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IMDbPro

Home at Seven

  • 1952
  • 1 h 25 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
872
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Margaret Leighton and Ralph Richardson in Home at Seven (1952)
CrimeDramaMystery

David Preston, um banqueiro, tem um lapso de memória de 24 horas. Acusado de roubo e homicídio, ele não consegue explicar o tempo perdido. Sem álibi, a polícia pressiona-o a explicar as hora... Ler tudoDavid Preston, um banqueiro, tem um lapso de memória de 24 horas. Acusado de roubo e homicídio, ele não consegue explicar o tempo perdido. Sem álibi, a polícia pressiona-o a explicar as horas perdidas, colocando em risco a sua liberdade.David Preston, um banqueiro, tem um lapso de memória de 24 horas. Acusado de roubo e homicídio, ele não consegue explicar o tempo perdido. Sem álibi, a polícia pressiona-o a explicar as horas perdidas, colocando em risco a sua liberdade.

  • Direção
    • Ralph Richardson
  • Roteiristas
    • Anatole de Grunwald
    • R.C. Sherriff
  • Artistas
    • Ralph Richardson
    • Margaret Leighton
    • Jack Hawkins
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,7/10
    872
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Ralph Richardson
    • Roteiristas
      • Anatole de Grunwald
      • R.C. Sherriff
    • Artistas
      • Ralph Richardson
      • Margaret Leighton
      • Jack Hawkins
    • 30Avaliações de usuários
    • 8Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos6

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    Elenco principal14

    Editar
    Ralph Richardson
    Ralph Richardson
    • David Preston
    Margaret Leighton
    Margaret Leighton
    • Janet Preston
    Jack Hawkins
    Jack Hawkins
    • Dr. Sparling
    Campbell Singer
    Campbell Singer
    • Inspector Hemingway
    Michael Shepley
    Michael Shepley
    • Major Watson
    Margaret Withers
    Margaret Withers
    • Mrs. Watson
    Frederick Piper
    • Mr. Petherbridge
    Meriel Forbes
    Meriel Forbes
    • Peggy Dobson
    Gerald Case
    • Sergeant Evans
    Diana Beaumont
    Diana Beaumont
    • Ellen
    Archie Duncan
    Archie Duncan
    • Station Sergeant
    • (não creditado)
    Victor Hagan
    • Police Photographer
    • (não creditado)
    Robert Moore
    • Fingerprint Man
    • (não creditado)
    Johnnie Schofield
    • Joe Dobson, Landlord of the Feathers
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Ralph Richardson
    • Roteiristas
      • Anatole de Grunwald
      • R.C. Sherriff
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários30

    6,7872
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    9SimonJack

    Smashingly good British mystery drama with a great cast

    "Home at Seven " (aka, Murder on Monday) is a smashingly good mystery drama. This is such a different plot, that I don't want to take away the surprise of the film by even doing a review with spoilers. I suspect that those who enjoy very good mysteries would not want even an inkling of how this story plays out. Others may want to read another review that has spoilers or reveals some of the details.

    But for my contribution here, I'll just say that this is a superb British mystery drama with a cast that includes some of England's best actors of the time. Besides starring as David Preston, Ralph Richardson directed this wonderful film. It was his only such venture behind the camera. Margaret Leighton is his wife, Janet. Jack Hawkins plays Dr. Sparling, Michael Shepley is Major Watson, Meriel Forbes is Peggy Dobson, and Campbell Singer is Inspector Hemingway.

    This is a fine film that shows superb acting in dramas sans police chases, running from the law, hiding out, and other actions. The film is based on a play by the title, "Home at Seven," by R. C. Sherriff.

    The film is a good reminder that a lie usually leads to misery for the one who tells it. Or, put more poignantly, the truth never hurts anyone.
    8MOscarbradley

    Stagey but surprisingly good.

