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Les bons meurent jeunes

Original title: The Good Die Young
  • 1954
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Richard Basehart and Gloria Grahame in Les bons meurent jeunes (1954)
HeistCrimeDramaThriller

In London, three otherwise law-abiding good men and their unscrupulous leader are about to commit a serious crime, but for different reasons.In London, three otherwise law-abiding good men and their unscrupulous leader are about to commit a serious crime, but for different reasons.In London, three otherwise law-abiding good men and their unscrupulous leader are about to commit a serious crime, but for different reasons.

  • Director
    • Lewis Gilbert
  • Writers
    • Vernon Harris
    • Lewis Gilbert
    • Richard Macaulay
  • Stars
    • Laurence Harvey
    • Gloria Grahame
    • Richard Basehart
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lewis Gilbert
    • Writers
      • Vernon Harris
      • Lewis Gilbert
      • Richard Macaulay
    • Stars
      • Laurence Harvey
      • Gloria Grahame
      • Richard Basehart
    • 49User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos179

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    Top cast44

    Edit
    Laurence Harvey
    Laurence Harvey
    • Rave
    Gloria Grahame
    Gloria Grahame
    • Denise
    Richard Basehart
    Richard Basehart
    • Joe
    Joan Collins
    Joan Collins
    • Mary
    John Ireland
    John Ireland
    • Eddie
    Rene Ray
    Rene Ray
    • Angela
    Stanley Baker
    Stanley Baker
    • Mike
    Margaret Leighton
    Margaret Leighton
    • Eve
    Robert Morley
    Robert Morley
    • Sir Francis Ravenscourt
    Freda Jackson
    Freda Jackson
    • Mrs. Freeman
    James Kenney
    James Kenney
    • Dave
    Susan Shaw
    Susan Shaw
    • Doris
    Lee Patterson
    Lee Patterson
    • Tod Maslin
    Sandra Dorne
    Sandra Dorne
    • Pretty Girl at Boxing Match
    Leslie Dwyer
    Leslie Dwyer
    • Stookey
    Patricia McCarron
    • Carole
    George Rose
    George Rose
    • Bunny
    Joan Heal
    • Switchboard Operator
    • Director
      • Lewis Gilbert
    • Writers
      • Vernon Harris
      • Lewis Gilbert
      • Richard Macaulay
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    6.71.6K
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    Featured reviews

    didi-5

    smart british thriller

    Coming to this with neutral expectations, and fresh from seeing Harvey in 'Room at the Top' for the umpteenth time, I was quite surprised to find it watchable, with lots of interesting facets and a cast who complement each other well. Baker (an actor whose work seems to be undergoing some appraisal at film festivals lately) gives some dignity to the down-on-his-luck prizefighter; Harvey convincingly plays an upper-class slimeball alternatively charming and terrorising his wife (interesting played by Margaret Leighton, who would become Mrs Harvey in real life), sparring with the father who despises him, and poisoning his 'friends' lives like a devious snake. Ireland, as the bitter GI with a film star wife flaunting her infidelities each time he comes home from leave, is effective, while Basehart, with a weedy wife and an overbearing mother-in-law, puts across his frustations nicely. So much for characterisation. The film is mainly taken up with a series of flashbacks, showing how the four men find themselves in the situation we see them in at the start. Once it moves back into the present, it feels rushed and the final moralistic voiceover almost kills it. Amongst the other players, Joan Collins as Basehart's wife doesn't do much besides pout and look pretty, while Gloria Grahame as the film actress manages to be simply irritating. All things considered, the film isn't a total success but has enough going on to keep you there with it.
    7rogerjillings

    crime takes place & tension take's over the gang.

    A well crafted heist thriller of the old school with the message of crime doesn't pay about a quartet of ne'er-do-wells who's stories are told in flashbacks then culminates in the daring crime which in turns leads to divisions amongst them.The leader is Miles(Rave)Ravenscourt(Laurence Harvey)who's at his gleefully sneering best with a host of well known faces(Baker,Basehart&John Ireland,there's also a young Joan Collins as Basehart's wife along with Gloria Grahame who's wonderful as a spoilt married woman to one of the gang.Full of action towards the end especially the underground scenes,the cast includes Margaret Leighton who was Harvey's real life wife.
    7MOscarbradley

    Surprisingly robust British thriller

    An attempt by the British to make a noirish thriller in the American style and it almost pays off. It's strong on atmosphere, with some superb nighttime photography, and it has an outstanding cast even if some of them are not at their best. It's both an heist movie and a character study that delves into the lives and backgrounds of the criminals on the job, by way of flashbacks.

