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Je suis un assassin

Original title: The Valiant
  • 1929
  • Approved
  • 1h 6m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
597
YOUR RATING
Marguerite Churchill, Paul Muni, and Edith Yorke in Je suis un assassin (1929)
Drama

After killing an unknown man for an unknown reason, a mysterious drifter turns himself to the law under a false name, intending to protect his own family's honor. But when the news of his co... Read allAfter killing an unknown man for an unknown reason, a mysterious drifter turns himself to the law under a false name, intending to protect his own family's honor. But when the news of his conviction breaks, the drifter's sister considers the possibility that the man is her long-l... Read allAfter killing an unknown man for an unknown reason, a mysterious drifter turns himself to the law under a false name, intending to protect his own family's honor. But when the news of his conviction breaks, the drifter's sister considers the possibility that the man is her long-lost brother.

  • Director
    • William K. Howard
  • Writers
    • Tom Barry
    • John Hunter Booth
    • Holworthy Hall
  • Stars
    • Paul Muni
    • Marguerite Churchill
    • Johnny Mack Brown
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    597
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William K. Howard
    • Writers
      • Tom Barry
      • John Hunter Booth
      • Holworthy Hall
    • Stars
      • Paul Muni
      • Marguerite Churchill
      • Johnny Mack Brown
    • 20User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Photos20

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Paul Muni
    Paul Muni
    • James Dyke
    Marguerite Churchill
    Marguerite Churchill
    • Mary Douglas
    Johnny Mack Brown
    Johnny Mack Brown
    • Robert Ward
    • (as John Mack Brown)
    DeWitt Jennings
    DeWitt Jennings
    • Warden Holt
    Edith Yorke
    Edith Yorke
    • Mrs. Douglas
    Clifford Dempsey
    Clifford Dempsey
    • Police Lieutenant
    Richard Carlyle
    • Father Daly
    Henry Kolker
    Henry Kolker
    • Judge
    Robert Elliott
    Robert Elliott
    • Undetermined Secondary Role
    • (scenes deleted)
    Sherwood Bailey
    • Little Boy
    • (uncredited)
    George Chesebro
    George Chesebro
    • Liberty Bondsman
    • (uncredited)
    Sidney D'Albrook
    Sidney D'Albrook
    • Prison Guard
    • (uncredited)
    Dannie Mac Grant
    Dannie Mac Grant
    • Little Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Henry Hall
    Henry Hall
    • Harold Everett Porter
    • (uncredited)
    Barton Hepburn
    Barton Hepburn
    • Joe Douglas as a Youth
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Homans
    Robert Homans
    • Newspaper Printer
    • (uncredited)
    Lillian Lawrence
    • Spinster on Train
    • (uncredited)
    Ralph L. Novarro
    • Unidentified secondary role
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William K. Howard
    • Writers
      • Tom Barry
      • John Hunter Booth
      • Holworthy Hall
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.0597
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    Featured reviews

    6xerses13

    Creaks, but still worth watching...

    Paul Muni's (1895>1967) initial role in film earned him a Academy Award nomination for 'Best Actor' in a understated performance. He plays his role without the 'bravura' or 'historonics' that would mark most of his later roles the rest of his career. Just for that, THE VALIANT (1929) is worth watching.

    Muni plays 'James Dyke' a alias to protect his Family back in Ohio. He is a self-confessed murderer who killed a Man for a undisclosed discretion with his only explanation 'he deserved it and God will understand'. Later suspected as a long lost Son he concocts a story to put his Family at ease which his Sister (first) and Mother buys. He is their Son's Friend who witnessed him get killed during the GREAT WAR (WWI) by a direct hit from a artillery shell, a '5.9'. For the historically interested that would be a German 15 Centimeter.

