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Brelan d'as

  • 1952
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 58min
NOTE IMDb
5,8/10
179
MA NOTE
Raymond Rouleau, Michel Simon, and John Van Dreelen in Brelan d'as (1952)
CriminalitéDrameMystère

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueThree episodes of a police nature, one of them starring Maigret and the other Lemmy Caution.Three episodes of a police nature, one of them starring Maigret and the other Lemmy Caution.Three episodes of a police nature, one of them starring Maigret and the other Lemmy Caution.

  • Réalisation
    • Henri Verneuil
  • Scénario
    • Georges Simenon
    • Stanislas-André Steeman
    • Peter Cheyney
  • Casting principal
    • Michel Simon
    • Raymond Rouleau
    • John Van Dreelen
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,8/10
    179
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Henri Verneuil
    • Scénario
      • Georges Simenon
      • Stanislas-André Steeman
      • Peter Cheyney
    • Casting principal
      • Michel Simon
      • Raymond Rouleau
      • John Van Dreelen
    • 3avis d'utilisateurs
    • 1avis de critique
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos4

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux38

    Modifier
    Michel Simon
    Michel Simon
    • Le commissaire Jules Maigret (segment "Le témoignage d'un enfant de choeur")
    Raymond Rouleau
    Raymond Rouleau
    • L'inspecteur Wenceslas Vorobeïtchik dit Wens (segment "L'alibi de monsieur Wens")
    John Van Dreelen
    John Van Dreelen
    • Le G'man Lemmy Caution (segment "Je suis un tendre")
    Nathalie Nattier
    Nathalie Nattier
    • Michèle Leroy (segment "Je suis un tendre")
    Arlette Merry
    Arlette Merry
    • Florence Garnier (segment "L'alibi de monsieur Wens")
    Inge Landgut
    Inge Landgut
    • Gisella Hauptmann (segment "Je suis un tendre")
    Jacqueline Porel
    • Denise (segment "L'alibi de monsieur Wens")
    Claire Olivier
    • Madame Maigret (segment "Le témoignage d'un enfant de choeur")
    Marguerite Garcya
    • La mère de Justin (segment "Le témoignage d'un enfant de choeur")
    • (as Marguerite Garcia)
    Alexandre Rignault
    Alexandre Rignault
    • L'inspecteur Janvier (segment "Le témoignage d'un enfant de choeur")
    René Génin
    René Génin
    • Le concierge (segment "L'alibi de monsieur Wens")
    Jérôme Goulven
    • Simon Lesueur - le brocanteur (segment "Le témoignage d'un enfant de choeur")
    André Dalibert
    André Dalibert
    • Le commissaire Malaise (segment "L'alibi de monsieur Wens")
    Pierre Sergeol
    • Leblond (segment "Je suis un tendre")
    • (as Sergeol)
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    • Hartner (segment "Je suis un tendre")
    • (as Koldehoff)
    Christian Fourcade
    • Justin (segment "Le témoignage d'un enfant de choeur")
    • (as le petit Christian Fourcade)
    Georges Tabet
    • Hubert (segment "Je suis un tendre")
    Maurice Teynac
    Maurice Teynac
    • Heldinge (segment "L'alibi de monsieur Wens")
    • Réalisation
      • Henri Verneuil
    • Scénario
      • Georges Simenon
      • Stanislas-André Steeman
      • Peter Cheyney
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs3

    5,8179
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    Avis à la une

    7ulicknormanowen

    A pair ,more like!

    A movie made of three sketches , two of which are pleasant ,the third is a throwaway.

    A stroll into the streets of Paris leads-somewhat whimsically - into the stories: a well-meaning mature gentleman and a distinguished lady are browsing through the detective stories of an old book store ;and on with the show !

    Segment 1 :"Mr Wens' alibi ";from Stanislas André Steeman who provided Henri -Georges Clouzot with two masterpieces "l'assassin habite au 21" and " Quai des orfèvres" ,is now a bit forgotten and it's certainly unfair for his short story ,here ,is a crime in an enclosed place John Dickson Carr would not disown.

    Plot : Mr Wens meets a wealthy woman's husband in his apartment :she was victim of several murder attempt and her heir (she wants to divorce) is the main suspect ;but as he's leaving the place, the private eye finds the wife's body in the elevator; the concierge sees nobody but her entering the place and the husband was with Mr Wens, a solid alibi.

    Witty dialog and the cabaret scene spares us the suggestive dances and instead, the viewer rejoices in the female impersonator act (the imitation of Gaby Morlay is very successful ). With a little help from Commissaire Malaise (another Steeman hero) and famous Commissaire Maigret (not appearing in the flesh) , Mr Wens (a distinguished Raymond Rouleau)will resolve the riddle .

    Segment two : "I'm the tender kind" : by far the weakest link of the movie;Peter Cheney ,Lemmy Caution ,it has not aged well and they did not even hire Eddie Constantine ,who could have saved something from the wreckage .

    Plot :Hot on the heels of a gangster ,Lemmy Caution has to frustrate two women's tricks in their plans .

    Dreadful stuff.

    Segment 3:an altar's boy's testimony. Georges Simenon was,by far ,the most adapted writer (from Renoir to Duvivier to Hathaway)of the lot .His short story focuses on the relationship between a middle -age commissaire Maigret and a brat :one never knows the motive of the crime and almost nothing about the murderer......

    Plot :going to church ,a kid sees a sinister-looking guy pulling a dead body ; the criminal threatens the witness: "if you talk to the police, I'll cut your throat and your mother's too. Terrified,in the church , the altar's boy faints ;in the police station, he tells what he 's seen, but nobody wants to believe till Commissaire Maigret intervenes.

