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IMDbPro

Le bal des maudits

Titre original : The Young Lions
  • 1958
  • Approved
  • 2h 47min
NOTE IMDb
7,1/10
9,4 k
MA NOTE
Marlon Brando and May Britt in Le bal des maudits (1958)
The lives of three young men, a German and two Americans, during WWII.
Lire trailer2:42
1 Video
99+ photos
ActionDrameGuerre

La vie de trois jeunes hommes, un Allemand et deux Américains pendant la 2eme Guerre Mondiale.La vie de trois jeunes hommes, un Allemand et deux Américains pendant la 2eme Guerre Mondiale.La vie de trois jeunes hommes, un Allemand et deux Américains pendant la 2eme Guerre Mondiale.

  • Réalisation
    • Edward Dmytryk
  • Scénario
    • Edward Anhalt
    • Irwin Shaw
  • Casting principal
    • Marlon Brando
    • Montgomery Clift
    • Dean Martin
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,1/10
    9,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Edward Dmytryk
    • Scénario
      • Edward Anhalt
      • Irwin Shaw
    • Casting principal
      • Marlon Brando
      • Montgomery Clift
      • Dean Martin
    • 88avis d'utilisateurs
    • 32avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 3 Oscars
      • 1 victoire et 7 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:42
    Trailer

    Photos182

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    Rôles principaux76

    Modifier
    Marlon Brando
    Marlon Brando
    • Lt. Christian Diestl
    Montgomery Clift
    Montgomery Clift
    • Noah Ackerman
    Dean Martin
    Dean Martin
    • Michael Whiteacre
    Hope Lange
    Hope Lange
    • Hope Plowman
    Barbara Rush
    Barbara Rush
    • Margaret Freemantle
    May Britt
    May Britt
    • Gretchen Hardenberg
    Maximilian Schell
    Maximilian Schell
    • Capt. Hardenberg
    Dora Doll
    Dora Doll
    • Simone
    Lee Van Cleef
    Lee Van Cleef
    • 1st Sgt. Rickett
    Liliane Montevecchi
    Liliane Montevecchi
    • Françoise
    Parley Baer
    Parley Baer
    • Sgt. Brandt
    Arthur Franz
    Arthur Franz
    • Lt. Green
    Hal Baylor
    Hal Baylor
    • Pvt. Burnecker
    Richard Gardner
    • Pvt. Crowley
    Herbert Rudley
    Herbert Rudley
    • Capt. Colclough
    John Alderson
    John Alderson
    • Cpl. Kraus
    • (non crédité)
    John Banner
    John Banner
    • German Town Mayor
    • (non crédité)
    Stephen Bekassy
    Stephen Bekassy
    • German Major
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Edward Dmytryk
    • Scénario
      • Edward Anhalt
      • Irwin Shaw
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs88

    7,19.3K
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    Avis à la une

    6SnoopyStyle

    Brando is the more compelling part

    Lt. Christian Diestl (Marlon Brando) is a dutiful German who finds the war more and more troubling. Meanwhile back in the US, Jewish Noah Ackerman (Montgomery Clift) finds love, and entertainer Michael Whiteacre (Dean Martin) try to avoid the war.

    This movie is split in three. I find the Marlon Brando part very intriguing right from the start. A straight movie with just his character would be very interesting. Brando sets a serious compelling tone. Clift and Martin's movie starts slowly. Quite frankly, it starts as an old fashion melodramatic romance with puppy dog Montgomery Clift. Martin has even less to do as he debates whether to join the fight or not. The movie crawls along at times, and would probably be better served to just keep Brando. Although Clift has some minor drama. At 167 minutes, this is like 2 movies jammed into one. The connection between the stories is tenuous at best until the very end. It seems it took forever to get there. Once there, the point of the movie is made crystal clear, but it seems that it could have been done with a much tighter story.
    6Piafredux

    Always Wanted to Like 'The Young Lions'

    'The Young Lions,' flaws have prevented my liking it as much as I'd like to.