    Running only 66" it will not tax the modern viewer. Like most early 'talky' films it is relatively static. Even though it is made at the FOX STUDIOS who used the advanced 'sound on film' technology from Western Electric. Marguerite Churchill (1910>2000) best know for Dracula's DAUGHTER (1936) and JOHNNY MACK BROWN (1904>1974) 'B' Westerns are also here for the ride. It is Muni though that will hold your interest. Recently restored, it is a fine illustration of the early sound Cinema.
    71930s_Time_Machine

    Intriguing, original and fascinating - surprisingly good for 1929.

    If ever you ever wanted a definition of melodrama then this is it but don't let that put you off - it's is also a unexpectedly intelligent, grown-up and by 1929 standards, a well-made little film. A man kills another man - we don't know why, we don't know who the killer is, we don't know whom he killed. He's sentenced to death - is he resigned to his fate, does he want to die, is he planning an escape? By not giving anything at all away your curiosity is instantly engaged. It's such a clever little device - and one you wouldn't expect from a 1929 Fox Film.

    In 1929 a handful of directors hit the ground running when it came to switching from silents to talkies. Most however, as was amusingly shown in the Margot Robbie film BABYLON hadn't a clue resulting in so much unwatchable awfulness. Although William Howard wasn't one of those up there with the likes of De Mille, von Sternberg, Mamoulian or even Roland West, he wasn't one the worst either. There's nothing wrong with this at all it simply doesn't have the 'wow factor' some of his contemporaries managed to achieve. He clearly knew how to make a silent film and especially his 'film parts' as opposed to the main 'stage play part' at the end (this picture is an expanded version of a very popular one-act play) are excellent. His skill is shown in the first scenes where he perfectly captures an authentic feel of pre-depression America as Muni traipses down some tatty street past tatty kids born a hundred years ago playing out their ordinary lives. He gives us a real time-machine moment.

    The acting is also miles better than a lot of the very early talkies but it's still far from natural.... except for Paul Muni. His portrayal of detachment, hopelessness and quiet resignation is outstanding. Although this gets crazily melodramatic, Muni's stoic performance is both intriguing and really rather moving. He easily makes up for the shortcomings of his fellow actors....apart from Johnny Mack Brown who cannot be forgiven on any grounds. Fortunately he's not in this too much. You almost feel embarrassed for him. Whereas MGM and Paramount targeted those who considered themselves sophisticated, Fox's audience were more blue collar. Presumably Mr Brown was picked to appeal to Fox Film's rural audience in middle America but I'd imagine even the humblest of farm hands back then must have found that patronising.

    I know people looked older in the past but Edith York, playing the mother looks about two hundred years old. She must have given birth to her daughter when she was about 90 which can only be explained by her daughter Mary being some sort of miracle you read about in The Bible. That's actually feasible and confirmed when you look at Marguerite Churchill because if you had to imagine what an angel looked like, you'd imagine her. She's almost too pretty to be real! You can easily forgive her slightly uneasy performance doing something completely new to her simply because she's so pretty but even so she's not just a (very) pretty face - she really can act - her emotional longing, purity and positiveness actually blends really well with Paul Muni's mysterious self-sacrificing moodiness.
    7AlsExGal

    Watch this little film for Muni's performance...

    ...because basically he gives the only three-dimensional performance in the film as his fellow players appear as cardboard cut-outs when compared to him. However, since this was released very early in talking picture history in the spring of 1929, I can overlook that. In fact, because this is one of the first all talking pictures Fox made it makes Muni's performance all the more remarkable and his colleagues' performances all the more forgivable.

    This is a very simple short little film with little back story given. The film opens with a man (Paul Muni) having just shot another man in the heart of the big city, leaving the scene of the crime, and turning himself in for murder at the local police precinct. When asked his name, he picks one off of a nearby calendar - James Dyke. When he's asked why he committed the murder he simply says that the man deserved to die for what he did and he's not sorry, but he also realizes he himself has to pay for what he did and he is ready to accept the consequences. The papers pick up the story of this mystery man, soon to be executed for murder. Out in rural Ohio, an old sick woman sees pictures and stories of this man, whom nobody has been able to identify and is unwilling to identify himself, and wonders if it isn't her son who has left home 15 years before and from whom she has received no word in all this time. Worried sick this is her son, her daughter and her daughter's fiancé make the trip cross-country to visit the condemned man and find out if he is the long lost man - Joe Douglas.

