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C'est arrivé... entre midi et trois heures

Titre original : From Noon Till Three
  • 1976
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 39min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
3,4 k
MA NOTE
Charles Bronson and Jill Ireland in C'est arrivé... entre midi et trois heures (1976)
After spending 3 unforgettable hours with an outlaw, a beautiful young widow turns her story into a worldwide famous book.
Lire trailer2:03
1 Video
60 photos
Comédie noireDrameOccidentalRomance

Graham Dorsey fait un mauvais rêve, peut-être prémonitoire. Le bandit prévient donc ses compagnons qu'il ne participera pas au hold-up prévu le lendemain à midi. Dorsey fait halte chez Amand... Tout lireGraham Dorsey fait un mauvais rêve, peut-être prémonitoire. Le bandit prévient donc ses compagnons qu'il ne participera pas au hold-up prévu le lendemain à midi. Dorsey fait halte chez Amanda, une jolie veuve, qu'il ne tarde pas à séduire.Graham Dorsey fait un mauvais rêve, peut-être prémonitoire. Le bandit prévient donc ses compagnons qu'il ne participera pas au hold-up prévu le lendemain à midi. Dorsey fait halte chez Amanda, une jolie veuve, qu'il ne tarde pas à séduire.

  • Réalisation
    • Frank D. Gilroy
  • Scénario
    • Frank D. Gilroy
  • Casting principal
    • Charles Bronson
    • Jill Ireland
    • Douglas Fowley
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    3,4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Frank D. Gilroy
    • Scénario
      • Frank D. Gilroy
    • Casting principal
      • Charles Bronson
      • Jill Ireland
      • Douglas Fowley
    • 54avis d'utilisateurs
    • 26avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:03
    Official Trailer

    Photos60

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    + 54
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    Rôles principaux38

    Modifier
    Charles Bronson
    Charles Bronson
    • Graham Dorsey
    Jill Ireland
    Jill Ireland
    • Amanda Starbuck
    Douglas Fowley
    Douglas Fowley
    • Buck Bowers
    • (as Douglas V. Fowley)
    Stan Haze
    Stan Haze
    • Ape
    Damon Douglas
    • Boy
    Hector Morales
    • The Mexican
    Bert Williams
    Bert Williams
    • Sheriff
    Davis Roberts
    Davis Roberts
    • Sam
    Betty Cole
    • Edna
    William Lanteau
    William Lanteau
    • Reverend Cabot
    Larry French
    • Mr. Taylor
    Michael LeClair
    • Cody Taylor
    • (as Michael Le Clair)
    Anne Ramsey
    Anne Ramsey
    • Massive Woman
    Howard Brunner
    • Mr. Foster
    Don 'Red' Barry
    Don 'Red' Barry
    • Red Roxy
    Billy Beck
    Billy Beck
    • Mental Patient
    • (non crédité)
    Alan Bergman
    Alan Bergman
    • Songwriter
    • (non crédité)
    Elmer Bernstein
    Elmer Bernstein
    • Songwriter
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Frank D. Gilroy
    • Scénario
      • Frank D. Gilroy
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs54

    6,53.3K
    1
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    Avis à la une

    8Oldguypo8

    Bronson in a lighter key works, but does not feed blood lust.

    If you seek killer Bronson, he isn't home. But if you are willing to watch Bronson doing lighter work and be on screen with his wife in a mildly funny satire, enjoy. From first meeting to keeper of the legend, this is a Jill Ireland vehicle. It satirizes Bronson's previous work which grew out of the dime novel creation of the American West. We watch the Bronson character lose control of his real life because a widow creates a better outlaw than he was. Enjoy this for the satire on every level including the score and the songs.

    It is a refreshing change of pace compared to the blood beast Bronson had to feed in many action movies. Now that it is being broadcast, watch it with the idea that Bill Hickok and Bill Cody played on stage for money and that dime novelist Ned Buntline gave out those Buntline specials to the men he wrote about. I suspect most of you will at least chuckle at the world caught up in the legend of a third rate bank robber ensnared by a woman he seduced. And the end is better satire than real life Emmett Dalton going to Hollywood to help make movies about the Dalton gang robbing Coffeyville. For an adult audience, this is far better entertainment than Over the Hill Gang slapstick. Give it a try.
    7helpless-dancer

