Strange things happen at night at the St. Agil secondary school. Baume, Sorgue and Macroix - three of the school's pupils - discover a suspicious man on the premises. Shortly after this unse... Read allStrange things happen at night at the St. Agil secondary school. Baume, Sorgue and Macroix - three of the school's pupils - discover a suspicious man on the premises. Shortly after this unsettling event, pupils begin to go missing.Strange things happen at night at the St. Agil secondary school. Baume, Sorgue and Macroix - three of the school's pupils - discover a suspicious man on the premises. Shortly after this unsettling event, pupils begin to go missing.
Aimé Clariond
- M. Boisse - le directeur
- (as Aimé Clariond de la Comédie Française)
Robert Rollis
- Un élève
- (as Robert Rollys)
Claude Roy
- Le petit garçon à la tortue
- (as Le petit Claude Roy)
René Génin
- Donnadieu, prof. de musique
- (as R. Génin)
Jacques Derives
- Planet
- (as J. Derives)
Martial Rèbe
- Le surveillant du dortoir
- (as M. Rèbe)
Pierre Labry
- Bernardin
- (as P. Labry)
Albert Malbert
- Alexis - le meunier
- (as Malbert)
Robert Le Vigan
- César - le passe-muraille
- (as R. Le Vigan)
Charles Aznavour
- Un élève
- (uncredited)
André Dionnet
- Un élève
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The film is set in the boarding school of St. Agil where 3 pupils - Marcel Mouloudji (Macroix), Serge Grave (Baume) and Jean Claudio (Sorgue) - form a secret society whose aim is to escape to America. They meet in a classroom after lights out in the dormitory to bond their commitments to one another. One day, however, one of the pupils goes missing. Then another....
This film keeps you hooked on the mystery and the cast all perform convincingly. We have 2 sets of players - the schoolkids and the teachers - who belong to very different clubs with their own in-fighting amongst themselves.
The set-up in the dormitory is much better than what I experienced when I was at boarding school in Switzerland. We had an open plan room with bunk-beds for 20 - 30 children whilst these guys get a curtained-off area for privacy between each bed. The shenanigans are still the same, however, eg, meeting up and sneaking off after lights out. In my day, it was midnight feasts, carrying out pranks like swapping everyone's slippers around and meeting at a football pitch for a game at midnight. We had to exit and re-enter the school through a window and it was instant expulsion if caught leaving the school premises. 100% record - never caught! Apart from being busted for the slipper swap for which, ironically, I got the slipper! It was one of the favoured forms of punishment at that time. So, I revisited some good memories watching this film. It is also a gripping tale and recommended.
This film keeps you hooked on the mystery and the cast all perform convincingly. We have 2 sets of players - the schoolkids and the teachers - who belong to very different clubs with their own in-fighting amongst themselves.
The set-up in the dormitory is much better than what I experienced when I was at boarding school in Switzerland. We had an open plan room with bunk-beds for 20 - 30 children whilst these guys get a curtained-off area for privacy between each bed. The shenanigans are still the same, however, eg, meeting up and sneaking off after lights out. In my day, it was midnight feasts, carrying out pranks like swapping everyone's slippers around and meeting at a football pitch for a game at midnight. We had to exit and re-enter the school through a window and it was instant expulsion if caught leaving the school premises. 100% record - never caught! Apart from being busted for the slipper swap for which, ironically, I got the slipper! It was one of the favoured forms of punishment at that time. So, I revisited some good memories watching this film. It is also a gripping tale and recommended.
I have seen German boy's school (All Quiet on the Western Front), UK boy's school (Goodbye, Mr. Chips), and American boy's school (Dead Poet's Society). So, now was my time to check out the French version of Boys School. Let us just say that the other countries did it a bit better. It is a good try, but no cigar, despite some interesting performances. Erich von Stroheim is always fun to watch, and the rest of the cast is fine. The writing is just weaker than the other countries' counterparts. Harmless fun.
At a boarding school, three boys -- Serge Grave, Marcel Mouloudji, and Jean Claudio -- have formed a secret society with the skeleton in the science class room. Their purpose is to go to America, where they can be free. After a meeting, Claudio sees Robert Le Vignan appear suddenly, then disappear as suddenly. The next day, modern language teacher Erich von Stroheim -- who is always being teased into a rage by art teacher Michel Simon -- announces they will be studying H. G. Wells' THE INVISIBLE MAN. Claudio insists on talking about the man who keeps appearing and disappearing, so von Stroheim sends him to the headmaster, Aimé Clariond. Clariond remonstrates with him, and Claudio leaves.... and disappears. Grave and Mouloudji think he has gone to America, particularly when Grave receives a postcard from New York from Claudio, which von Stroheim steals. Then Mouloudji disappears. Simon gets drunk and when the lights cut out, tumbles to his death. Then Grave disappears. Where have they gone? And where did Simon get the money to purchase half a dozen original Durers?
Christian-Jaque is not considered a great director, but his work was always solid, and commercially successful. Here, working with a script partly derived from a Victor Hugo play, he offers a tale of three imaginative boys at a second-rate school, where the teachers know they've reached a dead end. He gives Simon a fine, unlikable role, and von Stroheim a chance to play with his usual screen image in an unlikely way, as well as a finale that echoes ZERO DE CONDUITE in a very amusing manner.
Charles Aznavour plays one of the students in his second screen appearance. I didn't recognize him as a 13-year-old boy.
Christian-Jaque is not considered a great director, but his work was always solid, and commercially successful. Here, working with a script partly derived from a Victor Hugo play, he offers a tale of three imaginative boys at a second-rate school, where the teachers know they've reached a dead end. He gives Simon a fine, unlikable role, and von Stroheim a chance to play with his usual screen image in an unlikely way, as well as a finale that echoes ZERO DE CONDUITE in a very amusing manner.
Charles Aznavour plays one of the students in his second screen appearance. I didn't recognize him as a 13-year-old boy.
You can get a great Trivia question out of this movie: In which film did Charles Aznavour and Serge Reggiani have uncredited roles and Jacques Prevert supply uncredited dialogue. Dix sur dix. You got it in one. This would probably be a great film even without Prevert's linguistic touches because all the elements are in place; a cloistered setting which serves as a microcosm for the world outside, a story that holds the attention with just the right amount of suspense/mystery and an exceptional and, dare I say it, SYMPATHETIC performance from that man you love to hate Eric Von Stroheim who goes toe-to-toe with Michel Simon and is still standing at the end of fifteen rounds. Stroheim - with hair yet - is a member of the faculty at a boarding school for boys or, to put it another way, a German actor is playing an English teacher (teacher OF English)in a French school, quite a trick which he pulls off despite his French being about three times as slow as that of the natives. The film reeks of atmosphere and has perhaps been unfairly overshadowed because it was produced at a time - 1938 - when France was turning out really classic drama such as Hotel du Nord, Quai des brumes, Le Jour se leve, Carnet du bal etc. The good news is that there's an excellent print now available on DVD so what are you waiting for.
A residential boys' school full of almost same aged boys fall into a great mystery when two of the boys goes missing. The closest friend of the two missing boys takes steps to uncover the mystery.
I liked this movie very much despite it being very old one, almost 100 years back. The director is very good. The script is tight and solid. 100% RECOMMENDED.
I liked this movie very much despite it being very old one, almost 100 years back. The director is very good. The script is tight and solid. 100% RECOMMENDED.
Did you know
- GoofsAround 01:04:36, one can see cameraman's shadow on students' backs while traveling.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Le passe-muraille (1977)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Les disparus de Saint-Agil
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was Les disparus de St. Agil (1938) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer