VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
1511
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Valerie Carns, condannata per omicidio, viene bloccata da un'alluvione nell'ospedale di un convento, durante il trasferimento per l'esecuzione. L' infermiera Suor Mary si convince della sua ... Leggi tuttoValerie Carns, condannata per omicidio, viene bloccata da un'alluvione nell'ospedale di un convento, durante il trasferimento per l'esecuzione. L' infermiera Suor Mary si convince della sua innocenza e si mette alla ricerca dell'assassino.Valerie Carns, condannata per omicidio, viene bloccata da un'alluvione nell'ospedale di un convento, durante il trasferimento per l'esecuzione. L' infermiera Suor Mary si convince della sua innocenza e si mette alla ricerca dell'assassino.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Gertrude Astor
- Village Woman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Jack Carol
- Villager
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Steve Clark
- Mr. Moore
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
There really isn't anything to criticize about this movie. The plot was interesting and well handled; the cast was good. This is a solid movie and well worth watching.
Based on a undistinguished play, in lesser hands this would have been totally forgettable. Director Douglas Sirk endows it all with a sense of style but still does not manage to salvage the pedestrian stagy dialog.
Claudette Colbert is as always, winning in her role as the nun with a feisty spirit she finds difficult to hold in check and Gladys Cooper lends her renowned haughtiness. While there are some well played smaller parts there's much wooden acting too which bogs the film down measurably.
One can't help wondering if Hitchcock ever saw this, as the climax in the bell tower is a forerunner of the famous scene from "Vertigo", but there the similarity ends.
Since Sirk went on to become an important director, this film is of certain interest, but not one to make any particular effort to hunt down.
Claudette Colbert is as always, winning in her role as the nun with a feisty spirit she finds difficult to hold in check and Gladys Cooper lends her renowned haughtiness. While there are some well played smaller parts there's much wooden acting too which bogs the film down measurably.
One can't help wondering if Hitchcock ever saw this, as the climax in the bell tower is a forerunner of the famous scene from "Vertigo", but there the similarity ends.
Since Sirk went on to become an important director, this film is of certain interest, but not one to make any particular effort to hunt down.
After a season of heavy rains, the Norfolk dykes overflow. Refugees gather at the convent on the hill. It's not only local townsfolk who seek shelter. Convicted murderess Ann Blyth is stranded on her way to be hanged for killing her brother. Sister Claudette Colbert doesn't see how this lovely creature could have murdered anyone. She begins to investigate. Can she prove Miss Blyth innocent before the waters recede?
Although best remembered these days for his cynical depictions of middle-class America, director Douglas Sirk is adept at portraying the humble arrogance of nuns. Certainly the performances are all excellent; I was particularly impressed by Connie Gilchrist as a shrewd and sympathetic nun. DP William H. Daniels matches the lighting levels to the dark of the storms and the hopelessness of Miss Blyth's plight. Still, in the end, it's another murder mystery and you know the actual murderer will turn up among the people stranded at the convent.
Although best remembered these days for his cynical depictions of middle-class America, director Douglas Sirk is adept at portraying the humble arrogance of nuns. Certainly the performances are all excellent; I was particularly impressed by Connie Gilchrist as a shrewd and sympathetic nun. DP William H. Daniels matches the lighting levels to the dark of the storms and the hopelessness of Miss Blyth's plight. Still, in the end, it's another murder mystery and you know the actual murderer will turn up among the people stranded at the convent.
It's a can-we-prove-her-innocence before the convicted murderess is executed drama set in a convent hospital in Norfolk County, England, in the 1940s. A significant rainstorm and collapsed dike have isolated the convent hospital. Major characters are the Mother Superior (Gladys Cooper), hospital matron Sister Mary (Claudette Colbert), handyman Willi (Michael Pate), Dr. Jeffreys (Robert Douglas) and his flighty wife, Isabel (Anne Crawford), and angry Nurse Phillips (Phyllis Stanley). During the downpour, Police Sergeant Melling (Gavin Muir), Prison Matron Pierce (Norma Varden), and prisoner Valerie Carns (Ann Blyth) are forced to take cover at the convent. Carns has been found guilty of poisoning her disabled brother and is on her way to Norfolk to be hanged.
The plot revolves around Sister Mary's saintliness, which some around her challenge when she begins to doubt Valerie's guilt of the crime. Slowly, Sister Mary gathers information and discerns the villain's identity despite Mother Superior's opposition.
"Thunder of the Hill" (we hear thunder during the storm) is a straightforward murder mystery and not really in the noir style that some call it. Colbert does well as the nun who searches for perfection as she feels guilt for her own brother's suicide. I was less impressed with Ann Blyth's acting; it seemed forced and brittle. The other primary actors did well, including Michael Pate, Robert Douglas, and Phyllis Stanley.
The plot revolves around Sister Mary's saintliness, which some around her challenge when she begins to doubt Valerie's guilt of the crime. Slowly, Sister Mary gathers information and discerns the villain's identity despite Mother Superior's opposition.
"Thunder of the Hill" (we hear thunder during the storm) is a straightforward murder mystery and not really in the noir style that some call it. Colbert does well as the nun who searches for perfection as she feels guilt for her own brother's suicide. I was less impressed with Ann Blyth's acting; it seemed forced and brittle. The other primary actors did well, including Michael Pate, Robert Douglas, and Phyllis Stanley.
This film is based on a play, entitled BONAVENTURE, the title of which refers to the lead character, the nun named Sister Mary Bonaventure. But the film was released in 1951 as THUNDER ON THE HILL and has been released on DVD and Blu-Ray recently under that title as well. The story is highly dramatic, indeed can properly be described as a melodrama, and is powerfully directed by Douglas Sirk. It is set in the county of Norfolk, 8 miles from the city Norwich. Enormous floods have made the land impassable, so that some travellers cannot reach Norwich and they take refuge in a large convent, where they are welcomed by the sisters, who feed and shelter them. Amongst those taking refuge there are a policeman and a woman prisoner, as well as her female guard. We learn that she is on her way to Norwich to be executed for murder, and is due to be hung by the neck on a gallows the very next morning. But she will be late for her own execution, because there is no way to get to Norwich, and the phone lines are down so that a police boat cannot be summoned either. This sets the scene for a high intensity situation. A very saintly young nun feels instinctively when she meet the supposed murderess that she is really innocent. The nun is played by Claudette Colbert, and the condemned girl by Ann Blyth. The cinematography is terrific, evoking moods and atmospheres with every shot, and is by William H. Daniels. The combination of his camera work, Sirk's direction, and standout performances by the actors (Gladys Cooper play the Mother superior) make the drama immensely powerful. This is a major early work by Douglas Sirk. And it focuses intently on questions of guilt and innocence, and highly emotional scenes with a great deal of tension, as the confrontations play out one after the other, things are revealed, and there are surprises in store.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizCast members Michael Pate and Felippa Rock met while filming and married within the year, remaining so until Pate's death in 2008.
- BlooperMrs. Smithson is shown to have given birth to a full-sized baby, yet is shown lying flat on her back with a flat stomach in a hospital bed the day before. This was likely somewhat intentional, since filmmakers were loathe to show visibly pregnant women in the 1950s.
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 24 minuti
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What is the English language plot outline for La campana del convento (1951)?
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