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IMDbPro

Le dernier homme à pendre

Original title: The Last Man to Hang
  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
177
YOUR RATING
Tom Conway, Eunice Gayson, and Elizabeth Sellars in Le dernier homme à pendre (1956)
Film NoirCrimeDrama

Sir Roderick Strood is on trial for the murder of his wife.Sir Roderick Strood is on trial for the murder of his wife.Sir Roderick Strood is on trial for the murder of his wife.

  • Director
    • Terence Fisher
  • Writers
    • Ivor Montagu
    • Max Trell
    • Gerald Bullett
  • Stars
    • Tom Conway
    • Elizabeth Sellars
    • Eunice Gayson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    177
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Terence Fisher
    • Writers
      • Ivor Montagu
      • Max Trell
      • Gerald Bullett
    • Stars
      • Tom Conway
      • Elizabeth Sellars
      • Eunice Gayson
    • 14User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast41

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    Tom Conway
    Tom Conway
    • The Story: Roderick
    Elizabeth Sellars
    Elizabeth Sellars
    • The Story: Daphne
    Eunice Gayson
    Eunice Gayson
    • The Story: Elizabeth
    Freda Jackson
    Freda Jackson
    • The Story: Mrs. Tucker
    Hugh Latimer
    Hugh Latimer
    • The Story: Mark
    Ronald Simpson
    • The Story: Dr. Cartwright
    Victor Maddern
    Victor Maddern
    • The Jury: Bonaker
    Anthony Newley
    Anthony Newley
    • The Jury: Gaskin
    Margaretta Scott
    Margaretta Scott
    • The Jury: Mrs. Cranshaw
    Leslie Weston
    • The Jury: Bayfield
    Bill Shine
    Bill Shine
    • The Jury: Underhay
    Anna Turner
    Anna Turner
    • The Jury: Lucy Prynne
    Jack Lambert
    Jack Lambert
    • The Jury: Major Forth
    Harold Goodwin
    Harold Goodwin
    • The Jury: Cheed
    Joan Newell
    Joan Newell
    • The Jury: Mrs. Iseley
    Thomas Heathcote
    Thomas Heathcote
    • The Jury: Bracket
    Tony Quinn
    • The Jury: Nywood
    Hal Osmond
    Hal Osmond
    • The Jury: Coates
    • Director
      • Terence Fisher
    • Writers
      • Ivor Montagu
      • Max Trell
      • Gerald Bullett
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    5.9177
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    10

    Featured reviews

    6planktonrules

    Will he be convicted for murder or for just being a bad husband?

    Had "The Last Man to Hang" not ending on an incredibly improbable and unnecessary twist, I probably would have given it an 8. It was well acted, realistic an very well written. But, with the twist ending, I think it dropped the film to an overall score of 6.

    Roderick (Tom Conway) is married to a difficult and neurotic wife. Possibly as a result, he began an affair with another woman. The wife, when told later he wanted a divorce, behaved quite emotionally and irrationally...more so than would be usual in a case like this. Soon after, she is dead from an apparent overdose of a strong sleeping pill....and the husband is being charged for it, as he admits having given her a dose of sleeping pills. While he does not in any way deny this, he does deny that he knew she'd already been given a dose. In other words, he contends he never tried to kill her. It's a case of he says/she says and the film shows not just the events leading up to the trial but the trial and jury deliberations....as well as a completely unnecessary ending that was cool but wasn't logical...leaving MANY questions unanswered...too many to be an ending anyone could enjoy.

    Up until the ending, I loved the film. Why, then, come up with such a ridiculous twist which actually contracts much of the film...or at least needs a lot of explaining...which you never got in the movie! Frustrating...especially when the rest of the production was so strong.

