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La grande nuit

Original title: The Big Night
  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
John Drew Barrymore and Joan Lorring in La grande nuit (1951)
The Big Night: Jazz Club
Play clip3:11
Watch The Big Night: Jazz Club
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35 Photos
Film NoirDramaThriller

A teenager comes of age while seeking revenge on the man who beat up his father.A teenager comes of age while seeking revenge on the man who beat up his father.A teenager comes of age while seeking revenge on the man who beat up his father.

  • Director
    • Joseph Losey
  • Writers
    • Stanley Ellin
    • Joseph Losey
    • Hugo Butler
  • Stars
    • John Drew Barrymore
    • Preston Foster
    • Joan Lorring
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Stanley Ellin
      • Joseph Losey
      • Hugo Butler
    • Stars
      • John Drew Barrymore
      • Preston Foster
      • Joan Lorring
    • 20User reviews
    • 21Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Big Night: Jazz Club
    Clip 3:11
    The Big Night: Jazz Club

    Photos35

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    Top cast45

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    John Drew Barrymore
    John Drew Barrymore
    • George La Main
    • (as John Barrymore Jr.)
    Preston Foster
    Preston Foster
    • Andy La Main
    Joan Lorring
    Joan Lorring
    • Marion Rostina
    Howard St. John
    Howard St. John
    • Al Judge
    Dorothy Comingore
    Dorothy Comingore
    • Julie Rostina
    Philip Bourneuf
    Philip Bourneuf
    • Dr. Lloyd Cooper
    Howland Chamberlain
    Howland Chamberlain
    • Flanagan
    • (as Howland Chamberlin)
    Myron Healey
    Myron Healey
    • Kennealy
    Emile Meyer
    Emile Meyer
    • Peckinpaugh
    • (as Emil Meyer)
    Mauri Leighton
    Mauri Leighton
    • Terry Angelus
    • (as Mauri Lynn)
    Robert Aldrich
    Robert Aldrich
    • Ringsider at Fight
    • (uncredited)
    Walter Bacon
    • Boxing Match Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Benjie Bancroft
    • Bar Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Bice
    Robert Bice
    • Taxi Driver
    • (uncredited)
    Willie Bloom
    • Boxing Match Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Chet Brandenburg
    Chet Brandenburg
    • Boxing Match Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Lane Chandler
    Lane Chandler
    • Printer
    • (uncredited)
    Edmund Cobb
    Edmund Cobb
    • Cop
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Joseph Losey
    • Writers
      • Stanley Ellin
      • Joseph Losey
      • Hugo Butler
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.31.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8JuguAbraham

    The remarkable independent sequences, do not add up to a great convincing film

    The tale is based on an obscure novel called The Dreadful Summit by author/screenplay-writer Stanley Ellin. The script for the film appears to be a jumbled mess, but each segment has great independent value that is the result of an intelligent Losey touch. The lovely remarkable scenes are the following:

    A. Young bespectacled George bullied by friend to kiss a girl whom he likes B. A birthday cake with lighted candles given by his father that George is unable to blow out in full, One remains lit ominously. The cake serves as a reminder that the entire film deals with happenings of a single day. At the last scene the cake reappears to remind us of it. C. What appears to be real is proved unreal time and time again. D. The left-sympathizing Losey and friends made the film with a cleverness missing in other films of the day. Closure of the bars's curtains by the assistant to George's dad is a symbolic in an odd way. E. The small bitter role given to the enigmatic "2nd Mrs Citizen Kane" (Dorothy Comingore) as Julie Rostina, after she was hounded out in real life by Randolph Hearst and then the awful McCarthy witch hunt of alleged communists in Hollywood that followed states a story within a story. It is sad the way she died in real life. She had so much potential as an actress. F. The honest appreciation of beauty and talent of a black singer by George leads to so much bitterness of color-based prejudices. Losey adds a black poodle in chains in that scene. G The two kisses of George in the film are so different (the opening sequence and later one with Marion)

    These sequences are all wonderful, though the film never comes together. Yet it is a notable statement of undying love by a husband for his wayward wife and also of a motherless young man trying to love women and eventually grow up to be a good husband.
    6amadman

    Decent B Noir, horrible audio quality

    As previous reviewer wrote, saw this on TCM and the sound was terrible. Good story in need of a cleanup. I like hearing dialogue.
    8bmacv

    John Barrymore, Jr., memorable in coming-of-age noir

    Joseph Losey's The Big Night is a film noir that's also, like Moonrise and Talk About A Stranger, a coming-of-age story. The young male undergoing his transformational journey is John Barrymore, Jr., son of the Great Profile and father of Drew. His film career was not high-profile, as he inherited the family disposition toward chemical dependency (blood will tell). But here, boasting a luxuriantly healthy crown of hair, he gives a surprisingly intense yet controlled performance. His big night happens to be his 16th or 17th birthday, when his barkeep father is brutally beaten and publicly humiliated by a local sportswriter (Losey's staging is unflinching). Frustrations about his own Hamlet-like ditherings and confusions impel him to seek revenge on his father's behalf, and, gun in pocket, he sets out into a nightscape of prize fights, gin mills and the walk-up flats of casually met strangers. While Losey's sympathies lie with Barrymore, it's always clear that the emergent man is still a callow stripling, incapable of apprehending the complex reality he crashes into, like a fatted calf in a china shop. Though the director refrains from pushing the conclusion to where it might logically go -- he retreats into sentimentality and sententiousness -- The Big Night still scores as a provocative, moodily shot film.
    dougdoepke

    A Little Deeper Look at an Oddly Affecting Noir

    Uneven film that at times seems to drift. Still, there are genuinely compelling moments, as when burly dad LeMaine (Foster, in a fine performance) meekly submits to a brutal cane lashing that had me cringing. Why he's submitting remains a puzzle until the end. Because of the beating, Dad's insecure son George (Barrymore Jr.) spends the movie's remainder trying to avenge his father.

    Beneath the revenge narrative, however, is really a rite-of-passage story. For example, in a not very believable opening, a cringing George is pounded in humiliating fashion by his teenage peers. We're given no explanation, nor does actor Barrymore physically resemble an easy mark. It's not a promising beginning. Then, in a much more persuasive scene, Dad casts a slightly disapproving eye over his nervous son's birthday cake (symbolic of the story). So the kid must prove himself not only to Dad, but to himself.

    It's not a tight screenplay. Events more or less simply follow one another, tied together by the theme of vengeance. Happily, however, the narrative doesn't drag. Actor Barrymore Jr. had a rather brief career despite the pedigree. One thing for sure, he's certainly different looking. With a mop of unruly hair and slightly crooked mouth, he's no glamor boy. Nonetheless, his looks are perfect for the role, such that, when he dons a sport coat and hat, he still looks like a kid trying to take a big step up. All in all, the young actor does pretty well in the kind of difficult role that would later go to James Dean. I also like a de-glamorized Joan Lorring, who's a good match for him. My one real complaint is the way Al Judge (St. John) is written. His behavior is so crude and ugly, it's hard thinking of him as a respected sports writer. A racketeer would have been more credible and easier, so the scriptwriters must have had a reason.

    Then too, the screenwriters, Butler and Lardner Jr., along with director Losey, were all blacklisted during Hollywood's commie hunting period. I suspect it was their leftist leanings that are responsible for one of the film's most arresting sequences. George goes to a nightclub where a drop-dead beautiful black songstress (Mauri Lynn) entertains. Afterward, he encounters her outside and is compelled to compliment her looks and talent. She glows at the flattering remark. Trouble is his heartfelt momentum carries over to the unspoken qualification "for a Negro woman". She grasps the unfortunate hanging-in-the-air racial reference, and is reminded of her not-fully-equal status. Thus, disappointment clouds her former glow. It's a beautifully played moment and quite powerful in emotional impact. I wonder what happened to that fine actress.

