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Jusqu' à ce que mort s'ensuive

Original title: Blanche Fury
  • 1948
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Stewart Granger and Valerie Hobson in Jusqu' à ce que mort s'ensuive (1948)
Blanche Fury: She's Very Weak
Play clip1:51
Watch Blanche Fury: She's Very Weak
1 Video
13 Photos
Costume DramaPeriod DramaTragic RomanceTrue CrimeCrimeDramaMysteryRomance

The childless widow of Allan Fury bequeaths the Fury estate to her Fuller relatives, but Allan's illegitimate son who masquerades as a servant hopes to grab the estate for himself.The childless widow of Allan Fury bequeaths the Fury estate to her Fuller relatives, but Allan's illegitimate son who masquerades as a servant hopes to grab the estate for himself.The childless widow of Allan Fury bequeaths the Fury estate to her Fuller relatives, but Allan's illegitimate son who masquerades as a servant hopes to grab the estate for himself.

  • Director
    • Marc Allégret
  • Writers
    • Audrey Erskine-Lindop
    • Cecil McGivern
    • Hugh Mills
  • Stars
    • Stewart Granger
    • Valerie Hobson
    • Walter Fitzgerald
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Marc Allégret
    • Writers
      • Audrey Erskine-Lindop
      • Cecil McGivern
      • Hugh Mills
    • Stars
      • Stewart Granger
      • Valerie Hobson
      • Walter Fitzgerald
    • 42User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Videos1

    Blanche Fury: She's Very Weak
    Clip 1:51
    Blanche Fury: She's Very Weak

    Photos13

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    Top cast45

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    Stewart Granger
    Stewart Granger
    • Philip Thorn
    Valerie Hobson
    Valerie Hobson
    • Blanche Fury
    Walter Fitzgerald
    Walter Fitzgerald
    • Simon Fury
    Michael Gough
    Michael Gough
    • Lawrence Fury
    Maurice Denham
    Maurice Denham
    • Major Fraser
    Sybille Binder
    Sybille Binder
    • Louisa
    • (as Sybilla Binder)
    Allan Jeayes
    Allan Jeayes
    • Mr. Weatherby
    • (as Alan Jeayes)
    Edward Lexy
    Edward Lexy
    • Col. Jenkins
    Suzanne Gibbs
    • Lavinia Fury
    Ernest Jay
    • Samuel Calamy
    Townsend Whitling
    • Banks
    J.H. Roberts
    J.H. Roberts
    • Doctor
    • (as J. H. Roberts)
    Arthur Wontner
    Arthur Wontner
    • Lord Rudford
    Amy Veness
    Amy Veness
    • Mrs. Winterbourne
    Cherry London
    • Molly
    George Woodbridge
    George Woodbridge
    • Aimes
    Lionel Grose
    • Jordon
    Bryan Herbert
    • Elliot
    • (as Brian Herbert)
    • Director
      • Marc Allégret
    • Writers
      • Audrey Erskine-Lindop
      • Cecil McGivern
      • Hugh Mills
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    6.71.2K
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    Featured reviews

    otter

    Effective suspense in period trappings

    The 18th century costumes, manor-house setting, and forbidden romance make this look like a bodice-ripper to the idle channel-flipper, but it's not. It's a twisted and effective suspense movie in a period setting, more like "Dangerous Liaisons" than Harlequin books. It's about a beautiful and willful young woman (Valerie Hobson) who doesn't like her rich clod of a husband, instead she has the hots for poor-but-gorgeous estate manager Stewart Granger. At first it's all forbidden kisses and steamy dialogue... until they kill her husband. Then, things start to get real, and get creepy. It's easy to get excited over forbidden fruit that looks like Stewart Granger, but a whole lot harder to deal with a murderer who wants to marry you for reasons that have nothing to do with romance. Especially when it's impossible to refuse him because you're an accessory to murder, even after he...(sorry, no spoilers). It's rather like Hitchcock's "Shadow of a Doubt" or "Dangerous Liaisons", in which a well-to-do, polite exterior conceals a man and woman whose love has turned deadly. When I first saw this movie I was astonished at how good it was, and wondered why I'd never heard of it. It isn't a classic like "Kind Hearts and Coronets", but it sure grabbed me when I flipped across it. Between the solid performances by Hobson and Granger, the lush Technicolor photography, the steamy romance, and the creepy ending, this is one to look for. (I don't believe it's out on video, but is occasionally shown on AMC
    9TheSmutPeddler

    Sumptuous, atmospheric color and style make this a must for DVD...but WHEN???

    "Blanche Fury" is one of those films that is rarely aired on TV, impossible to find on video, and OUGHT to be released to DVD for magnificent production values, use of color, and all out dripping-with-Gothic eeriness. The leads are compelling (Valerie Hobson and Stewart Granger at both their primes). This is also one of those rare opportunities to see Michael Gough doing what he does best; behaving thoroughly despicably! (unfortunately, Gough is familiar to contemporary audiences pretty much only as Alfred the butler from the "Batman" films of the 90's, which is rather a crime since he's most proficient playing cads and sinister megalomaniacs).

    Watching "Blanche Fury" is like diving head first into a Victorian Gothic romance novel, and is pulled off with style and panache in every sense. It's a film for revival houses, ripe for restoration and preservation on DVD/VHS, and would surely find an audience in today's society which seems pretty much preoccupied with escapism. Escape into the world of "Blanche Fury" and you might not want to resurface (yes, it's that good).
    dbdumonteil

    The silence and the fury.