    By the way, she film showed something that confused me and is perhaps a way that British and American juries differ. In one scene, before the case was handed to the jury to decide, they show the jurors in a room discussing the case and what they thought about Roderick's apparent guilt. If such a meeting and conversations occurred in an American trial, it would be grounds for a mistrial, as jurors are NOT allowed to discuss the case until the defense and prosecution have concluded. It is possible the American and British systems are the same and an editing error placed this scene in the wrong place....instead of about 10 minutes later. I just don't know.
    7ouzman-1

    The director should have cut the final minutes.

    Well the film plot is appalling so why the 7/10? The plot calls for a mystifying added conclusion. Why? The film should have cut to the forgiving husband who accidentally killed his wife but we get something else, something mystifying in the extreme?

    OK. Why the 7/10? It's for the court scene - very worthy and Vic Madden an unsung hero of the 20th c (gone far too soon). Did he ever act badly? Much more than a Sam Kydd type. This man was an actor. He should, perhaps, have struck out for fame instead he diversified. Taken too soon I believe a few more films and he would have been held today in the same high esteem of a Tom Courtney or a Freddy Jones.

    The film about a man struggling to come to terms with self-blame of the death of his wife, is shallowed by the lead actor. Perhaps the last man to hang was indeed Tom Conway. Miss Sellers could have been asked for a POV, but alas it's now just too late! (RIP dear lady).
    lor_

    Stupid shaggy-dog story

    Terence Fisher is famous for directing dozens of popular genre films, notably the Hammer horror classics, but his ponderous, very boring treatment of this stupid courtroom drama is incompetent. I nearly dozed off early on.

    The screenplay is at fault, with several flashbacks and telegraphed clues that bog things down, and even at 71 minutes of running time this B-level British feature from Columbia seems padded. In particular, showing the family life of the jurors as they receive their court summons is totally extraneous footage.

    For such a nothing movie it has 35 credited roles, mostly flatly performed, especially Tom Conway's walk-through as the lead. The unconvincing final plot twist is asinine, more appropriate to a Z-level exploitation movie than a major production that has a misleading subplot about capital punishment on the verge of being abolished (hence the title), yet that did not occur until it was suspended for murder nine years after the film was released.
    trimmerb1234

    Victor Madden: a British Henry Fonda?

    As reviewer John Howard Reid has pointed out, there is a section in the film too close for coincidence with the entirely famous and superior 1957 "12 Angry Men! where one juror holds out against the rest

    This is a film of two halves, so different in quality as to be quite mystifying. The first half features the rather wooden Tom Conway who is really not up to interpreting his rather poorly scripted role but fairly essential viewing to understand the second half, the murder trial at the Old Bailey. This is well done by nearly all concerned - far better written, acted and directed. This is the engrossing part, the first half just a make weight. Quite a good cast including an impressive young Anthony Newley
    5blanche-2

    Confusing

    Directed by Terence Fisher, The Last Man to Hang from 1957 stars Tom Conway as a man accused of killing his wife Daphne (Elizabeth Sellars).

    As others have pointed out, this was an okay film until the ridiculous twist at the end which made no sense. At all.

    Conway plays Sir Roderick Strood, introduced to a soprano (Eunice Grayson) who is singing Lucia on the radio. He falls for her and wants to divorce his wife. At one point, he and Daphne fight and she pulls a gun, evidently to kill herself, which he wrestles away from her. The gun goes off, bringing the maid (Freda Jackson) who hates Strood. No one is hurt.

    Strood gives Daphne sleeping tablets, and he is accused of killing her, since the maid had given her a sedative and claims he knew it.

    We see the jurors receiving jury duty summons. One of them is Anthony Newley. You think it's going to be a story about the jurors.

    This movie is all over the place. The end is terrible.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      [Foreword] This film contains scenes that some viewers may find distressing.
    • Goofs
      When Mrs. Tucker identifies the dead body of Daphne the body is breathing.
    • Quotes

      The Jury At Home: Lucy's Mother: Oh - I wish your father had killed me and not left me here to die all alone!

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 1956 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Condamnée au remords
    • Production companies
      • Association of Cinema Technicians (A.C.T.)
      • Warwick Film Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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