    They are Laurence Harvey, Stanley Baker, (both very good), Richard Basehart and John Ireland, (less so), and their women include a young and highly inadequate Joan Collins, Gloria Grahame, (winging it), and a marvelous Margaret Leighton who plays the woman who is married to Harvey and who keeps him and who was also married to him in real life.

    The serviceable Lewis Gilbert directs with real flair. Gilbert never made the front ranks yet many of his films were surprisingly entertaining and well-made. This is one of them.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    Four Men, Four Women, Four Guns.

    The Good Die Young is a cracking British Noir picture directed by Lewis Gilbert and featuring a strong cast of British and American actors. Laurence Harvey, Stanley Baker, Richard Basehart, John Ireland, Gloria Grahame, Margaret Leighton, Joan Collins and Rene Ray are the principals. While support comes from Robert Morley and Freda Jackson.

    Adapted from the novel written by Richard MacAuley, the story starts with four men pulling up in a car, guns are passed around them and it's soon evident they are about to commit a serious crime. We are then taken through the sequences for each man, how they came to be at that point in time, what brought them together and their common interest; that of women trouble and financial strife. It's excellently structured by Gilbert, four separate stories, yet all of them are on the same track and heading towards the grim and potently "noirish" final quarter. Such is the way that we as viewers have been fully informed about our characters, the impact when things get violent is doubly strong. It takes you by surprise at first because the makers have given us a smooth set-up, and then there is the shock factor because these were not criminal men at the outset. But then..

    A real pleasant surprise to this particular viewer was The Good Die Young, it's got fully formed characters within a tight and interesting story. The cast do fine work, yes one could probably complain a touch that the ladies are under written, but they each get in and flesh out the downward spiral of the male protagonists. Rene Ray is particularly impressive as the fraught wife of Stanley Baker's injured boxer, Mike, while Gloria Grahame (walking like a panther) is memorable as a bitch-a-like babe driving her husband Eddie (Ireland) to distraction. Basehart is his usual value for money self, but it's Baker and Harvey who own the picture. Baker does a great line in raw emotion, a big man, big heart and a big conscious; his journey is the films emotional axis, while Harvey is positively weasel like as playboy sponger Miles Ravenscourt; someone who is guaranteed to have you hissing at the screen with his stiffness perfectly befitting the character.

    Top stuff. 8/10
    7johnnyboyz

    Intriguing heist film, which takes time to substantially explore the characters therein and their reasons for turning to crime.

    The Good Die Young comes at you from the very beginning; a honking, blaring opening consisting of the front of a car filling the screen. We appear to be on the back of the vehicle in front, that sensation of being chased through the dimly lit public streets in the dead of night most certainly prominent. British director Lewis Gilbert begins his 1954 heist film in a stark and unmitigated fashion, that sense of having something you don't want right on your tail or looming over you as you attempt to get away; his film going on to document a handful of characters as disparate as they are desperate with a foreboding sense of the inevitable looming over each of their heads as they ponder a heist set against each of their respective financial situations. But where the opening is frank in its immediacy, The Good Die Young goes on to morph into a rather intimate character study about a handful of men brought together through the same reason to take part in the same task.

    The film is ultimately about the allure of crime than anything else; those expecting a gangster film will be rather sorely disappointed, with Gilbert's film coming to resemble more a class drama than a crime genre piece. It's bookended by the men clustered together with tensions running high and a sorely undesired predicament looming, a clerk named Joe Halsey (Basehart) narrating to us how it was he and three others got to be occupying a rich playboy's car sizing up an object and wielding pistols; the finale a quite gripping trawl through the murky, cobbled streets of 1950s Britain as police officers; stray freight trains and unfaithful partners in crime each pose their own threats. It's here Gilbert proves he's just as apt at dealing with dramatic action set-pieces as he is engaging us with character: specifically, who's involved; what's at stake; who's going where, and why; the internal 'checkpoints' the characters must reach as well as the sorts of action that must be undertaken, the man having his characters in The Good Die Young pay special attention to both the methodical planning and dealing with each obstacle within an action set piece which needs separately dealing with during the final getaway.