    The strangest Bronson film ever

    Never have I seen a Bronson flicker as bizarre as this gem. Here we have a outlaw who breezes into the life of a lonely, remote woman on the post civil war outback. Their relationship takes off like a ruptured duck, producing an outcome that only the likes of a taro card reader could predict. I loved the way this story played out as the action led from one stranger than fiction event to another. This led Bronson's character to lose the one thing more valuable to him than all the bank money he had ever desired and his lover to lose even more. This was a top notch Charles Bronson film, well written and played out, possibly the best thing I've seen him in yet. Thumbs up.
    6ma-cortes

    Agreeable and atttactive Western/ romance / comedy with the real life marriage, Bronson and Ireland

    After spending 3 unforgettable hours with an outlaw called Graham Dorsey, Charles Bronson, whose band commits a bank hold-up thwarted by villagers , a beautiful young widow, Jill Ireland, turns her love story - Romeo and Juliet alike- into a worldwide notorious book with several prints and she builds the mediocre Graham Dorsey into a western hero. As the town celebrates :Welcome to Gladstone City where Buck Bowers gang met their end and the romance of Graham and Amanda began. As the noisy city receives a lot of tourists and visitors and showing : Starbuck Mansion tour twice daily , 3 dummies with a poster captioning : where they were hung. And to see Graham Dorsey's grave: he valued friendship more than life , sleep gently sweet prince.

    This is a change of pace character for Bronson in a spoof of western legend . Strange is certainly the word for this comedy action fantasy romance tale . The plot is plain and simple as Bronson has a brief romance with his real wife Jill Ireland who , believing him dead, fictionalizes their lives in a series of succssesful books, when he turns alive, no one, including Jill believes that he is the actual Dorsey and he is gradually driven crazy. No sypnosis could convey the flavour of a movie that almost creates its own genre and even might have done so with other classic Hollywood actors . Bronson gives an acceptable acting as the two-fisted gunslinger , though Charles adventure buffs may well not know what to make of this one . This is one of a number of westerns that Bronson played during the mid, late 60s and early seventies, as the famous Once upon a time the west by Sergio Leone, Red sun by Terence Young , Chato by Michael Winner , Nevada Express by Tom Gries , Valdez by John Sturges and White Buffalo by JL Thompson. And being finely acompanied by Jill Ireland who is nice as the gorgeous and sympathetic widow. Supporting cast is good with brief interpretations from Douglas Fowley, Don Red Barry, Elmer Bernstein himself and Anne Ramsey.

    Enjoyable and sensitive musical scoreby the classy maestro Elmer Bernstein. Adequate and appropriate production design by Robert Clatworthy, an expert designer who worked in Psycho, Ship of fools, Touch of evil, Guess who is coming to dinner, The incredible shrinking man, The parent trap, among others. The motion picture was weak but professionally directed by Frank D Gilroy. He was a craftsman who wrote and directed a few films such as The gig, Jinxed, Once in Paris, Desperate characters, The subject was roses , The gallant hours and Fastest gun alive. Rating :acceptable and passable 6/10
    7megavenganceman

    Bronson makes Nice

    At the height of his stardom, Charles Bronson made this curious oddity. He stars as a bankrobber hiding out at a widow's residence and after a series of comical mishaps, fall in love with one another. This is probably Jill (Bronson's then real life wife) Ireland's best moment. She made a career doing a lot of second stringing in her husband's films but she comes into her own here in a believably sympathetic performance. As for Bronson, well he didn't do a lot of "cute" movies so it's nice to see him in something a little less nasty for a change. Also, he provides some impressive comic relief in his own inimitable, understated way. It is only hampered by some awfully wooden direction. Still, you could do a lot worse.
    8yuggoth-1

    A stirring little gem with an unbronsonesque Bronson

    This modest little gem is a humorous, funny, melancholic movie about what you can encounter if you fall in love with a romantic woman - you can end up bigger than life, and that can get you into serious trouble! Bronson - far from his usual he-man cliché roles - delivers a very nice, humorous performance; and so does Jill Ireland. Just watch it, even if you are far from being a Bronson fan - this droll flick is enjoyable for everyone!

    To tell you more, and make you understand, one cannot avoid spoilers; so here's the plot:

    ***** SPOILERS *****************************

    Graham Dorsey (Bronson) is a member of a gang which is on their way to rob a bank. Being frightened of the job, he takes the chance to stay in a house by the road until his buddies come back from the job.