    It's not uncommon for actors to direct themselves in films but many do it only once, perhaps because they believe in a project, either as vehicle for themselves or just as a vehicle worth bringing to the screen. In 1952 Ralph Richardson felt the need to direct a film of R. C. Sherriff's play "Home at Seven" casting himself as the bank clerk who has a 24 hour memory lapse and then finds himself inplicated in a murder.

    It's a good plot and if Richardson handles it in a somewhat theatrical fashion he, at least, draws first-rate performances from his cast while he is outstanding as the clerk. After Olivier, I've always felt Richardson was the finest of the theatrical knights to make it in the movies and he doesn't disappoint here. It's a wonderful performance and Margaret Leighton and Jack Hawkins are just as good as his fretting wife and the doctor who tries to help him. The plot itself may be a little far-fetched but the treatment is excellent making this one of the best and certainly one of the most underrated British films of the period.
    7barryrd

    British Gold Nugget from the 1950's

    Ralph Richardson, who both directs and acts in this film, has taken a simple story that depicts a short period in the life of a middle-class couple in post-war England whose routine is suddenly disrupted by the memory lapse of the husband. The story is brought to life by the acting of the three main actors - Richarson and Margaret Leighton as the couple and the medical doctor, Jack Hawkins.

    A veteran of World War II (1939-45), the dutiful husband is stricken with an anxiety attack that causes him to relive his days in battle. When this mental episode is over, he cannot remember what happened for a full 24-hour period. Husband and wife are perplexed and anxious by this sudden turn of events. They turn to their understanding family doctor for an explanation. The doctor, Jack Hawkins, is sympathetic and not overly worried but eager to find out the source of the problem.

    As it turns out, a theft and murder occurred that seem to implicate the husband or so the couple fears. Lies and cover-ups complicate the matter and the couple become so upset that they make things worse for themselves. The couple are so used to their routine that a sudden and unexplained twist becomes exaggerated. The story presents us with a puzzle and the reaction of two decent but somewhat docile human beings, who feel they will be unfairly targeted by the authorities. However, the police go about their work very calmly and before long everything is explained.

    The movie is a throwback to a time when ordinary people enjoyed simple pleasures like going to their club, or taking in the "pictures" and growing their chrysanthemums in the adjoining greenhouse garden...so very British.

    It is these very ordinary people that I have a great sympathy and admiration for in our often self-serving world. Nothing extraordinary about the movie or the couple but almost 60 years on, the acting still makes it a delight to watch.
    7mikrift

    Slow starter

    Very slow to gain momentum, but once it does it chugs along at an acceptable pace. Richardson may be an impeccable Shakespearean actor, but on the big screen he is far less convincing. Leighton excels as the dutiful wife who will do anything for her suffering husband. Of course we laugh at those traits in this modern age of feminism, but what a comfort dutiful wives must have been for men of that era. The plot is very predictable and somewhat rigid given the base cause: (amnesia), but it is handled very well by the direction of Richardson that you could be excused for mistaking it for a Hitchcock movie. All in all, an enjoyable film.
    10robert-temple-1

    Harrowing and Extraordinarily Accurate Portrayal of a Mental 'Fugue State'

