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Je suis un fugitif

Original title: They Made Me a Fugitive
  • 1947
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Trevor Howard in Je suis un fugitif (1947)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

After WW2, former RAF airman Clem Morgan joins a gang of black-market smugglers-thieves but when a robbery goes wrong, Clem is caught , framed for a policeman's murder, and is sent to prison... Read allAfter WW2, former RAF airman Clem Morgan joins a gang of black-market smugglers-thieves but when a robbery goes wrong, Clem is caught , framed for a policeman's murder, and is sent to prison where he plots his escape and revenge.After WW2, former RAF airman Clem Morgan joins a gang of black-market smugglers-thieves but when a robbery goes wrong, Clem is caught , framed for a policeman's murder, and is sent to prison where he plots his escape and revenge.

  • Director
    • Alberto Cavalcanti
  • Writers
    • Jackson Budd
    • Noel Langley
  • Stars
    • Sally Gray
    • Trevor Howard
    • Griffith Jones
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alberto Cavalcanti
    • Writers
      • Jackson Budd
      • Noel Langley
    • Stars
      • Sally Gray
      • Trevor Howard
      • Griffith Jones
    • 46User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos4

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    Top cast30

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    Sally Gray
    Sally Gray
    • Sally Connor
    Trevor Howard
    Trevor Howard
    • George Clement 'Clem' Morgan
    Griffith Jones
    Griffith Jones
    • Narcissus aka Narcy
    Rene Ray
    Rene Ray
    • Cora
    Mary Merrall
    Mary Merrall
    • Aggie
    Charles Farrell
    Charles Farrell
    • Curley
    Michael Brennan
    • Jim
    Jack McNaughton
    • Soapy
    Cyril Smith
    Cyril Smith
    • Bert
    John Penrose
    John Penrose
    • Shawney
    Eve Ashley
    • Ellen
    Phyllis Robins
    • Olga
    Bill O'Connor
    • Bill
    Maurice Denham
    Maurice Denham
    • Mr. Fenshaw
    Vida Hope
    Vida Hope
    • Mrs. Fenshaw
    Ballard Berkeley
    Ballard Berkeley
    • Rockliffe
    Derek Birch
    • P. C. Murray
    Peter Bull
    Peter Bull
    • Fidgity Phil
    • Director
      • Alberto Cavalcanti
    • Writers
      • Jackson Budd
      • Noel Langley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    7.22K
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    Featured reviews

    8secondtake

    British noir? You bet, and really good, a must-see for noir fans.

    They Made Me a Fugitive (1947)

    This is a vigorous British crime noir film, a counterpart to the great Warner Bros American movies from the same period (and earlier) and to American post-war film noir. (In fact, this was released by Warner Bros.) The plot is fast and twisty and the photography is bold and dramatic with a lot of night scenes. Great stuff. If you like this sort of thing normally you'll love this.

    The star is one of the Howard Brothers, Trevor, playing a would-be criminal and eventually the fugitive of the title. He's mixed up with some tough criminal types (British style) and some female leads that have echoes of film noir femme fatales. There is violence, angular camera-work, even a few special effects, and a couple of sympathetic leads who eventually take the plot somewhere new.

    Howard's biggest role, in the best movie of his career, came two years earlier in "Brief Encounter," and he's again complex and nuanced and someone to identify with. But he's not especially sympathetic, playing a hardened, selfish type who just happens to have a conscience unlike his cohorts. The movie follows him through several phases of his brush with crime, and with an attempt to clear his name. There is a rather long and dramatic and somewhat unconvincing fight scene near the end (the throw of the milk bottle takes first prize in this one), but the very last scene is brutally pessimistic in a way American noirs are oddly not.

    If you like film noir this is a must see. If you appreciate a good movie for its action and drama, likewise. There may be no deep character development are larger social arc here, but that's true of a lot of American noirs, too. So just jump and and soak it all up.
    10johne23-1

    Fantastic British post-war noir.

    Well, what have we got here?

    We've got a 1946/7 London - rainy, smog- and fog-ridden - swarming with sweaty, sadistic small-time black marketeers, hag-faced toothless harridan prostitutes, rat faced squealers, slimy grasses, heart-of-gold cashmere-wearing Judys, squalid, smoky dockside boozers, and bobbies in mackintoshes and capes (told you it was raining) getting run over and bashed over the coconut.

    Enter ex-RAF Clem Morgan (Trevor Howard). He wants a bit of action with a gang led by sharp, smoothie, sadistic, snooker-playing knuckle-duster wielding Narcy (Narcissus)(Griffith Jones) - but he baulks at their drug (sherbert!) dealing side. So he's framed into a cop murder - very heavy stuff in immediate post-war England. But this isn't The Blue Lamp - it's nearer Jules Dassin's famous Night and the City and precedes both.

    As well as a crackling script by Noel Langley we've got a runaway fugitive we know is innocent, more bobbies, more rain, and a head-butting, knife-throwing, rooftop-climbing finale.

