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Le bourreau

Original title: El verdugo
  • 1963
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
7.8K
YOUR RATING
Le bourreau (1963)
Watch Trailer [OV]
Play trailer3:37
1 Video
56 Photos
Dark ComedySatireComedyDrama

An undertaker marries an old executioner's daughter and must continue his father-in-law's profession after his retirement, although he doesn't like it.An undertaker marries an old executioner's daughter and must continue his father-in-law's profession after his retirement, although he doesn't like it.An undertaker marries an old executioner's daughter and must continue his father-in-law's profession after his retirement, although he doesn't like it.

  • Director
    • Luis García Berlanga
  • Writers
    • Luis García Berlanga
    • Rafael Azcona
    • Ennio Flaiano
  • Stars
    • Nino Manfredi
    • Emma Penella
    • José Isbert
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    7.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Luis García Berlanga
    • Writers
      • Luis García Berlanga
      • Rafael Azcona
      • Ennio Flaiano
    • Stars
      • Nino Manfredi
      • Emma Penella
      • José Isbert
    • 26User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 3:37
    Trailer [OV]

    Photos56

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    Top cast49

    Edit
    Nino Manfredi
    Nino Manfredi
    • José Luis Rodríguez, el enterrador
    Emma Penella
    Emma Penella
    • Carmen, la hija de Amadeo
    José Isbert
    José Isbert
    • Amadeo, el verdugo
    • (as Jose Isbert)
    José Luis López Vázquez
    José Luis López Vázquez
    • Antonio Rodríguez, el hermano mayor de José Luis
    • (as Jose Luis Lopez Vazquez)
    Ángel Álvarez
    Ángel Álvarez
    • Álvarez, el enterrador
    • (as Angel Alvarez)
    Guido Alberti
    • Director de la prisión
    Julia Caba Alba
    Julia Caba Alba
    • Mujer visitante de la obra nº 2
    María Luisa Ponte
    María Luisa Ponte
    • Estefanía, esposa de Antonio
    • (as Maria Luisa Ponte)
    María Isbert
    María Isbert
    • Ignacia, esposa de Álvarez
    • (as Maria Isbert)
    Erasmo Pascual
    Erasmo Pascual
    • San Martín
    Xan das Bolas
    Xan das Bolas
    • Guarda de la obra
    José Orjas
    José Orjas
    • Marqués
    • (as Jose Orjas)
    José María Prada
    José María Prada
    • Vigilante con botella de champán
    • (as Jose Maria Prada)
    Félix Fernández
    Félix Fernández
    • Organista
    • (as Felix Fernandez)
    Antonio Ferrandis
    Antonio Ferrandis
    • Funcionario de prisiones
    Lola Gaos
    Lola Gaos
    • Mujer visitante de la obra nº 3
    • (as Dolores Gaos)
    Santiago Ontañón
    • Sr. Corcuera, el académico
    • (as Santiago Ontañon)
    Alfredo Landa
    Alfredo Landa
    • Sacristán
    • Director
      • Luis García Berlanga
    • Writers
      • Luis García Berlanga
      • Rafael Azcona
      • Ennio Flaiano
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    7.97.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8SpaaceMonkee

    Wonderfully Executed Dark Comedy

    The Executioner's plot is simple: after his father-in-law retires, a man must take over his role as an executioner in order to preserve the family's state-leased apartment, but he hates the job. It's not a flashy film. There's no nudity, violence, or special effects. It's hard to say there's even anything like a serious plot twist. Instead, it's just an excellently scripted and well-designed satire.

    From the beginning of the movie, Jose Luis is a weak-willed man. He talks of wanting to go to Germany to become a mechanic, but instead stays in his day job as an undertaker. Although he seems to find the state executioner's job repellent, Jose Luis ends up sleeping with the executioner's daughter, possibly because no one else will date an undertaker. From there, he winds up applying to become the next executioner - notwithstanding his own numerous objections - in order to keep the family in a nice, new state-owned apartment. When he's finally called up to execute a man, Jose Luis gets cajoled by his father-in-law and wife (who wants a vacation) to go consider it at the site rather than resign. Once he's finally there - in one of the film's best scenes - Jose Luis gets egged on even more by the prison warden after he tries to resign at the site. By the end, Jose Luis somehow finds himself having done exactly what he said he wouldn't do. His comfortable wife seems not to care.

    The Executioner doesn't have a lot of out-loud laughs, but it's very funny. It manages to achieve great situational irony without descending into slapstick; it's an absurd plot that feels totally believable. Throughout, there are a number of memorable scenes, and the dialogue usually is witty and excellent. It's a movie that somehow manages to satirize capital punishment - with clever commentary along the way, particularly about state bureaucracy - without coming across as political or partisan. Overall, The Executioner is well worth a watch.
    10kevinmanf

    An unknown comical masterpiece which uses humour to denounce the death penalty

    Luis García Berlanga's El Verdugo (The Executioner) was recently named the second greatest Spanish film of all time yet it still remains unknown to many non-Spanish people. Perhaps the reason it's so unknown is due to the fact that it was released during the Spanish dictatorship lead by General Franco and this did not permit it to get an international recognition and viewing. Whatever the reason, it's a pity that this little treasure of a film can not get the international recognition it deserves. It's one of the great black comedies I have seen, a fierce yet hilarious critique on the death penalty. Berlanga's inspiration is Franco's regime which practised it, but it has a universal appeal.

