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Madeleine

  • 1950
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Madeleine (1950)
Madeleine: Dance With Me
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Watch Madeleine: Dance With Me
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11 Photos
Period DramaTrue CrimeCrimeDramaMystery

Madeleine's middle-class family cannot understand why she puts off marrying a respectable young man; they know nothing about her long-term affair with a Frenchman.Madeleine's middle-class family cannot understand why she puts off marrying a respectable young man; they know nothing about her long-term affair with a Frenchman.Madeleine's middle-class family cannot understand why she puts off marrying a respectable young man; they know nothing about her long-term affair with a Frenchman.

  • Director
    • David Lean
  • Writers
    • Stanley Haynes
    • Nicholas Phipps
  • Stars
    • Ann Todd
    • Norman Wooland
    • Ivan Desny
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Lean
    • Writers
      • Stanley Haynes
      • Nicholas Phipps
    • Stars
      • Ann Todd
      • Norman Wooland
      • Ivan Desny
    • 38User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Madeleine: Dance With Me
    Clip 3:10
    Madeleine: Dance With Me

    Photos11

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    Top cast46

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    Ann Todd
    Ann Todd
    • Madeleine Smith
    Norman Wooland
    Norman Wooland
    • William Minnoch
    Ivan Desny
    Ivan Desny
    • Émile L'Angelier
    Leslie Banks
    Leslie Banks
    • James Smith
    Edward Chapman
    Edward Chapman
    • Dr. Thompson
    Barbara Everest
    Barbara Everest
    • Mrs. Smith
    Elizabeth Sellars
    Elizabeth Sellars
    • Christina Hackett
    Jean Cadell
    Jean Cadell
    • Mrs. Jenkins
    Ivor Barnard
    Ivor Barnard
    • Mr. Murdoch
    Patricia Raine
    • Bessie Smith
    Eugene Deckers
    Eugene Deckers
    • Thuau
    André Morell
    André Morell
    • Defending Counsel
    • (as Andre Morell)
    Barry Jones
    Barry Jones
    • Proscuting Counsel
    Susan Stranks
    • Janet Smith
    Douglas Barr
    • William the Boot Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Eva Bartok
    Eva Bartok
    • Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Hyma Beckley
    • Man in Crowd
    • (uncredited)
    George Benson
    • Estate Agent
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • David Lean
    • Writers
      • Stanley Haynes
      • Nicholas Phipps
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews38

    6.92.2K
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    Featured reviews

    5Doylenf

    Familiar material given the David Lean touch but is emotionally cold...

    It should come as no surprise that the trial of MADELEINE may well have been termed "the trial of the century" in 1857's Scotland. And from this true story, David Lean has made a period romance starring ANN TODD as the scheming woman from a wealthy background who feels compelled to hide her love affair with a commoner from her disapproving father.

    Madeleine defies the conventions of her stiff upper-class household and, after receiving a proper gentleman caller with her family, retreats to her private room where she has an assignation with a lover who is not a man of means. The shadowy interiors suggest the menace to come, as her father urges her to take a suitable suitor in marriage as soon as possible.

    What hurts the story is the familiarity of it all--a woman of substance wanting to break out of the social boundaries of convention. And unfortunately, there is nothing novel or different about this version of such a tale to make it of more than routine interest, despite the David Lean touch. What it really needed was Alfred Hitchcock's guiding hand.

    All of the technical ingredients are fine but the script is ultimately a disappointment and tends to be dull in spots. Furthermore, Ann Todd's Madeleine is not a very arresting character. This has to be considered one of David Lean's less effective films. The story is as emotionally cold as Madeleine herself and her demure behavior with her father seems more like a pose than anything else, one that he should easily be able to see through. Her arrest for murder in the poisoning of her lover is handled with too many frigid close-ups of Todd's face and no real explanation of what happened.

    It's certainly not a "must see" film by the renowned directed Lean.

