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IMDbPro

O Homem de Outubro

Título original: The October Man
  • 1947
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 35 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,0/10
1,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
John Mills in O Homem de Outubro (1947)
Suspense MysteryWhodunnitCrimeMystery

Quando uma jovem mulher é assassinada, seu vizinho do lado está sob suspeita devido a sua estada anterior em um hospital psiquiátrico.Quando uma jovem mulher é assassinada, seu vizinho do lado está sob suspeita devido a sua estada anterior em um hospital psiquiátrico.Quando uma jovem mulher é assassinada, seu vizinho do lado está sob suspeita devido a sua estada anterior em um hospital psiquiátrico.

  • Direção
    • Roy Ward Baker
  • Roteirista
    • Eric Ambler
  • Artistas
    • John Mills
    • Joan Greenwood
    • Edward Chapman
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,0/10
    1,6 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Roy Ward Baker
    • Roteirista
      • Eric Ambler
    • Artistas
      • John Mills
      • Joan Greenwood
      • Edward Chapman
    • 43Avaliações de usuários
    • 13Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória no total

    Fotos6

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    Elenco principal34

    Editar
    John Mills
    John Mills
    • Jim Ackland
    Joan Greenwood
    Joan Greenwood
    • Jenny Carden
    Edward Chapman
    Edward Chapman
    • Peachy
    Kay Walsh
    Kay Walsh
    • Molly Newman
    Joyce Carey
    Joyce Carey
    • Mrs. Vinton
    Catherine Lacey
    Catherine Lacey
    • Miss Selby
    Adrianne Allen
    Adrianne Allen
    • Joyce Carden
    Felix Aylmer
    Felix Aylmer
    • Dr. Martin
    Frederick Piper
    • Detective Inspector
    John Boxer
    • Detective Sergeant
    Patrick Holt
    Patrick Holt
    • Harry
    George Benson
    • Pope
    Jack Melford
    Jack Melford
    • Wilcox
    Esme Beringer
    • Miss Heap
    Ann Wilton
    • Miss Parsons
    James Hayter
    James Hayter
    • Garage Man
    Frank Ling
    • Booking Office Clerk
    Juliet Mills
    Juliet Mills
    • Child
    • Direção
      • Roy Ward Baker
    • Roteirista
      • Eric Ambler
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários43

    7,01.6K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    9bkoganbing

    British Noir

    One of the best pieces of acting I've seen John Mills do is in this film The October Man. It takes part of its plot from Laura and part of it from the American film High Wall that starred Robert Taylor.

    Mills as he did on so many occasions was the British average Joe who as it happens suffers a traumatic brain injury as a result of a train wreck. He blacks out and comes back with no apparent rhyme or reason and his treating doctor Felix Aylmer says that's likely to go on for some time. No reason though he can't resume normal life and employment.

    Which he does and starts living at a boarding house with the usual amount of busybodies. He even gets a relationship of sorts going with both Joan Greenwood and Kay Walsh. But when Walsh turns up murdered, Mills is looking real good for it to Scotland Yard guys Frederick Piper and John Boxer.

    Of course Mills didn't do it, but the fascinating thing with The October Man is that we do learn before the end who did do it and that individual confesses to Mills. The perpetrator is also a mentally unstable, but has learned to hide it. And it looks very much as if Mills will not be able to prove his innocence.

    The focus of The October Man is on Mills's plight. It's one of the best pieces of acting I've ever seen from John Mills. He does you really do think he's about to get into a jackpot not of his own doing.

    The October Man was very much influenced by Hollywood noir, although I'm sure our friends across the pond could say our noir films were influenced by this. It's a very moody cinematographic piece with expert use of shadow and lights. And John Mills is heartbreaking in the role.

    Don't miss this if it is ever broadcast again on this side of the Atlantic.
    jozefkafka

    October is the cruelest month?

    I first heard of this 1947 British film in one of Leslie Halliwell's books. Written by Eric Ambler and directed by Roy Baker, it's kind of a British answer to Hollywod's noir, essentially a reworking of Grahame Greene's Ministry Of Fear. Chemist (and I do mean "chemist", not pharmacist or apothecary) John Mills blames himself for the death a friend's daughter in a bus crash, which also gives Mills a concussion and tendencies towards blackouts and amnesia. Quicker than you can say "Alfred Hitchcock" Mills is accused of murdering a fellow resident of his boarding house, and poor old John can't remember if he did it or not. What's most fascinating to me is the subtext -- Mills is clearly supposed to represent returning war veterans, but the film's makers were too afraid to have war wounds be the source of his blackouts (even though H'wood had already done it in The Blue Dahlia) and instead resorted to the bus crash contrivance. There is effective direction by Baker (who went to H'wood and made the classic 3D "depthie" Inferno, later returning to England to do A Night To Remember) and Ambler's script is good, with a few surprise scattered throughout.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    Astrology Amnesia.