    Mongomery Clift was too old for his role as "young man" Pvt. Noah Ackerman. Clift looks old enough to be the same age as the actor who portrays the father of Ackerman's beloved Hope. Also, the near-repetition of his 'From Here to Eternity' pugilist part feels perverse, excessive, monotonously voyeuristic. Those circumstances aside, Clift's performance finely communicates Ackerman's plaintive, good-hearted tenderness.

    Brando's effort is solid, though I'd like to have seen more character development: we know nothing of Christian Diestl's upbringing in Weimar/Nazi Germany except for his revelation that he was a shoemaker's son who ran out of money midway through medical school. More could have been made of the intellect of a young skier whose medical ambitions were, in parallel with the German people's interwar ambitions toward a place in the world befitting their view of themselves, thwarted until their vile demagogue rode the wave of such ambition to utter destruction.

    Dean Martin's work is adequate, but not stellar; perhaps a result of his playing the would-be shirker. In some moments his slender dramatic gifts exceed their natural power, but in most of his screen-time he seems to be coasting on his Hollywood persona's legendary charm.

    Maximillian Schell's work is first-rate, but it seems to have gotten him typecast in later films as the rabid, or otherwise intrinsically flawed, Nazi officer - which he only managed to again turn into solid effect in 'The Odessa File.' Solid actresses Hope Lange and Barbara Rush aren't given much decent scripting to work with. WWII veteran-writers, the unsurpassable James Jones included, had difficulty portraying women characters: often their female characters seem stilted, if not downright stereotypes. Thus I suspect that 'The Young Lion's' screenwriters hadn't much in the original novel from which to develop its women characters. This also applies to Diestl's girlfriend Francoise (in fact, the most credible female role here is that of Simone who portrays, briefly but heart-rendingly, a woman in dread for her about-to-desert boyfriend Brandt's fate). May Britt, as the opportunistic, adulterous Frau Hardenburg, is adequate; but for her corrupt role the scriptwriters faced no great challenge.

    Most preventing my liking this film are its stagey sets and lighting. There's just one superb location scene: the Afrika Korps's dawn ambush of a British unit; the other location scenes - especially of Ackerman's and Whittaker's infantry company - seem much too bucolic in the midst of history's most violent war. The other complaint I have, about this and other post-mid-50's WWII films, is that the women's hairstyles, makeup, and clothing are not of the 1940's, but of the later vogue in which such films were shot: this disjoints the viewer from belief in the period which such films attempt to portray.

    'The Young Lions' script leaves much to be desired. It might have been more thoroughly fleshed out, from Irwin Shaw's novel, than it turned out to be. Its best-written scene is of Hope's father taking Noah Ackerman for a contemplative walk round the square of Hope's Vermont hometown, as it flourishes the only writing impressive in economy and power.

    One glaring continuity gaffe, in the scene in which Diestl and Brandt meet Simone and Francoise: it's night, yet when Diestl leaves the studio-shot sidewalk table to pursue Francoise to the nearby riverbank, the cut shifts to a location shot made plainly at midday. Quite a few other interior-to-exterior, and vice-versa, scene shifts also detract from the 'The Young Lions' visual flow and credibility. One instance in which it succeeds is actually one in which many other WWII films suffer egregiously: 'The Young Lions' manages to seamlessly weave bits of actual WWII documentary/file footage into its narrative (in one moment, however, this doesn't work: the too-long sequence depicting the El Alamein offensive, which uses documentary clips but which also reuses Hollywood footage from, I think, 'The Desert Rats' or 'The Desert Fox'). This sequence is followed by the almost comical - yet intended to be tragical - motorcycle retreat of Diestl and Hardenburg, which is poorly done in rear-screen projection with the pair astride a bucking, but plainly otherwise stationary, motorcycle (which, by the way, is an American, not a German, bike).