    Gilbert executed similarly effective craft later on in his career, namely when he was granted the helming of three separate films within the James Bond cannon. 1977's The Spy Who Loved Me saw an extended scene on board a tanker ship nearer said film's climax and required its lead to first get aboard; find some trapped hostages; recover them only to discover a wall of seemingly impregnable steel; find something which might destroy that; obtain it, and then follow through once again with the next course of action. The attention to such things were initially used to a lesser degree of success in 1967's You Only Live Twice. But in The Good Die Young, a similarly effective craft is evident behind not only the finale but the getting to this point; the film coming to resemble one long flashback told to us by the aforementioned Joe involving a whole group of people brought together through problems with money.

    The film does its best to intrinsically link each man, each one being of a respective background in class and career; one of whom is a boxer named Mike Morgan (Baker), a man at the end of his stretch as a fighter - the ring-set howls and wails as another fatal blow is landed upon a poor opponent much to the glee of the crowd echoing down below into the locked room as Mike sits there knowing one of his hands is on the brink of being seriously damaged as it is. Meanwhile, American pilot Eddie Blain (Ireland) refuses orders to ship out to West Germany with the American air force to instead zero in on his wife and her infidelities; whereas narrator Joe maintains a rocky relationship with the mother of his own wife, something he gets involved in so much so that flying back to England from his American-based clerical job to get involved sees him fired.

    So each man is rather attuned to their wives, Mike's relationship seeing him admit to lending his hard-earned cash to his own wife's brother if she'd told him to; his ultimate goal to take his large earnings and escape to his beloved. Furthermore, each man's respective situation in each of their jobs sees them hit a proverbial wall bringing about unemployment or redundancy; each of the three men additionally appearing to have served in a respective war and two of them have experiences with near-death or great harm of some kind in that Joe's mother in law attempts suicide and Mike must come to have some serious work done on his hand.

    The men are eventually thrust together by the seemingly indomitable Miles Ravenscourt (Harvey), a young man, whom might be richer than he actually is, but whom occupies a plush and far richer locale; a self indulgent man whose home is rife with portraits of himself and whose wife Eve (Leighton) must suffer his begging for more money despite both parties' knowledge of his trouble with gambling debts; a man so estranged from his father, that he hopes to outlive him so that Miles may never see any of his inheritance, such is is ill-minded way with money as the film will go on to document. As previously mentioned, the film is more about the allure of crime or the idea behind a criminal act that'll greatly benefit oneself arriving with a sense of enticement, than most others things. The duality in each of the four men may appear looser than desired, but Gilbert crafts rather-a taut and tight heist film about desperate people doing desperate things at desperate times.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      (at around 31 mins) The prominent painting in the apartment of Eve (Margaret Leighton) of Rave (Laurence Harvey) as a polo player was clearly altered from a copy of one of an American "old money" socialite and sportsman, Winston Guest, a top polo player in his day.
    • Goofs
      During the robbery, Miles Ravenscourt fires 9 shots from a 6-shot revolver without reloading.
    • Quotes

      Miles Ravenscourt: Someone who is quite determined to be most unpleasant about it has a cheque of mine for a thousand which is probably bouncing at this very moment. So if you are determined not to share the money, in a few days from now, you'll be sharing some very lurid headlines.

      Sir Francis Ravenscourt: You can't threaten me any more. Public disgrace couldn't be worse than sitting here being reminded that I'm your father.

      Miles Ravenscourt: You really do hate me, don't you?

      Sir Francis Ravenscourt: I don't hate you. I Ioathe and despise the very sight of you.

    • Connections
      Featured in Frances Farmer Presents: The Good Die Young (1958)
    • Soundtracks
      Piano Blues
      (uncredited)

      Music by Lambert Williamson

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 14, 1955 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Good Die Young
    • Filming locations
      • Barbican Estate, City of London, England, UK(Barbican train platform used for the fictional High Street Station)
    • Production companies
      • Romulus Films
      • Remus
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White

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