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Temps sans pitié

Original title: Time Without Pity
  • 1957
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Temps sans pitié (1957)
Film NoirPsychological DramaSuspense MysteryTragedyWhodunnitCrimeDramaMystery

The day before a young man is to be executed for killing his girlfriend, his alcoholic father shows up to try to prove his innocence.The day before a young man is to be executed for killing his girlfriend, his alcoholic father shows up to try to prove his innocence.The day before a young man is to be executed for killing his girlfriend, his alcoholic father shows up to try to prove his innocence.

  • Director
    • Joseph Losey
  • Writers
    • Ben Barzman
    • Emlyn Williams
  • Stars
    • Michael Redgrave
    • Ann Todd
    • Leo McKern
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Ben Barzman
      • Emlyn Williams
    • Stars
      • Michael Redgrave
      • Ann Todd
      • Leo McKern
    • 37User reviews
    • 28Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos6

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    Top cast30

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    Michael Redgrave
    Michael Redgrave
    • David Graham
    Ann Todd
    Ann Todd
    • Honor Stanford
    Leo McKern
    Leo McKern
    • Robert Stanford
    Paul Daneman
    Paul Daneman
    • Brian Stanford
    Peter Cushing
    Peter Cushing
    • Jeremy Clayton
    Alec McCowen
    Alec McCowen
    • Alec Graham
    Renee Houston
    Renee Houston
    • Mrs. Harker
    Lois Maxwell
    Lois Maxwell
    • Vickie Harker
    Richard Wordsworth
    Richard Wordsworth
    • Maxwell, the M.P.
    George Devine
    George Devine
    • Barnes, the Editor
    Joan Plowright
    Joan Plowright
    • Agnes Cole
    Ernest Clark
    Ernest Clark
    • Under-Secretary, Home Office
    • (as Ernest Clarke)
    Peter Copley
    Peter Copley
    • Prison Chaplain
    Hugh Moxey
    Hugh Moxey
    • Prison Governor
    Dickie Henderson
    • Comedian
    John Chandos
    • First Journalist
    Vernon Greeves
    • Second Journalist
    Arnold Diamond
    Arnold Diamond
    • Third Journalist
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Ben Barzman
      • Emlyn Williams
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews37

    6.82.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7SnoopyStyle

    cool premise

    Jenny Cole is killed and her drunken boyfriend Alec Graham is set to hang for it. His attorney Jeremy Clayton (Peter Cushing) picks up his recovering alcoholic father David Graham (Michael Redgrave) from the airport. He had been away in rehab in Canada. He has less than 24 hours to clear his son's name and stop the execution.

    I like the mystery premise but I would give the man more time. It's a little too convenient to give him less than a day to solve a case which probably lasted months if not years. It's too little time to solve the case in a believable way. It would also help to not show Robert Stanford's face in the opening. That takes away from a possible compelling mystery. I do like the progression of the plot and its final conclusion. The acting is great although Leo McKern goes overboard sometimes. This is terrific.
    9hitchcockthelegend

    Everyone has a secret. It's not always written in the face.

    Time Without Pity is directed by Joseph Losey and adapted to screenplay by Ben Barzman from the Emlyn Williams play Someone Waiting. It stars Michael Redgrave, Ann Todd, Leo McKern, Paul Daneman, Peter Cushing, Alec McCowen, Renee Houston and Lois Maxwell. Music is by Tristram Cary and cinematography by Freddie Francis.

    David Graham (Redgrave) is a recovering alcoholic who comes out of the sanitarium to try and prove his son is innocent of murder. His son, Alec (McCowen), is to be hanged in 24 hours for the slaying of his girlfriend. David finds he is constantly met with brick walls and his sobriety is tested at every turn, but salvation may lie with the suspicious Stanford family...

    Blacklisted in America, Joseph Losey went to the UK and made a number of films under various pseudonyms, Time Without Pity marked the first time he would put his own name to the production. It's also a film that stands tall as another of Losey's excellent British offerings.

    Losey and his team do not make a murder mystery, from the off we see who the killer is and it's not young Alec Graham. This is a device that in the wrong hands has often over the years proved costly, where viewers looking for suspense have been sorely short changed. What happens here is that we are privy to an investigation by a man in misery, battling his demons as he frantically searches for redemption.

    Tick Tock. Tick Tock.

    Shunned by his estranged son, who would rather be hanged for a crime he didn't commit than accept his "waster" father's help - that might in turn give him false hope, David Graham is a haunted being who is closer to solving the case than he knows. This brings us viewers tantalisingly into the play, we know who it is, we can see how they react around David and how the other players who are hiding something also behave from scene to scene. The script never looses focus, it constantly keeps a grip on the tension as the clock ticks down on the Graham's.

    Tick Tock. Tick Tock.

    Losey and the great Freddie Francis are a dream pairing, a meeting of minds who could produce striking lighting compositions and scenes of other worldly distinction. Time Without Pity is full of such film making smarts. Time is a key, obviously, clocks feature constantly, including one classic era film noir extended scene as David visits a potential witness who has her home filled with alarm clocks! Alarm clocks that keep going off at regular intervals, thus putting an already twitchy and sweaty David Graham further on the edge of his nerves.

    Tick Tock. Tick Tock.

    One scene enforces that on the page there's an anti-capital punishment message, but as a bunch of suits sit in a room digressing about the ethics of it all etc, Losey and Francis fill the room with stripped shadows filtered via the lead patterned windows, it's that what you remember, not a social message. Gorgeous and potent all in one. Mirrors feature as well, with one elevator shot superb, while the bittersweet ending deserves better credit than it got at the time of release. Certainly noir lovers will enjoy it as much as they enjoy some other kinks in the story narrative.

    Over the top of it all is a brilliant musical score by Tristram Cary (all his 50s work is worth checking out), three years before Herrmann brought bloodied strings to Psycho, Cary deals from an earlier deck of cards with string menace supreme, while his ticking clock motif is a pearler. Redgrave is terrific, a sweaty mass of fragility, while Todd, Cushing and Houston (wonderful) bring class to their respective characters. Losey's misstep is in not reigning in McKern, who is way too animated throughout, but such is the strength of everything elsewhere, it can't hurt the picture at all. Oh and look out for future Miss. Moneypenny Lois Maxwell, the little minx.

    Now widely available on DVD with a good print, Time Without Pity demands to be better known. 9/10
    8bkoganbing

    Resisting demons

    Exiled from the USA because of the blacklist Joseph Losey did some of his best work in the United Kingdom and he has a really good thriller here. Not much of a mystery other than the question is why couldn't the police see who it was in the first place.

    Young Alec McCowen is now on death row after his girlfriend was found strangled to death in her family's home where he had been spending the weekend. Like father like son, Michael Redgrave an alcoholic writer who has been living in Canada comes back to the UK to visit with his son now on death row. He's been convicted of her death and was too drunk at the time to offer any meaningful evidence in his defense.

    It was at Leo McKern's home where the deed was done. He's a foulmouthed ill tempered automobile manufacturer who terrorizes his family like wife Ann Todd and son Paul Daneman who is McCowen's best friend. He's also a bit unbalanced and everyone around him is afraid.

    The real suspense is in Redgrave battling his own demons and not returning to the bottle. The pressure to do so is great, but Redgrave summons up enough strength to resist. It's a masterful very subtly cerebral type performance. He and McKern take the acting honors.

    For fans of Redgrave and McKern this is a must.
    freddy-11

    Justice in a bizarre, disturbed landscape

    A bizarre psychogram of a series of characters, all of whom are disturbed in their own manner. Losey delineates the characters through a series of images which are so effective because they're so simple.

    A cheap B-movie. The choppy dramaturgy and editing, viewed from today's perspective, conveys a nervousness and an intensity to the film that was probably lost on a 50's audience. No happy end, but a just and noble one.
    stephen-357

    An incredibly edgy, self-aware film

    Time has no pity, no sympathy, no joy and no sorrow. It's passage denotes the brevity in which the living inhabit the earth. In TIME WITHOUT PITY, a young man is dong time in prison for a murder he did not commit. A correctional institution is about to put a stop to that young man's time at the behest of the State. A father caught between the daunting task of fighting the system for more time, and forgetting time altogether at the bottom of a whisky glass. A broken woman mourning the loss of time never spent with one who's out of time. Every character in this drama is lost somewhere in their own guilt ridden space and time, but director Losey makes sure his audience is always aware, littering the screen with watches and clocks ticking like a giant timebomb about to explode as the desperately pathetic father searches for a clue to disable the alarm. Lost in an alcoholic haze that is almost dreamlike in it's ability to paralyze action, he clumsily attempts to win back for his son the time he let slip away. Is it too late? An incredibly edgy, self-aware film, TIME WITHOUT PITY clearly states its objection to the State as executioner. From the opening scene, we know the son did not commit the murder, but neither the State, "You must keep your visit short . . . we don't want to upset the prisoner," the Church, "He's given himself over to more compassionate hands," or the anti-capital punishment advocates, "We're not interested in whether young Graham is innocent or guilty," seem to have a specific interest in the individual. To make matters worse, young Graham himself has given up hope and when his father pleads, "don't give up," he asks, "What difference would it have made if you had died when you were my age?" And this question gets to the core of the film; it's resonance heavily influencing the final pivotal scene.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Theatrical movie debut of Dame Joan Plowright (Agnes Cole).
    • Goofs
      The camera crew is reflected in the door of Clayton's car as it pulls up at the prison with Graham.
    • Quotes

      David Graham: What did Alec say about me?

      Brian Stanford: I got the impression you were about to write the greatest novel ever written. Did you?

      David Graham: In common with quite a lot of other writers... I had been about to write it for a very long time.

    • Connections
      Featured in Joseph Losey: The Man with Four Names (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Silent Night
      (uncredited)

      Written by Franz Xaver Gruber and Joseph Mohr

      Played in the pub, in a jazzed-up tempo

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 1, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Time Without Pity
    • Filming locations
      • Crystal Palace motor racing track, London, England, UK
    • Production company
      • Harlequin Productions Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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