    Best performance in the entire film: ANDRE MORELL as the defense counselor who gives the most stirring and satisfying speech in the courtroom as to why Madeleine should be found innocent of the circumstantial evidence.
    5moonspinner55

    A scandal in Scotland...

    A boarding-house Lothario in 1857 Glasgow dies from arsenic poisoning; a stack of incriminating letters point the finger at the man's secret lover, an unmarried high society woman who has recently announced her engagement to a man of her class. True story which held Victorian Scotland spellbound is given handsome, but not elaborate treatment from director David Lean. Lean's then-wife Ann Todd reportedly played Madeleine Smith on the stage (not credited here) and her assets--steely eyes, a knitted-brow and taut mouth--are in perfect accompaniment with this inscrutable character, who may or may not be what she seems. Lean captures the allure of a clandestine romance, with the screen fading to black as the lustiness becomes palpable, and his third act in the courtroom is quite lively. Still, this seems to be a lot of striding up and down for a fairly certain verdict, and the conclusion is curiously flat. Columbo could've solved this case in an hour. ** from ****
    7wes-connors

    Arsenic and Ann Todd

    In 1850s Glasgow, beautifully-dressed Ann Todd (as Madeleine) and her family move into an immaculately-furnished, upper-classy new home. Still fetching in her 40s, Ms. Todd attracts her share of male admirers, most significantly handsome young Ivan Desny (as Emile L'Anglier). However, Todd's appearances-conscious father Leslie Banks (as James Smith) would rather his daughter marry suitable Norman Wooland (as William Minnoch). Eventually, a lover is poisoned and Todd stands accused. While Todd looks beautiful under duress, Andre Morell and Barry Jones passionately argue it out in court...

    This is based on a true story; Todd's character is probably supposed to be much younger, but the age difference works well, adding another dimension to her unacceptable affair. Todd delivers a Garbo-like performance. Coincidently, Greta Garbo was concurrently preparing the un-produced "Lover and Friend" (1950) with noted Todd co-star James Mason; Garbo camera tests by James Wong Howe and William Daniels by resemble some shots of Todd in this film. "Madeleine" is lacking in narrative, but the direction by David Lean and photography by Guy Green make it worth viewing.

    ******* Madeleine (2/14/50) David Lean ~ Ann Todd, Norman Wooland, Ivan Desny, Leslie Banks
    7brogmiller

    Neither guilty nor not guilty.

    The greatest directors are entitled to the occasional misfire and this would appear to be one of David Lean's. He was persuaded to do it by his wife Ann Todd who had played the part of alleged poisoner Madeleine Smith on stage a few years earlier. Ironically nothing of the play would remain and the film would become an original screenplay. Difficult to put ones finger on why 'nothing seemed to fit', to use Lean's own words. Even allowing for Ann Todd's customary 'temperament' this was by all accounts a far from happy experience and it certainly shows. I think that Todd is excellent in the role and her final, enigmatic look to the camera after the jury has found the charges against her 'not proven' is masterful. Ivan Desny is very good as the vain social climber but it is difficult to warm to him so that his demise fails to excite our sympathy. Apparently Gerard Philipe was considered for the role. What a tantalising prospect! Notable performances by Leslie Banks as her unbending father and by Andre Morell as the defending counsel in the stupendous trial scenes whose oratory and impassioned pleas put sufficient doubts in the jurors' minds to enable Madeleine to escape the executioner. Norman Wooland is okay as faithful Mr. Minnoch but as an actor lacks that certain 'something'. This is by no means a 'bad' film and there are very effective moments but it simply lacks that elusive and magic alchemy by which everything comes together. Lean put the blame fairly and squarely on the writing. The film was both a critical and commercial failure and Lean was not to be so harshly judged until 'Ryan's Daughter' twenty years later.
    9sol-

    A lesser known but no less than brilliant David Lean film

    As one of David Lean's lesser known films, I did not have any great expectations (excuse the pun) before watching this film. After watching the film, the only conclusion that I could draw is that it is lesser known because it is hard to acquire rather than because it is a lesser Lean film. Lean's directing in 'Madeleine' is on par with his grand visions of the two works of Charles Dickens that he had directed in the few years before this one. With Guy Green photographing again, and once again John Bryan involved in the film's production design, Lean creates a visual feast here that helps flesh out the themes of the screenplay.