    The best scene is the last scene, where Dyke meets Mary Douglas (Marguerite Churchill) in the warden's office and has time with her alone where she is sure she can determine if this man is her brother. This is where you realize where the title comes from and who it is that is being valiant here and why. I'd recommend this one primarily for those interested in the transition to sound, plus it's a pretty good example of the kind of material Fox Films specialized in at least up until 1940 or so, that being entertainment for rural audiences in which it was common for their films to warn people of being tempted by the big city versus valuing the simple charm of hearth, home, and farm.
    6fntstcplnt

    The Valiant (1929)

    Directed by William K. Brown. Starring Paul Muni, Marguerite Churchill, DeWitt Jennings, John Mack Brown, Edith Yorke, Clifford Dempsey, Richard Carlyle.

    After killing a man who "deserved to die," Muni turns himself in to authorities under a false identity to protect his family; when Churchill sees his picture in the paper and believes it to be the brother she hasn't seen in years, she travels to the prison to meet him before his execution. Simple, unfussy drama, clocking in at just over an hour, has moments of quiet power emerging from the often stiff, static presentation. In his screen debut, Muni establishes an intuitive, naturalistic acting style, avoiding nearly all the industry-wide creaky performance tricks that severely date most early talkies (Brown, on the other hand, inspires giggles just about every time he opens his mouth). Even at its short length, signs of padding when Muni is offscreen are apparent, while other aspects would have benefited from deeper development; sentimentality during the final reel is earned.

    61/100
    Michael_Elliott

    Fine Performances Make Film

    The Valiant (1929)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    This is a rather bizarre film that has been forgotten over the years but it does have some historical importance to it as it earned Paul Muni his first Best Actor Oscar nomination. As the film starts off we witness him killing a man and then turning himself into the police. He refuses to give his real name, defend himself or explain anything so he is sentenced to die. On a farm in Ohio, a mother sees his picture in the paper and believes that he is her son that went missing over a decade earlier so she sends her daughter (Marguerite Churchill) to see. THE VALIANT really isn't a good movie but there are some interesting things going on in it that makes it worth viewing for film buffs. The biggest reason are for the performances, which are all fairly good. This includes Muni who looks so incredibly young here. It's rather fun to see him in a performance like this because it's so different from what we'd see later in his life and especially in stuff like SCARFACE. What really caught me off guard was how laid back Muni was in the part and the restraint he showed by not going over-the-top or reaching for some sort of melodrama. Churchill is also very good in her role as the possible sister. DeWitt Jennings does a nice job as the warden of the prison and we even have Johnny Mack Brown playing the sister's fiancé. On a technical level the film is also rather impressive and especially the audio, which is among the best I've ever heard from an early talkie. The cinematography is also quite impressive for the time and especially some tracking shots that are seen early on. With that being said, the story itself really isn't a very strong one and you can't help but grow somewhat frustrated that there's not a better pay off to the story. There are also a few scenes that come off way too stagey and this here takes the film down a few notches. With that said, fans of Muni or early sound films will want to check this out and at 61-minutes the thing never gets boring.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Film debut of Paul Muni.
    • Goofs
      When the warden begins to head toward the door in order to let Dyke's sister enter his office, he is holding a cigar in his right hand. But on the next immediate cut, as he reaches the door and then opens it; there is no longer a cigar in his hand.
    • Quotes

      Mary Douglas: Every evening, when I'd be sent off to bed, Joe and I had a little Romeo and Juliet goodnight of our very own.

    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of El valiente (1930)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 1, 1933 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Valiant
    • Production company
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 6m(66 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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