    A great British noir sadly often overlooked. See it!
    8Bunuel1976

    THEY MADE ME A FUGITIVE (Alberto Cavalcanti, 1947) ***1/2

    This is a relatively rare example of a British film noir, but one which can hold its own alongside the more celebrated American variety. Director Cavalcanti's background in documentaries certainly served him in good stead here, bringing complete authenticity to the situations and settings. Still, thanks to Otto Heller's outstanding camera-work and lighting, he manages a number of strikingly cinematic visuals (for instance, the scene where heroine Sally Gray is beaten up by chief villain Griffith Jones).

    It features a splendid cast, all of whom deliver excellent performances: Trevor Howard is an unusual hero-type but totally credible; lovely leading lady Sally Gray may come off a bit too good to be true (she initially commits herself to the framed Howard merely because her gangster boyfriend has jilted her for the latter's own fiancée!) but she elicits all the petite sex appeal of a Veronica Lake (meanwhile her love/hate banter with Howard evokes memories of the Robert Donat/Madeleine Carroll pairing from Hitchcock's THE 39 STEPS [1935]); Griffith Jones is a suave yet ruthless leader of a black-market ring (but who gets his just desserts in particularly gruesome fashion); Mary Merrall is Jones' elderly associate, whose level-headedness and experience keeps the violent gangster in check; a young Ballard Berkeley is a sympathetic Scotland Yard man, but who doesn't think twice about using Howard as bait to capture the entire gang; Peter Bull turns up for a bit as a police informer.

    The general gloominess (a mainstay of thrillers emanating from the post-war era) is leavened somewhat by its constant flurry of hard-boiled dialogue courtesy of screenwriter Noel Langley. The terrific climax is set inside the gang's 'business' office - a funeral parlor, amusingly named "The Valhalla Undertaking Co.". Still, perhaps my favorite scene in the entire film is Howard's surreal encounter with the zombie-like Vida Hope - in whose household he stumbles while on the run; she turns out to be deranged, and even tries to talk our hero into murdering her alcoholic husband (Maurice Denham)!

    As is typical of old films released on DVD by Kino, the quality of the print and transfer leave a lot to be desired - but one has to be grateful still, because otherwise gems such as this one would remain unavailable indefinitely...
    dougdoepke

    Noir Sleeper

    A British noir as good as the definitive ones being turned out in the States by such consensus masters as Mann, Dassin, and Lewis, to name three. And what about that great ending that still leaves me flabbergasted. Three cheers for a British cinema that apparently was able to operate without the albatross of a Production Code and still not wreck the nation's moral fiber. Needless to say, those final few minutes would never have been allowed Stateside where the scales of justice always triumphed, no matter how the world really works.

    Then too, consider the household Howard stumbles into by accident, where the zoned out housewife is only too eager to perforate her boozy hubby. One look at that demented visage and she's a lot scarier than any of the professionals. No wonder Howard flees back to the safety of London's underworld. This may also be the cheapest electricity bill on record since the brightest sound-stage bulb checks in at about 60 watts—they don't call it "noir" for nothing. And keep an ear cocked for some of the snappiest dialogue this side of Dashiel Hammett, especially from that old crone Aggie, who, I shudder to think, might actually be somebody's grandmother.

    Not that everything is roses. Some of the set-ups operate only at a stretch. For example, Howard's aim with a milk bottle should have him pitching for the Yankees. And he does it with such casual flair, you'd never guess his life is on the line. Nonetheless, the movie's a real sleeper and should have been exported to our shores a lot sooner. I expect, that daring finale would have inspired our own filmmakers to greater sneaky lengths in subverting the dead hand of Hollywood censorship.
    7AlanSquier

    Of course those Brits can do noir

    The truth of the matter is that they did a bang-up job in emulating American noir and gangster type films. Why not, the American stuff was going great guns on that side of the pond.

    This was pretty heavy stuff for 1947. References to cocaine, brutality towards women, and such goodies are noticeable here. Also noticeable is the noir type anti-hero magnificently portrayed by Trevor Howard, and lots and I do mean lots of shadows.

    A rooftop scene was undoubtedly the prototype and inspiration for later movies such as To Catch A Thief.

    Don't confuse this with the earlier Hollywood movie, They Made Me A Criminal, which featured John Grfield and the Dead End Kids. There's no similarity between those two films.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Trevor Howard was cast at very short notice after the actor first cast dropped out.
    • Goofs
      He grabs the steering wheel in an attempt to avoid running down the Policeman, that is why his fingerprints are on the steering wheel.
    • Quotes

      Mrs. Fenshaw: Nobody will arrest you while you are in this house. I give you my word.

      Clem: Why? Have you fallen in love with my beautiful wavy hair?

      Mrs. Fenshaw: No. You can do me a service in return for helping you.

    • Connections
      Referenced in A Man About a Film - Richard Dyer on Obsession (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      Caress Me
      (uncredited)

      Performed on-stage by Phyllis Robins and others

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    FAQ16

    • How long is I Became a Criminal?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 8, 1948 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • I Became a Criminal
    • Filming locations
      • Riverside Studios, Hammersmith, London, England, UK(as Alliance Studios, Hammersmith)
    • Production companies
      • A.R. Shipman Productions
      • Alliance Films Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 41 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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