    Is Marc Allegret a director?Or does he simply(but smartly) use others' talents?His most memorable pre-war movies are not really his.For instance ,"Fanny" owes everything to its actor,Raimu,and its writer,Marcel Pagnol:it is actually a Pagnol movie.Ditto "Entrée des Artistes" which is remarkable by Henri Jeanson's lines ("I wear my Légion d'honneur to impress the fool" ) and Louis Jouvet's acting genius.

    A short English period occurred just after the war -when he other French directors such as Renoir and Duvivier worked abroad during the war.Which leads us to "Blanche Fury".This movie is par excellence an effort in which Allégret uses the others' skills.Objections remain:an arguable editing ,too much ellipse (the relationship Lawrence/Blanche is botched,and the pace is often too fast and hasty :again the Blanche /Thorn love affair is believable only because of the actors' splendid performances).

    And the screenplay,however ,is wonderful:snatches of lady Chatterley,Jane Eyre ,the turn of the screw,My cousin Rachel,Wuthering Heights and more come to mind.Even Vincente Minelli's "home from the hill"(1960)!This is a romantic story par excellence. Heredity and fatality play a prominent part is this story of silence and fury:Thorn (a great Stewart Granger) is a bastard,but Blanche( a majestic Valerie Hobson) is akin to him,because,at the beginning of the movie,she's a governess,and only marriage can provide her with a place in the sun;but her husband is probably impotent :here the writers use a metaphor.his father wants him to show his authority over their valuable property,that is to say to be a man.At the beginning of the movie,Blanche is a go-getter,but as soon as she meets Thorn,her fate is sealed,she reacts to events ,she no longer initiates them.Ultimately,she will try to stop the impending disaster ,but what she does finally backfires on herself and turns it into a final Thorn victory.Thorn is much more complex than he appears at first sight:actually he should own the property and he sees the Fury family as impostors;his attitude with animals makes us side with him for a while.Then,when he's about to win,he treats the servants as his predecessors used to do,and we discover his love for Blanche takes a back seat to his love for the domain.Then the lovers' fate is sealed.

    Color treatments are visually astounding :when we go from Blanche's deathbed to a flashback at the beginning,then the final pictures,hellish glimmering red glow ;Blanche's arrival in the castle,in a snowed up,misty landscape;the barns fire ,which seems to set ablaze the darkest night.

    Afterwards,Allégret's career straightly goes downhill."L'amant de Lady Chatterley" which I haven't seen but which he may have intended as "Blanche Fury II" ,poor Brigitte Bardot's vehicles ("en effeuillant la marguerite') or abysmal works(a segment of the horrible made up of sketches movie "les Parisiennes") .His brother Yves was much better ("Manèges" "Dédée d'Anvers" "une si jolie petite plage" "les Orgueilleux").

    "Blanche Fury" deserves to be seen anyway.
    verna55

    Eerie Gothic melodrama with several bizarre and unsettling twists.

    This dark, engrossing drama centers on a beautiful English girl(Valerie Hobson) who goes to live at her uncle's Gothic estate where she engages in an illicit affair with the head-strong steward(Stewart Granger). This is one of the Rank Studio's most impressive Gothic melodramas. It's rich in creepy, menacing atmosphere, and features solid direction by Marc Allegret and terrific performances by the multi-talented British cast. Most of these classic '40's British dramas were rightfully filmed in black and white. BLANCHE FURY was filmed in color, but color actually suits this film well and makes the wonderful Gothic architecture all the more enjoyable.
    9suppascoops

    one of the best films of the forties

    I first discovered this little gem on tv a few years ago and loved it , i taped it and for some unknown reason kept watching it over and over it has a kind of hypnotic pull to i mean you have to really get into, i guess its not for everybody but it has been held in some regard up until recently,martin scorseses mentioned this as one of his guilty pleasures in film comment years ago and popular film presenter and critic from australia bill collins said while presenting another film that this would have to be one of the best british films from the forties.I totally agree it has a great gothic feel and the decor is marvelous as is the estate it was filmed on it has good solid performances and stewart granger is espescially good.Take note of the gypsy elements because at the time these points were crowd pullers other granger films to watch out for with similarities - "moonfleet","caravan","saraband for dead lovers","madonna of the seven moons"

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    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Though not cited in the opening credits, the film is based on a 1939 novel of the same name by Joseph Shearing (1885-1952), a pseudonym for Marjorie Bowen. A prolific writer with a taste for the Gothic, Bowen also wrote "Moss Rose" which came to the screen in 1947 (La rose du crime (1947) with Victor Mature and Peggy Cummins.
    • Goofs
      The story is set from January 1853 to August 1860, yet Lavinia is the same age throughout the film.
    • Quotes

      Blanche Fury: Do you seriously believe all that superstitious nonsense about Fury's ape?

      Philip Thorn: You're afraid. Are you?

      Blanche Fury: Not at all. I'm not easily frightened.

      Philip Thorn: That I can believe.

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 8, 1948 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Artflix - Filmklassiker" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Artflix - Movie Classics" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Blanche Fury
    • Filming locations
      • Dunstable Downs, Bedfordshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Cineguild
      • Independent Producers
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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