    One blooper I caught (but then I'm familiar with such details): after Diestl's African tour he meets Brandt in France, and in the exterior shot Diestl's wearing the old-style Wehrmacht officers cap sans silver chin cords, but when the duo steps into a building to continue conversing, in the interior shot Diestl's cap has magically sprouted the later cap style's chin cords.

    An element of unreality in 'The Young Lions' is the remarkable survival rate of Ackerman's infantry squad mates - which doesn't reflect the grievous casualties suffered by U.S. units that fought from D-Day to the final campaign that ended in Germany. (Indeed, ETO commanders howled for replacements for their units' casualties; even the procrustean Patton had reluctantly to accept Negro units as replacements for his decimated formations - though to his credit Patton acknowledged the fitness and combat excellence of those Negro units, about one of which Kareem Abdul Jabbar has well-written a fitting history-cum-tribute).

    Though some detail moments of 'The Young Lions' give the story enough meat for the audience to chew and digest satisfyingly, its scopic plot's enormous, world-ranging bones could not have been given enough sinew and muscle to have yielded thoroughgoing excellence, else the film would have run six or more hours. This prompts the expectation that a thoroughly-fleshed mini-series (are you listening HBO?) deserves to be adapted - much more closely and roundly than this 1958 film could have been - from Shaw's novel. In sum the major flaw of 'The Young Lions' is, despite fine acting efforts made on necessarily scant script matter, its failure to have met its ambition of capturing the whole meat of Shaw's story.
    8Wuchakk

    Outstanding WW2 DRAMA (with Some Action)

    "The Young Lions" is a black & white 1958 WW2 drama featuring Marlon Brando, Dean Martin and Montgomery Clift.

    The film attempts to show the German, American and French sides of the war. Brando stars as a young German officer who becomes increasingly disillusioned with Hitler's regime and the world war he started. Meanwhile Martin plays a worldly Broadway musician who struggles with cowardice whereas Montgomery Clift's character is a poor, naive Jewish American who falls in love with with a winsome lass (Hope Lange) and fights the anti-semitic guys in his platoon.

    Marlon's performance illustrates why he's considered the greatest actor in cinema; he's just captivating. Most reviewers note that Brando's German storyline is more interesting than the two American story lines, which is true, but repeat viewings grant the viewer more appreciation for the latter.

    There are three stunning women featured in the picture: Barbara Rush, May Britt and Liliane Montevecchi. Rush is Martin's marriage-minded gal, who flirts with Brando early on; Britt plays the luscious sexpot wife of Brando's captain (Maximilian Schell); and Montevecchi performs as a French girl who initially insults Brando's character (because he's a German invader).

    It should be pointed out that "The Young Lions" is not a war action film, but rather a powerful war DRAMA. Yes, there's quite a bit of action (France, Northern Africa, etc.), but the emphasis is on the characters and their stories. The climax involves a horrified and utterly disillusioned Brando, leaving a strong impact.

    FINAL WORD: If you're looking for a mindless action flick this is not the one to see. This perhaps explains some of the less-than-stellar reviews. Yet, make no mistake, "The Young Lions" is without a doubt a WAR film. It's also a masterpiece of cinematic art, not to mention one of Brando's most mesmerizing performances.

    The film runs 2 hours, 47 minutes.

    GRADE A-
    7tomsview

    Big movie, bigger book

    "The Young Lions" was one those big Hollywood war movies I remember seeing with my family at the local cinema during the late 1950s.

    I saw many of those films and actually read most of the slab-like novels they were based on: "Battle Cry", "The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit", "From Here to Eternity" and Irwin Shaw's "The Young Lions" - there just weren't that many competing devices back then.

    I usually read the books after seeing the films and then became acutely aware of how the movies suffered under the censorship of the day. The novels often filled in some serious gaps in my sex education, but the films never did.

    The story is about three soldiers: a German, Christian Diestl (Marlon Brando), and two Americans: Noah Ackerman (Montgomery Clift) and Michael Whiteacre (Dean Martin). The film follows their fortunes through WW2 until they cross paths at the end.