    This is certainly one of the most accurate portrayals on film of what psychologists call a 'fugue state', which is a dissociative disorder of human consciousness caused by a mental trauma. In this story, a perfectly ordinary bank executive played by Ralph Richardson experiences amnesia for a 24-hour period of his life, with disastrous consequences. Every evening, after leaving his job in the City of London, Richardson takes the train from Cannon Street Station and arrives home in the suburbs at seven. One Tuesday, he arrives home at seven to find his wife, played brilliantly by Margaret Leighton, in a terrible state of anxiety bordering on hysteria. She asks him where he has been, why he did not come home the night before, why was he not at work at the bank all day, and she informs him that she called the police and reported him missing. He is incredulous and says that she is talking nonsense, that here he is precisely at seven as always, and it is Monday, not Tuesday. But she shows him the newspaper and proves that it is really Tuesday. Thus the story begins, and everything becomes increasingly desperate and harrowing from there on. This is the first and only film directed by Ralph Richardson, and he has done a superb job of it. He received expert support from cameramen Jack Hildyard and Ted Scaife, with camera operator Denys Coop, and Assistant Director Guy Hamilton, all of whom later became famous. Although the film is not showy and does not have dramatic lighting and editing, the emphasis is on the story and the actors, which creates a considerable intensity, as the performances are all so good. The doctor who attempts to sort out Richardson's 'missing day' is expertly played by Jack Hawkins, who was always one of the most reliable as well as agreeable of British actors, whether as a lead or in a supporting role, as here. The reason why this film is so convincing and so accurate in its portrayal of this psychological condition is that it is based upon a play by R. C. Sheriff. Sheriff is chiefly famous for his play JOURNEY'S END, which was filmed in 1930 and subsequently three more times. It is a gripping film about the trenches of the First World War, based on Sheriff's own Army experiences prior to his being invalided out after the Battle of Ypres. (It is a superb film. I taped it off the air years ago but gave my tape to John Mills, who asked me for it because he wanted to see it again, as he had been touring in that play as a young man when he met his wife in Shanghai because she and her father Colonel Hayley Bell attended a performance, and it was love at first sight. He thus considered that in a way he owed his happy marriage to R. C. Sheriff.) Sheriff had a direct and personal experience of such matters as shell shock and the fugue states caused by battle trauma, which he put to good use in HOME AT SEVEN, since the explanation of Richardson's fugue state is eventually found to be because he heard a sound like a gunshot, which snapped him into a dissociative state where he imagined he was again under attack in the War. The story was filmed again for television by the BBC five years later, in 1957, with Peter Cushing in the lead. Sheriff's expertise at writing convincing stories about strange mental states was shown in the film THE NIGHT MY NUMBER CAME UP (1955). That is a film I know a great deal about indeed, as it is based upon a real paranormal experience of my close friend Air Marshal Sir Victor Goddard (who made a speech at my wedding), with whom I discussed both the experience and the film on many occasions. Sir Victor believed Sheriff had done a very good job of portraying his story in dramatic form, and that was Sheriff's great strength. He also wrote the famous ODD MAN OUT (1947) with James Mason, and he adapted the two excellent Somerset Maugham story compilation films, QUARTET (1948) and TRIO (1950). And of course he did the screenplays for the classics THE INVISIBLE MAN (1933), GOODBYE, MR. CHIPS (1939), and THE DAM BUSTERS (1955). He really was a giant of British stage and screen, and deserves to be better remembered. He died in 1975. This film does a first rate job of putting the story across, in a state of high anxiety and suspense. It turns out that for all the years of his marriage, Richardson had been telling a little white lie to his wife by saying he left work at 6, whereas he really left work at 5 and stopped off in the back room of a pub run by friends (as pubs only opened at 6) for a friendly and very tame sherry, and a game of darts. He didn't care to tell his wife lest he offend her, as she 'disapproved of alcoholic drinks'. This is Richardson's one guilty secret, surely the tamest one ever featuring as a major plot element in a suspense film! But because of it, no one can figure out where Richardson was for his 24 lost hours, and he is wrongly suspected of theft and murder. This film should be shown to psychology students at universities. I have made a considerable study of dissociative psychological states, and I can assure everyone that every detail of this film is accurate, clearly because it is based upon a real case or cases known to Sheriff, and possibly even others known to Richardson, thus perhaps explaining Richardson's strange enthusiasm for the story. It is always better when films about psychological cases such as amnesia and dissociation of personality are based upon facts, for then they are convincing and effective, as this is.

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    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Sir Ralph Richardson's only directorial effort.
    • Conexões
      Version of Hemma klockan sju (1958)

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    Perguntas frequentes13

    • How long is Murder on Monday?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 17 de março de 1952 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Murder on Monday
    • Locações de filme
      • Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, Surrey, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Studio)
    • Empresas de produção
      • London Film Productions
      • British Lion Film Corporation
      • Maurice Cowan Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 25 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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