a general audience. To get around this, Hollywood disguised the plot and dialogue in some films. The disguise allowed the presentation of underlying subversive themes, but in veiled form. "The Strange One" is a film with a provocative premise rendered opaque by its plot and dialogue.

    A Machiavellian-minded Cadet named Jocko DeParis (Ben Gazzara) throws his weight around at a Southern military academy. DeParis is a terrible human being: bullying, manipulative, and sadistic, yet unemotional, always in control of the situation. In the film's plot, he carries through on a well-thought-out scheme to have a cadet he doesn't like expelled. He uses other cadets to implement his plan, so that he personally cannot be blamed. One of his puppet cadets is a visually unappealing Cadet Simmons (Arthur Storch), a guy with a mouth full of conspicuous teeth, who doesn't approve of alcohol and doesn't like women.

    Another Cadet in Jocko's orbit is Perrin, (a.k.a Cockroach), a slightly effeminate guy, played by Paul Richards. Cockroach hero-worships Jocko, which thus allows Jocko to humiliate him in front of others. Yet, Cockroach, who refers to Jocko as "Night Boy", has his own plans, disguised by the script's dialogue, when he tells Jocko: "All I want to have is your confidence and your friendship". Well, you can see where this is headed in one sense, though the plot implies something else. The dialogue is heavy on subtext. And the film was quite subversive in its day.

    The film's B&W visuals are rather dark, in keeping with the story's subversive theme. A jazzy score amplifies the seedy nature of these inter-relationships. The film's casting and acting are quite good, Arthur Storch's bizarre performance notwithstanding.

    On the negative side, the plot doesn't explain why Jocko had such a grudge against others at the academy, nor do we learn the basis for his apparent political hold on the academy's higher-ups.

    Yet these are fairly minor issues. And my overall impression of "The Strange One" is highly favorable. In addition to a deeply thematic story, we get to see a number of actors early in their careers, including Gazzara, Pat Hingle, James Olson, and George Peppard, among others. This is a film that would have been all but forgotten had it not been released recently on DVD. It's worth a look.
    petershelleyau

    louse Actors Studio style

    Originally advertised as the first picture filmed entirely by a cast and technicians from the Actor's Studio, this tale of power play amongst the cadets of a Southern military academy, only comes alive when it features the material that the Production Code of the 1950's demanded be cut.

    Based on the autobiographical novel and play End as a Man by Calder Willingham, director Jack Garfein uses the music of Kenyon Hopkins noticably in the scenes between Ben Gazzara as an upperclass man and Paul E Richards as a presumably gay cadet Gazzara nicknames Cockroach, who wears a shower cap when the other cadets don't. Richards is a "creative writer" who names the Gazzara character in his novel "nightboy". Their best scene together is where Richards reads to Gazzara, who plays with his sword! Clearly Gazzara is not adverse to Richard's attention, and their farewell handshake is more a sensual than manly experience. Gazzara's relationship with Richards is also echoed in his friendship with football jock James Olson, where Gazzara reacts to being casually touched. I also like idea of Gazzara's cigarette holder, though his kissing his own wrist at one point is a little too self-consciously Method.

    But whilst it is interesting to observe these subversive (for the period) elements, the narrative ultimately disappoints in the treatment of Gazzara as the academy's resident sadist. The Actors Studio adaptation needs to create an ensemble, as opposed to allowing Gazzara to star, which dissipates the tension and reduces his threat. Whilst it may be more psychologically truthful for him to underplay his psychotic nature, with the addition of Freudian insight which makes him more intellectual than physically violent, this doesn't help the drama, which is even more obvious when the far more satisfying climax uses mob intimidation and a physical act of revenge.

    The worst of the Actors Studio excess is in the presentation of victim Arthur Storch who is said to be schizophrenic and thus an easy target. Storch has coke-bottle spectacles, buck teeth, cartoon at attention posture, ambition to become a priest, is a mommy's boy, afraid of women, and anti-alcoholic. Gazzara's interest in Storch is inexplicable, even if he does hold him down while Olson spanks him with a broom, but as a good part of the film has us trapped in one room (the stage origins show here) while we're supposed to observe how bad Gazzara is, proceedings crawl into tedium. Or perhaps this kind of s/m power play just doesn't hold that much interest for me. The academy rooms have cell-like iron gates in front of the doors, and even though they aren't locked, the film opens with a guard hitting each as he passes, doing a role call.

    Watch for Gazzara's sci-fi buggy car, which has room in the back for a passenger.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Drame psychologique
    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in Le grand sommeil (1946)
    Film noir
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drame

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Ben Gazzara, Pat Hingle, Peter Mark Richman (as Mark Richman), Arthur Storch, and Paul E. Richards played the same roles on stage. The play "End as a Man" opened on Broadway at the Vanderbilt Theatre, 148 W. 48th St. on 14 October 1953 and ran for 105 performances.
    • Gaffes
      When Jocko and Julie go to the Savanarola Club in town, there is a neon sign in a window with open blinds as seen from the outside. But when they step inside, the blinds in the window are closed and no light from the neon sign is seen.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Ben Gazzara Remembers the Strange One (2009)

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    FAQ13

    • How long is The Strange One?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 10 janvier 1958 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Strange One
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Rollins College - 1000 Holt Avenue, Winter Park, Floride, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Horizon Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 40min(100 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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