    The lady of the house, Amanda (Ireland), a young, attractive widow, is alone in the house. Graham manages to get her to bed with him. They fall for each other (he pretends to be somewhat more noble than he really is), and share some hours of love and bliss - until a posse comes to catch him (the robbery had failed). He tries to flee (telling Amanda he goes to free his accomplices). But he ends up in jail, sentenced for another man's frauds, while the other man is erroneously shot in his place. So Amanda gets word that Graham is dead.

    Amanda, formerly an honorable widow, now looked upon as a bandit's mistress, is alone in her grief. She writes a book about the story; but Graham having overstated, and Amanda having a strong tendency to romanticize and idealize her feelings, she describes the whole story much bigger than life. The book becomes a best-seller; not only locally, but all over the world. The tale gets a huge hype.

    So when Graham is free again after a year in jail, and comes back into town (in disguise) for Amanda, he finds, to his surprise and growing amusement, some sort of "Graham Dorsey Disneyland" at the place, built around the book's tale. And Amanda's house has turned into a GD museum, visited by loads of tourists guided by Amanda who tells them "her story". He, too, enters, asking for a tour. He gets it; Amanda does not recognize him - not even when he takes his masquerade off: she simply does not believe him - she believes her book, and in her book, he is bigger, more beautiful, and better in any respect! (very funny scene)

    Finally, he succeeds to make her believe him. But to his big surprise, Amanda does not want the real GD - she prefers to live for the legend! She tells him that formerly, it was a matter of just the two of them; but now it has become a matter of the feelings of all the world, which she would not hurt by destroying the myth. Even when he tries to apply force, she just steals his gun and demands that he leaves forever. He refuses. When she sees no more way to change his mind, she even shoots herself before his eyes.

    On his following lonely odyssey, he meets the Graham & Amanda hype everywhere, ad nauseam: and whenever he gets up to protest against the lies, saying that HE is GD, he is laughed at, shouted down, or even threatened for his "fraud". Irony of fate: it is only in the end, when he is put in an asylum for his "lunacy", among the lunatics, that Graham finds people who believe him and accept him, and finds his peace of mind.

    *********** END OF SPOILERS *******************

    So this movie, though playing in a western milieu, is at its core a story of the fate of an unusual love. It is very unpretentious (far away from roaring schmaltz like "Gone with the wind" or "Titanic"; lightyears away from that big-mouthed, stylish soulless crap that we have to endure since the eighties), just a humble, bittersweet little (tragi)comedy with moments of the grotesque, about life's pleasures and grief, about becoming a culprit and becoming a victim; about the value and the cost of idealizing and true life. If it wouldn't be for Bronson and Ireland starring, you might call it a B-film. But Charles Bronson - surely not being the king of actors - delivers a very nice, humorous performance here in a very unbronsonesque role, together with his excelling real life wife Jill Ireland. It's a pity that the direction is wooden sometimes. And, fitting superbly to its old-fashioned style, the movie has a nice catchy melancholic little waltz as a theme song ("Hello and Goodbye"/Elmer Bernstein/Alan and Marilyn Bergman, sung by Ireland), dealing with the elusiveness of love.

    Give it a chance! You will come out of it thoughtful, I guess; and about how many Hollywood films can you say that?

    Valuation: I would spontaneously give it a good 7 out of 10 - but I spontaneously tend to judge relating to an IMDb average valuation of below 5, as it should be; but the actual average being near 7, it should get an 8 (though this is unfair to the comedy masterpieces like Lubitsch's "To be or not to be", or Chaplin's "Modern times"; or Tati's "Jour de fête" - those should have at least a 12, then! :-) )

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      The movie was a rare instance where the author of a novel (Frank D. Gilroy) directed the filmed adaptation of his book.
    • Gaffes
      When Amanda (Jill Ireland) has the confrontation with the villagers at her door, the sleeve of her dress disappears between frames leaving her with a bare arm.
    • Citations

      Amanda: Enough. If you're so depraved you'd inflict your desires on an unwilling body, then proceed.

    • Connexions
      Featured in 42nd Street Forever, Volume 3: Exploitation Explosion (2008)
    • Bandes originales
      Hello and Goodbye
      Lyrics by Alan Bergman & Marilyn Bergman

      Music by Elmer Bernstein

      Sung by Jill Ireland

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    FAQ14

    • How long is From Noon Till Three?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 août 1976 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Site officiel
      • MGM
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • C'est arrivé entre midi et trois heures
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Thousand Oaks, Californie, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Frankovich Productions
      • William Self Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 39min(99 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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