L'histoire du tueur en série britannique John Christie, qui a commis la plupart ou la totalité de ses crimes dans la maison mitoyenne du 10 Rillington Place, et l'erreur judiciaire impliquan... Tout lireL'histoire du tueur en série britannique John Christie, qui a commis la plupart ou la totalité de ses crimes dans la maison mitoyenne du 10 Rillington Place, et l'erreur judiciaire impliquant Timothy Evans.L'histoire du tueur en série britannique John Christie, qui a commis la plupart ou la totalité de ses crimes dans la maison mitoyenne du 10 Rillington Place, et l'erreur judiciaire impliquant Timothy Evans.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
- 1 nomination au total
- Judge Lewis
- (as Andre Morell)
Avis à la une
The film's bleak depiction of immediate post-war Britain is just stunning, Attenborough deserved the Oscar for his amazing characterisation of Christie...a monster with a facade no-one thought to question. No clear-thinking and perceptive person could possibly watch this movie and not be affected in some way. The horror Is that there IS no horror, just a veneer of respectability and decency. I cannot offhand, nominate a more powerful or credible piece of film-making. We have this film in our library and watch it on average ever two years - it has never aged or been less impactful!
Chillingly portrayed by the great actor Richard Attenborough , Christie was a little mouse of a man who first lured his victims home on some pretext or other, usually by saying that he could perform some desired medical procedure on them, for example, an abortion, which was illegal at the time. Once there, he put them at ease by offering them a cup of tea, deceived them into breathing gas from the pipe, rendering them unconscious, then strangled them. He disposed of the bodies, at first by burying them in the garden, then putting them under the sink in the water closet, and finally by tearing up and replacing floorboards and papering over cupboards.
The primary reasons that Christie was able to do what he did for so long were first of all the war. London was undergoing the blitz, and people had a tendency to disappear during the bombing. Another reason was that he was able to turn the suspicions of the police from him to a not very bright truck driver named Timothy Evans, (played by John Hurt) who was convicted of the death of his baby daughter, and was also suspected in the murder of his wife, but due to English law could only be tried for one or the other of them. He was hanged in 1950. The scene in the film where Evans is hanged is chilling, and quite accurate.
Slow at first and shot on location at the actual scene of the murders, the film shows a dangerous manipulative killer hiding behind a bland, mild exterior. Because he appeared so mild, Christie was all the more terrifying. Attenborough brings this out expertly and the overall effect is very creepy.
This superbly-acted film is British cinema at its' very best.
Cup of tea, anyone?
Fleischer's style is plain;the trial scenes,when any director would have his actors overact is a lesson a lot of the current artists should pay attention to.The hanging could not be spookier.One cannot help but think that the last lines about Tim on the screen are a bit ironical.
Matching Attenborough's awesome portrayal,is John Hurt's remarkable Tim:definitely not Gregory Peck as his wife thinks,macho but pitiful,a not very handsome whining lad who cannot hold a candle to his maleficent owner.
You should see "the Boston strangler" and "10 Rillington place" one after the other
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRichard Attenborough's make-up, mainly consisting of a bald pate, took three hours to apply every morning.
- GaffesWhen Christie is explaining the procedure he's about to perform on Beryl, he says that natural gas contains carbon monoxide, then quotes its formula as CO2 (which is actually carbon dioxide). The correct formula for carbon monoxide is CO. However, the point appears to be to show him for the half-educated conman he is. It's just Christie's character creating an air of "expertise".
- Citations
John Reginald Christie: It's the moral question that concerns me, the taking of life - no matter how rudimentary.
Beryl Evans: It's not really... I'd be ever so grateful, Mr Christie.
- Crédits fousPrologue to opening credits: "This is a true story. Whenever possible, the dialogue has been based on official documents"
- ConnexionsFeatured in Interview with Sir Richard Attenborough (2004)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is 10 Rillington Place?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- L'étrangleur de Rillington Place
- Lieux de tournage
- 10 Rillington Place, Notting Hill, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(location exteriors, still occupied during filming - demolished 1970)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro