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Les anges marqués

Original title: The Search
  • 1948
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
5.2K
YOUR RATING
Les anges marqués (1948)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:52
1 Video
26 Photos
DramaWar

In post-war Berlin, an American private helps a lost Czech boy find his mother.In post-war Berlin, an American private helps a lost Czech boy find his mother.In post-war Berlin, an American private helps a lost Czech boy find his mother.

  • Director
    • Fred Zinnemann
  • Writers
    • Richard Schweizer
    • David Wechsler
    • Paul Jarrico
  • Stars
    • Montgomery Clift
    • Ivan Jandl
    • Aline MacMahon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    5.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fred Zinnemann
    • Writers
      • Richard Schweizer
      • David Wechsler
      • Paul Jarrico
    • Stars
      • Montgomery Clift
      • Ivan Jandl
      • Aline MacMahon
    • 87User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
    • 85Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 7 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:52
    Official Trailer

    Photos25

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    Top cast11

    Edit
    Montgomery Clift
    Montgomery Clift
    • Ralph Stevenson
    Ivan Jandl
    • Karel Malik
    Aline MacMahon
    Aline MacMahon
    • Mrs. Murray
    Wendell Corey
    Wendell Corey
    • Jerry Fisher
    Jarmila Novotna
    Jarmila Novotna
    • Mrs. Malik
    Mary Patton
    • Mrs. Fisher
    Ewart G. Morrison
    Ewart G. Morrison
    • Mr. Crookes
    William Rogers
    • Tom Fisher
    Leopold Borkowski
    • Joel Makowsky
    Claude Gambier
    • Raoul Dubois
    Fred Zinnemann
    Fred Zinnemann
    • Interpreter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Fred Zinnemann
    • Writers
      • Richard Schweizer
      • David Wechsler
      • Paul Jarrico
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews87

    7.85.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8PudgyPandaMan

    Touching story of WWII's forgotten victims

    I love the old WWII movies and how they portray what life was like for the men and women who served - and what it was like for the families etc. But of all the ones I've seen, I don't think I've seen a single one that highlighted the plight of the children. I'm glad this one chose to bring this sad effect of war to the public in this film.

    The movie starts more like a documentary with a female narrator telling part of the story. At times the narration is a little annoying. But most of the rest of the film unfolds naturally without the narration. The film is a heartbreaking tale of the orphaned children of the war. They have nowhere to go and are shuttled from orphanages to resettlement centers. I was so shocked when I first saw the children - they looked so emaciated and dirty. They all seemed to have shell-shocked expressions on their faces. I think the director (Fred Zinneman)did a great job of casting and going for a realistic portrayal and not trying to gloss over the true realities. Being of Austrian Jewish heritage, the story no doubt hit close to home for him.

    The actual location shooting in bombed out cities of Germany was also quite stark and realistic. I'm glad they chose not to try to replicate the devastation in a studio. Being filmed in 1948, 3 years after the end of the war - I was shocked to see how much destruction was still evident, with huge piles of rubble laying around. The cities looked deserted.

    This was one of Montgomery Clift's first films. He doesn't appear until 36 minutes into film. He delivers a fine performance given his inexperience (although he was experienced on the stage). He is still in possession of his youthful good looks which deteriorated later. Too bad he lived such a young, tragic life as he was quite a natural talent. The young boy is quite a good actor for his age and manages to express his desperation through his body language and action since he doesn't speak for almost 2/3's of the film.

    There are many memorable and shocking scenes: the drowning of one of the children, the young boy searching through a crowd of women for his mom, several scenes of his wild and desperate attempts to escape at all costs, and the hordes of children exiting from the train as they arrive at the settlement center. Many of these scenes are some I will never forget.

    I'm shocked so few people have seen this (given only 37 comments and 1000+votes on IMDb at this time). I highly recommend this film if you are interested in movies about the sad effects of war.
    whpratt1

    Outstanding Classic Film

    Enjoyed this film from beginning to the very end because of a great story about children who were separated from their parents by Nazi Germany and they were also placed in concentration camps and marked with a number like cattle. Montgomery Clift, (Steve Stevenson) plays the role as an Army personnel who finds a very young boy who is starving and gives him some of his lunch. This young boy is named Karel Malik, (Ivan Jandl) who learns to speak English from Steve and starts to forget some of his horrible experiences. However, Karel begins to want to find his mother who is Mrs. Hannah Malik and Hannah is searching all through the ruins of bombed out towns trying to find her son. There is great acting by Montgomery Clift and Wendell Corey and this is a horrible story about the effects Hitler had on young children, men and women who were treated like animals. Great Gem of a Film !.
    8bkoganbing

    The Littlest Victims of War and Totalitarianism

    This film marked the feature film screen debut of Montgomery Clift. It was not meant to be that way. Red River was made first, but held up in release due to a threatened lawsuit. So The Search ended up being the movie going public's first glimpse of Montgomery Clift.

    They didn't get to see him until the film was only just about half way finished. The only character who is continuously on screen through out the film is little Ivan Jandl. What a performance too. The worst thing that could have happened to this film is to have some name Hollywood kid actor play that role. Young Ivan comes across as a real kid who went through horrors unimaginable in first world countries today.

    Ivan is Czech and his family are singled out by the Nazis and put in Auschwitz. Father and sister are killed, mother and son are separated. The film is their search for each other.

    Ivan after V-E Day is in another kind of camp, a refugee camp run by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Agency. He's almost comatose from the shock of four years of horror. To him the men in uniforms are still to be feared even though it's not Nazi uniforms. He makes a break for it and GI Montgomery Clift picks him up and takes him back to his dwelling.

    Ivan and Monty kind of grow on each other, but at the same time Ivan's mother played by Czech opera star Jarmila Novotna is pursuing her quest for her little boy. She comes to the UNRRA camp which is headed by Aline McMahon. This may very well be her best screen moment. McMahon also narrates large chunks of the film, describing the enormous task the UNRRA had in reuniting families all over Europe in addition to a whole lot of other things like food, clothing, and shelter.

    Clift and Ivan have great chemistry. And no one ever portrayed sensitivity better than Montgomery Clift on the screen. You know how much empathizes with Ivan's plight with every look, every nuance, every gesture. Fred Zinneman got a great performance out of him and later on Zinneman directed Clift in his greatest film role in From Here to Eternity.

    The film was shot in postwar Germany and the landscape itself and the looks of the people tell what they've been through. I wouldn't be surprised but that Clift's performance in The Search later on led him to being cast in The Big Lift, another film set in post World War II Germany.

    Probably it was just as well Clift got his first exposure in this film. It guaranteed him co-star status with John Wayne when Red River finally did come out.

    The Search 56 years later is a moving movie experience.
    8EdgarST

    Search

    After watching Roberto Rossellini's 1947 final part of his war trilogy "Germania anno zero", Fred Zinnemann's "The Search" is in direct contrast. While Rossellini approaches a similar subject with absorbing objectivity, "The Search" opts for sentimentality, although Zinnemann tried to add a documentary dimension to the story. It's the tale of a boy who is rescued by an American G.I. in Berlin, while the boy's mother is looking for him in refugee camps, after they were separated in Auschwitz during the war. Mother and child are pretty close but do not know it, so the story goes from scenes of the soldier educating the boy, to the mother's giving love to surrogate sons in a UN home for war orphans. Zinnemann's tact (or lack of passion, as some may say) nevertheless makes it work, as well as the performances by Montgomery Clift as the soldier and young Ivan Jandl as the kid, who won a special Oscar.
    9planktonrules

    Warning: this fantastic movie will start you bawling!

    Aside from some dated music and ponderous narration, this is a nearly perfect film. It's surprising, then, that people rarely talk about this being among Montgoery Clift's best work. I, for one, prefer this over From Here to Eternity, Raintree County or even The Heiress. This is because I rarely have encountered a movie that has so pulled me in emotionally to the story. I'm a guy and I don't just start bawling at everything, but I defy ANY person to watch this film with a dry eye! It just doesn't seem possible.

    The story is less about G.I. Clift than about a sad but adorable little boy he encounters wandering around in post-war Germany. At first, the boy is wild and doesn't trust anyone, as he and his family had been through the holocaust. Somehow in the concentration camp, he and his mother had become separated and at the end of the war, he had run away from the allied resettlement program because he had a natural fear of ALL soldiers. Despite these tragedies, the boy did not give up hope of one day finding his mother, though Clift plans on taking him back to the States because he knows it is hopeless to go on searching.

    You've GOT to see this film! You've GOT to show it to your kids! Although the Diary of Ann Frank and Shindler's List have received a lot of attention, this little film is every bit as poignant and important for understanding the real impact of World War II.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ben Mankiewicz on TCM indicated that Ivan Jandl spoke no English at the time this film was made, and that his English dialogue was phonetically memorized.
    • Goofs
      On Montgomery Clift's right shoulder, he wears the patch of the 102nd infantry division, but it is sewed on incorrectly; it is turned 90 degrees to the right.
    • Quotes

      [Steve is teaching a young boy, whose name he does not know but has coined Jim, to speak English]

      Ralph 'Steve' Stevenson: [to Jim] You have no idea how useful it's going to be for you to know English. You can go where ever you like. Everybody knows what 'OK' means. You can use English all over the world. Not, not just America: Canada, Africa, Australia, India. Even in England, they understand English... well, sort of.

    • Alternate versions
      There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA srl, "LA SETTIMA CROCE (1944) + THE SEARCH (Odissea tragica, 1948)" (2 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood et la Shoah (2004)
    • Soundtracks
      'S Wonderful
      (1927) (uncredited)

      Music by George Gershwin

      Played on a radio

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 7, 1949 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Switzerland
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
      • French
      • Polish
      • Hungarian
      • Czech
    • Also known as
      • La búsqueda
    • Filming locations
      • Frankfurt, Germany
    • Production company
      • Praesens-Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $250,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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