    The film is about a woman of wealth who is torn between a foreign working class man who she loves, and her father's expectations that she marries within her own class. Her father is a strict, conservative man, and Madeleine keeps her love affair a secret because she knows that he would not approve. However, she feels guilty for leading her lover on when she knows that it is futile. To make matters worse, her father is insisting that she lets an upper class young man romance her. Madeleine is unsure how to cope with the situation, and even considers using poison at one point in time.

    The film has one of the best lighting designs that I have ever seen. Lean pays careful attention to shadows and the direction that light is coming from on screen. In the first scene when we see Madeleine and her lover Emile together outside, they are photographed with only back lighting so that their facial features are hardly seen, showing the secretive nature of their meeting. And after a few cuts they are then seen so that only their necks downwards are properly lit up. There is a definite contrast between shots like these are those that take place inside her house, where very strong lighting is used so that the skin on the characters all seem very white.

    Another interesting use of light is in a conversation that Madeleine has with her father. The scene uses cuts between their faces, and her father is shot with light from a low camera angle so that his features are barely seen and that he seems dominating. In contrast, a slightly high camera angle is used on Madeleine with lighting work that shows her skin as grey with very visible distinguishing features. Whenever the sky is seen, it is also shown as moody and cloudy, which would be a combination of lighting and art direction. There is also one scene in which Madeleine says "No", and the light source for the shot when she says this is coming from below, with shadows falling from her nose above on her face.

    The camera-work is brilliant too, especially in the scene with administering the poison. There is a low camera angle on a closeup of the bottle to make it menacing, then only seen in closeups, it is poured, while a girl in the background (not seen) sings a song about the death of a bird. The closeups and inserts are great throughout, as are Guy Green's angles. One of the best has a man's hand holding a cup in the foreground, while Madeleine is seen sitting down in the background. This is not a point of a view shot, but rather one that shows that Madeleine's attention is drawn to the cup. Amazing stuff.

    The sound design of the film is also great, with certain sounds (footsteps, clanging) isolated when they are all that a character is listening out for. The audio in terms of music though is less than splendid. It is overly melodramatic, and tends to overplay the tension of certain scenes. The film also has another couple of detracting factors. One is that we never really feel the chemistry between Madeleine and her two lovers, which makes it slightly difficult to sympathise with what she is torn between. Also, the final third of the film is rather weak - the bulk of what it is of interest lies in the middle section. Either way, Lean's talent for directing makes this a very worthwhile experience overall, and it comes particularly recommended to those who liked his Charles Dickens films.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Ann Todd had portrayed the title character in a production of the play on which this movie was based and had always wanted to play it in a movie adaptation. Shortly after she married director Sir David Lean, he agreed to make this movie and cast her as the lead, as a wedding present of sorts.
    • Goofs
      Twelve jury members' names are read out but a Jury in Scotland has fifteen members not twelve. The trial taking place in Glasgow.
    • Quotes

      Scots Divine: The wicked shall be destroyed! This daughter of a rich man in her devilry defied the most sacred laws of God and man. She dresses in purple and fine linen, but her heart is black, black with sin. "Vengeance is mine" said the Lord, and the retribution will be just upon this murderess, this daughter of Satan. Just! And merciless! Her she comes.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Drôle d'embrouille (1978)
    • Soundtracks
      Lord Blantyre
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Arranged by William Alwyn

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    FAQ

    • How long is Madeleine?
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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 9, 1951 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Movie-buff" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "YouTube Movies & TV" YouTube Channel (restored)
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • El pecado de Madeleine
    • Filming locations
      • Blythswood Square, Glasgow, Scotland, UK(Madeleine Smith's home)
    • Production companies
      • J. Arthur Rank Organisation
      • Cineguild
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 54 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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