    The film has a number of authentic, well-executed sequences shot on location. However these are mixed with flat, over-lit scenes shot on the blandest of backlots and soundstages - the interiors are particularly artless. Documentary footage also added to the lack of a definitive style.

    Fortunately the action scenes open the film out. The most arresting of them was the ambush of a British convoy in North Africa. It would have touched a nerve with many in that audience in 1958 as our guys had been part of the British Eighth army and the war had only been over for 13 years.

    One of the surprises in the movie was the anti-Semitism Noah Ackerman encounters in the U.S. Army. Monty Clift faced a tough enlistment in "From Here to Eternity", but it was even tougher here. He looked worn (this was after his accident in 1956) and seemed a bit too old, but his performance is the most affecting in the film. No wonder Brando was wary of his talent.

    Dean Martin without Jerry Lewis was another surprise, but he was good as the soldier with better motives than he thought.

    Brando's blonde, broad shouldered Diestl starts out as a fine example of the master race, but his journey through the rise and fall of the Third Reich makes him thoughtful. He is treated rather sympathetically in the movie, although he was more of a nasty Nazi in the novel. However they may have overdone Diestl's disgust at every turn.

    I can see why Irwin Shaw was disappointed. However the film has its moments, and is still one I have no trouble watching every now and then.
    lauramae

    Peace in our time?

    I have seen this movie several times and catch something different every time I see it. Today is the first time I've seen it from the beginning. In the context of the time it was made, it was a bold statement about the human factor in any war. Brando shines and plays a sympathetic character who sees first hand the evil that men do in the name of patriotism.

    Made at a time when the Americans that liberated the concentration camps were in their prime and there weren't any idiots running around claiming it was a lie, we see how ordinary citizens respond to the unthinkable. Brando's character stands in for the citizens of the Reich who claimed they were clueless about the genocide while the ashes from the smokestacks fell like snow on their towns. We see the horror and the denial.

    It briefly explores a major taboo--interracial/interfaith marriages. It looks at racism in the context of anti-Semitcism (unfortunately still alive and well in America) and one man's courage in opposing it. Ironic this brand of racism, as the founder of the prevelant religion in America was a Jewish rabbi.

    This movie is worth the 3 hours of time; it would make a great set piece with "Judgement at Nuremberg" which also showcases the talents of many of the actors from this film.

    Good acting from all players in this film. It presages Robert Altman with the interweaving of the characters' lives from the first shot where Barbara Rush and Brando debate the merits of the Fatherland to the last scene in the forest where the end comes full circle.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Montgomery Clift was widely felt to look too old and unhealthy to be an A1 soldier. Although Clift was only 36 during filming, this was the first full film he had made since his near-fatal 1956 car accident (it occurred during filming of L'arbre de vie (1957)), which had drastically altered his appearance.
    • Gaffes
      Early in the movie, Marlon Brando's character is riding in some sort of staff car. The car is right-hand drive; the Germans did not use right-hand drive. However, the staff car is a French-made Laffly V15T, which is, indeed, right-hand drive and was used by the French Army in WWII. The vehicle was probably captured from the French Army.
    • Citations

      Michael Whiteacre: You want me to get shot. Look, I've read all the books. I know that in 10 years we'll be bosom friends with the Germans and the Japanese. Then I'll be pretty annoyed that I was killed.

    • Connexions
      Featured in V.I.P.-Schaukel: Épisode #8.2 (1978)
    • Bandes originales
      The Blue Danube
      (uncredited)

      Music by Johann Strauss

      Heard at the party in Bavaria

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    FAQ

    • How long is The Young Lions?
      Alimenté par Alexa
    • In front of which building are Capt. Hardenberg and Lt. Diestl posing?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 2 avril 1958 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • La ira de los dioses
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Natzweiler-Struthof Concentration Camp, Natzwiller, Bas-Rhin, France
    • Société de production
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 3 550 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 9 363 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 47 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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