    And the movie becomes a depiction of the human relations between a grumpy man and a scared little boy ; Maigret's authoritarian missus appears ,which is as rare in the movies as Mrs Colombo in the TV series;suffering from a cold, the famous sleuth investigates in his bed whilst his wife places cupping glasses on him! Michel Simon is true to form ,and excellent as ever ;Christian Fourcade ,the little boy,is superbly directed and never hams it up.

    Two good sketches out of three,it's a worthwhile percentage ; trust Henri Verneuil whose know-how can't be questionable.
    5mdjedovic

    "The Testimony of the Altar Boy": Michel Simon wonderful in a lacklustre adaptation of a first-rate Simenon story

    The third and final segment of this omnibus film, "The Testimony of the Altar Boy" is, somewhat unusually, based on one of Georges Simenon's finest short stories instead of on one of his novels. Still featuring the dedicated commissaire Maigret in the lead, it is a wonderful story about how Maigret gently teases out the truth about a murder from the titular altar boy and how a tender friendship develops between this precocious child and child-like adult.

    This film adaptation, sadly, is significantly lacking both due to Jacques Companéez's adaptation and Henri Verneuil's direction. Starting with the latter, the film begins, unlike the story, by revealing not only who the killer is but also how the murder was committed which is the central mystery of the story. Of course, none of Simenon's Maigrets is truly a detective story in the sense that the answer to the mystery is the sole point of interest but by revealing it so early, Companéez robs the story of any potential for a final twist and also of all its dramatic momentum.

    There is also a misguided attempt to imbue this witty and meditative story with suspense, I suspect in order to make it fit better with the other two segments in the film based on more action-packed works. Thus, the segment ends with a chase through the streets of Paris and a shootout both of which feel utterly out of place in a Simenon story.

    Verneuil's direction is disappointingly flat-footed. It is technically sound, utterly adequate and utterly boring. Comprised almost entirely of lengthy wide shots in which actors stand and deliver their lines for what seems like ages, the segment drags on even with its 30-minute runtime. Companéez must take part of the blame, of course, for his overly talky script, but Verneuil fails to give any of the scenes dramatic urgency or energy. They all proceed at the same unhurried and listless pace, without atmosphere or even humour. Simenon's perceptive characterisations are simplified to base stereotypes and the point of the story, about how all adults eventually revert to childhood, is completely lost, surviving only as a sight gag in one of the seemingly endless scenes.

    There is also no attempt at making Simenon's characters come alive on screen even when the author himself gives them wonderfully eccentric and amusing characteristics. In the short story, the character of the judge is almost surreally funny, wrapped in a blanket in a sauna-like room. Adding coles to the fire surrounded by walls covered in books. His only amusement in old age is to scoff at the young altar boy as he passes by his window. In the film, he is merely an old man in a wheelchair without any of the eccentricities from the story. The wonderful atmosphere of his room and the scene in which Maigret tries to catches him out in a lie is completely lost.

    None of this, I hasten to add, is the fault of the actors who are uniformly excellent. Especially wonderful are Maigret and the altar boy played, respectively, by Michel Simon and Christian Fourcade. Simon is, I'd even go as far as to say, one of the best screen Maigrets. His warm, witty, commanding presence absolutely perfect for the part of the indefatigable commissaire. I wish he'd played him more often and in better movies. Also wonderful is Claire Olivier as the overbearing Mme Maigret and the two of them develop an enjoyable and believable rapport. But the segment centres on the scene between Maigret and the boy and Simon and Fourcade are wonderful together. Effortlessly, Fourcade brings out the grown-up seriousness in the altar boy and Simon the childishness in the commissaire.

    But, the wonderful cast and terrific source material are failed by a misguided adaptation and lacklustre direction. If the other two segments are as lacking as "The Testimony of the Altar Boy", I understand why "Full House" is a forgotten Henri Verneuil film.
    8happytrigger-64-390517

    The old man and the little boy

    It's a pleasure to discover this rarity in fabulous restoration. I didn't expect any good stuff from Cheyney's Lemmy Caution sketch, and it's a waste of time, the actor didn't convince me and the character Lemmy isn't developed, really boring. I expected more from Steeman who provided Clouzot's masterpieces, and Raymond Rouleau is really convincing as Wens, even if I've seen him more dynamic in that kind of character as Georges Masse. But the very best sketch of this rarity is obviously Michel Simon as Maigret. And it works well, he's another Maigret, not punchy as Gabin, but really empathetic with the kid, and that's a success. Some shots made me think of Julien Duvivier and Christian Jaque.

    I give an 8 note mostly for this sketch.

    A few months ago, on Bertrand Tavernier's blog, there was a discussion on the different Maigret, and no one had seen this version with Michel Simon, and I think of Bertrand Tavernier immediately saying his legendary "I have to check this".

    If you like French murder movies in sketches, I advise "Suivez cet homme".

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This is the only movie where the character of Lemmy Caution isn't played by Eddie Constantine.
    • Citations

      Le G'man Lemmy Caution (segment "Je suis un tendre"): She has legs that hold out their arms to you!

    • Connexions
      Edited into Portrait souvenir: Georges Simenon, part 4: Maigret (1963)
    • Bandes originales
      Ça Vaut l'Coup d'Oeil
      Music by Hans May

      Lyrics by André Tabet

      Performed by Nathalie Nattier

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 12 septembre 1952 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • France
    • Langue
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Full House
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Rue Julie, Paris 14, Paris, France(Street where Justin, his mother and the second-hand dealer live)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Centre national du cinéma et de l'image animée (CNC)
      • Coin de Mire Cinéma
      • Productions Calamy
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 58min(118 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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