    Filled with memorable gags, the story starts with Jose Luís (Nino Manfredi), an undertaker who is thinking of moving to Germany to become a good mechanic. In love with Carmen, daughter of Amadeo (José Isbert), an executioner, he is one day discovered by her father during there moment of intimacy and is forced to marry her – the undertaker marries an executioner's daughter. Jose Luís is faced with economic difficulties and the urgent need to create a new home for his new wife. The only way of solving this problem, it seems, would be accepting his father in law's offer (Amadeo): to take the vacant place of executioner Amadeo is leaving due to retirement. Only this way will he get a home. Under pressure from his surrounding, Jose Luís accepts the job convinced that he will never have to put it into practise. Life goes on pleasantly in his new home until one day he receives the feared telegram: he must execute a convicted man.

    The story, filmed in a black and white photography that feels so fresh, sounds serious because below the comical surface, lies not only the serious subject matter of death penalty but also the wide spread pessimism caused by Franco's regime. Director Berlange could have chosen to tell the story as sad drama but he doesn't: in a way, he is laughing at the absurd logic and inhumanity he feels the death sentence is. The film's true brilliance lies not in the wonderful all around performances, but in its screenplay that takes on a comic tone that is apparently inoffensive to condemn an action that is just as inhuman as those committed by the executed. And the great irony is that the executioner goes through much worse emotionally than the executed in a great sequence. The movie looks with amusement at the idea of how those who execute can go on there days with a calm conscience. But don't get the wrong idea, El Verdugo does not portray the condemned as victims – it is not interested in there guilt or innocence. The only victims, it suggests, are those that accept to practise inhumanity under the name of justice. There are so many brilliant comical sequences that have nothing to admire from the exhausted and cheap comedies we get from many of the films nowadays.

    This is a film that will certainly be less appealing to those in favour of the death penalty. For those who do not which to dwell on such a subject can look at it on its simplest level, which is that of a first rate comical masterpiece.
    8framptonhollis

    one of the finest (and funniest) films to emerge from Spain

    Fiercely funny and unapologetically black, "The Executioner" is among the most entertaining comedies that I have ever seen. Through morbid themes and distressing issues, this masterpiece of the macabre is one of Spanish cinema's many miracles. The pace is as fast as a speeding bullet as visionary filmmaker Luis Garcia Berlanga slyly mocks the heated controversy of capital punishment. Forcing its lead character to choose between traumatizing himself and living a life of poverty, Berlanga is masterfully able to turn transform tragedy into farce.

    While the constant comedy may seem to some as no more than silly distraction from the social commentary, I sensed not only a consistent sense of farcical satire in the masterwork, but also a consistent sense of dread and awareness. The film can be split into two halves: the first being a slightly morbid, but utterly charming romantic comedy, and the second being a much more bleak work of direful, tragicomic satire. Many satires have the unfortunate flaw of paying much more attention to their message than the quality of their script, characters, and plot; "The Executioner" shares all of these traits. Beyond the black and social critiques, there are some highly likable characters and a flat-out amazing premise, satirical or not.

    Chaotic, sad, and laugh-out-loud hilarious in equal measure, it is hard to determine whether "The Executioner" is a work that leaves an imprint of joy or sorrow. My reaction is one of both, for the ambiguous ending serves as both a punchline and a bone chilling reminder of the unpredictable tragedies hidden deep within the human experience.
    9dalton2

    An original and brilliant movie

    Here we have a tragicomedy about executions released in 1963, when executions and censorship did still exist in Spain. How did they do it...? I only can say... using their imagination. It has a really brilliant story, and a screenplay that combines in a so wise way the comic and dramatic/tragic aspects of the story. Also, the actors know at every moment what to do. As a result we find a really funny film, a really sad film... and a perfect recreation of the reaction of common people to a hard and dangerous epoque. A masterpiece in my opinion.
    9MogwaiMovieReviews

    Gallows Humour

    This is a real treat, a keenly observed, merry black comedy of life for a mild-mannered undertaker turned unwilling hangman. Every scene is filled with small observations and asides that add something memorable, and every bit character in every scene tosses in some little bit of "business" that is not necessary for the plot, but enriches it and deepens the believability of the world in which it is set.

    Watching this made me think on how, if this film had been made at the same time outside of Europe, the British would have probably made it as a crass Carry On movie, and the Americans would most likely have turned it into a Jerry Lewis vehicle, without any subtlety, thoughtfulness, sensuality, societal commentary or beauty, and yet this is funnier than any of those put together, too.

    The wedding scene is hilarious, with so much going on at every moment outside of the dialogue, and the "wave to daddy" line on the docks is priceless.

    It's always a comedy, and yet one in which the viewer is never allowed to escape the oppressive moral weight of taking another's life, and the inability to look away from this increases as it goes along, until the ending borders on harrowing.

    It's a film that really should be as well known as some of those by Fellini, and I'm eager now to see more by its mischevious writer and director, Luis Garcia Berlanga.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      José Luis López Vázquez improvised the moment when measuring the child's head.
    • Quotes

      Chica en feria del libro: [subtitled version] Excuse me, do you have anything on Bergman or Antonioni?

      Sr. Corcuera, el académico: Bergman? The actress?

      Chica en feria del libro: No, not the actress. Thanks.

    • Connections
      Featured in Berlanga, plano personal (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      El verdugo
      (twist)

      Composed by Adolfo Waitzman

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 16, 1965 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Spain
      • Italy
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • El verdugo
    • Filming locations
      • Mallorca, Balearic Islands, Spain
    • Production companies
      • Naga Films
      • Zebra Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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