    Anyway, the movie does have a number of effective noir touches, especially George's twilight escape through LA's towering industrial district. It's a mysterious world so much larger than himself. All in all, the film is oddly memorable, thanks, I think, to Barrymore's unusual presence. I know I sought it out on DVD, lo, so many years after having first seen it in a theatre.

    (In passing—the burly guy sitting next to Barrymore and Bourneuf ringside at the fights is Robert Aldrich, the great director of such classics as Kiss Me Deadly {1955} and Attack {1956}.)
    6Bunuel1976

    THE BIG NIGHT (Joseph Losey, 1951) **1/2

    From Losey's American feature films (a period which barely lasted four years, when he fell victim to political persecution) I had only previously watched his eccentric debut, THE BOY WITH GREEN HAIR (1948). The same year he made THE BIG NIGHT, a low-budget noir, he directed two other thrillers - THE PROWLER, Losey's own favorite from this early phase of his career and M, an Americanization of Fritz Lang's German masterpiece. Both these films promise to be a good deal more interesting than the ones I watched, and I hope I get the chance to view them someday...

    Anyway, back to THE BIG NIGHT: in itself, it wasn't too bad but it didn't feel at all like a Losey film; perhaps that's because I'm not used to watching him dealing with an American setting - but it's still a minor film, not quite knowing where it's going and not even that compelling while it's on. The noir-ish atmosphere (courtesy of cinematographer Hal Mohr), however, is quite interestingly deployed - sometimes with an audacious psychological resonance, as in the nightclub scene where a riotous drum solo brings back to lead John Barrymore Jr. (looking more like Sean Penn than his matinée' idol father!) memories of his father's vicious beating at the hands of a crippled but influential sports columnist (an effectively sinister Howard St. John); the latter episode is actually a key scene, which sets the plot in motion and sends Barrymore - who witnessed father Preston Foster's humiliation and whom he idolized - seething with revenge in search of St. John.

    The characters are largely stereotypes - caring bartender (Foster owns a bar), philosophical drunk pal, his bitter girlfriend (a rather spent Dorothy Comingore, who 10 years earlier had played Susan Alexander in CITIZEN KANE [1941]!), her good-girl sister who falls for and yearns to 'save' Barrymore, shady promoter Emil Meyer (a dry run for his memorable turn as a crooked cop in SWEET SMELL OF SUCCESS [1957]), etc. - but the last act provides a couple of ironic twists involving the characters of Foster, St. John and the tragic fate of a woman they both loved in their own way.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      According to interviews that director Joseph Losey gave in the mid-1970s to Michel Ciment, the FBI wanted to spy on him in Europe, where he relocated to work after being blacklisted by Hollywood because of his political activities. So they paid John Drew Barrymore (who became a good friend after this movie) to furnish information about Losey's political activities, if any, in London. Barrymore later met Losey in London and confessed to him about the money and expense account the FBI had given him to spy on Losey. Losey, recalling that the young actor had been under tremendous pressure at the time, forgave him and, in fact, suggested that they have several lavish meals together and put the cost on Barrymore's FBI expense account, which they promptly did.
    • Goofs
      The magazine racks outside the corner store are mostly issues contemporary to 1951, with one glaring exception. A copy of the famous first issue of The New Yorker (published in 1925).
    • Quotes

      Peckinpaugh: Next time you see somebody drop money, don't think about it so long before you decide to give it back.

    • Connections
      Featured in Vampira: The Big Night 1951 (1956)
    • Soundtracks
      Am I Too Young
      Music by Lyn Murray

      Lyrics by Sid Kuller

      Sung by Mauri Leighton (uncredited)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 1, 1965 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Big Night
    • Filming locations
      • 218 East 12th Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA(George goes to the old St. Joseph's Church - destroyed by fire and demolished in 1983)
    • Production company
      • Philip A. Waxman Productions Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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