    The October man is directed by Roy Ward Baker and written by Eric Ambler. It stars John Mills, Joan Greenwood, Edward Chapman, Kay Walsh, Joyce Carey, Catherine Lacey, Adrianne Allen and Felix Aylmer. Music is by William Alwyn and cinematography by Erwin Hillier.

    Following a bus crash that killed a friends child that he was treating to a day out, Jim Ackland (Mills) suffers a brain injury. During his recuperation it's revealed to him that he is prone to amnesia, and even though he's suicidal over the child's death, he's released back into society. Setting up lodgings at a hotel and back to work as an industrial chemist, Jim is functioning well. That is until he financially helps one of the young lady residents of the hotel and becomes the chief suspect when she winds up murdered in a park. Jim has no recollection of committing the crime, but he was in the park…

    Pulsing with moody atmospherics, this Brit noir – psychological - thriller showcases the best of John Mills and the higher end of the British noir splinter. It's a post war London that's cloaked in shadowy streets, of parks harbouring spectral mists punctured by bulbous lamps, a train station a foreboding but visually stunning presence. Jim Ackland is suicidal and nursing amnesia, yet the hotel where he lives, itself a relic of a London that time forgot, is full of human beings from different ends of the evolutionary scale. It's not a good place for Jim to be, a cuckoos nest of spiteful, suspicious, vengeful, lonely people, Jim in fact, in spite of his problems, appears to be the only sane one there!

    There is no great "whodunit" to be solved here, some critics have bizarrely complained that the murderer is too obvious! Bizarre because the makers don't try and hide who it is, the film is firmly interested in the human condition, in how members of society react post a heinous crime, and of course how the afflicted antagonist fights his corner when confronted by hostility and his own mental confusion. Roy Ward Baker, for what was his first direction assignment, is more than up for the job of crafting a noir thriller. He has a good eye for the visual traits that often marry up with human feelings or behaviour, of course having someone of Hillier's class on cinematography duty naturally helps him through his debut production.

    Splendid entertainment. 8/10
    8Handlinghandel

    They Don't Get Much Better Than This!

    The superb John Mills plays a man with a history of emotional imbalance. He moves into a rooming house peopled by the sorts who might be charming in a Barbara Pym novel. Here they are increasingly less charming: There's the classic nosy landlady. There's an elderly resident who begs for more coal on the fire: The way she's written to do this made me think of a leitmotif from an Eliot poem.

    There's a homely bachelor; there's an attractive young woman involved with a married man. And, there are assorted eccentrics thrown in as well.

    Mills meets Joan Greenwood, she of the dark, husky voice. And a murder takes place.

    That's all I will say, lest I give anything at all away: Try hard to see this little beauty of a film, knowing as little of the plot in advance as I did. Indeed, before today, I had never heard of it.

    If it were an American film of this period it would be called a film noir. It has all the elements but I don't think I'd call it one. It's a psychological thriller, a mystery.

    The secondary roles are cast superbly in every case. It's tense, filled with fascinating characters -- it lacks almost nothing. And the two stars could scarcely be better.
    7blanche-2

    pretty good

    John Mills is the "October Man" in this small 1947 British film costarring Joan Greenwood.

    Mills plays Jim Ackland, a man involved in a tragic train accident that killed the child of a friend (actually played by Juliet Mills) he was returning to town. He suffers a fractured skull and is hospitalized for a year, as he has developed some brain damage. He blames himself for the accident and is haunted by it. It's actually not clear if he has actual brain damage - he acts perfectly normal and is totally functional - or has developed psychological problems. He leaves the hospital, takes a room at a boarding house and gets a job. His neighbor in the house is a pretty young woman (Joan Greenwood) who apparently is always having money trouble and possibly traded either downright sex or nookies for money with another resident of the house, Mr. Peachy (Edward Chapman). Meanwhile, she's seeing a married man. So one could say her life is complicated. Attempting to break the ties that bind with Mr. not-so-Peachy, she puts the touch on Jim for 30 pounds, and he writes her a check. The next day she's found dead in the Commons, the crumpled check nearby. Suspicion falls on Jim because of the check, the fact that he wasn't home that night she was killed and because of idle gossip started by Mr. Peachey. Meanwhile, Jim has fallen in love with his coworker's sister; though his old terrors return, he realizes that he needs to keep fighting and clear himself of the murder.

    This is a good movie with a superb performance by John Mills and real British atmosphere which lends itself to the story and bumps up the suspense. As someone correctly stated, it is sort of a film noir but really more psychological in nature, which was all the rage after World War II. Very entertaining.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The little girl to whom Ackland (John Mills) is talking on the bus, is Mills' real daughter, Juliet Mills.
    • Erros de gravação
      When Jim is told he is the only suspect, he does not mention that another man in the hotel has been pursuing and annoying her.
    • Citações

      Jim Ackland: I didn't give up! I didn't give up!

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    Perguntas frequentes17

    • How long is The October Man?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 1947 (Alemanha)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The October Man
    • Locações de filme
      • Amersham Hill, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Bridge over railway where Jim contemplates suicide.)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Two Cities Films
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 1.000.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 35 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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