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Celui qui doit mourir

  • 1957
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
999
YOUR RATING
Melina Mercouri and Pierre Vaneck in Celui qui doit mourir (1957)
Political DramaDrama

Three townspeople cause an uproar when they try to help refugees on a Greek island occupied by Turks.Three townspeople cause an uproar when they try to help refugees on a Greek island occupied by Turks.Three townspeople cause an uproar when they try to help refugees on a Greek island occupied by Turks.

  • Director
    • Jules Dassin
  • Writers
    • Ben Barzman
    • Jules Dassin
    • Nikos Kazantzakis
  • Stars
    • Jean Servais
    • Carl Möhner
    • Grégoire Aslan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    999
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jules Dassin
    • Writers
      • Ben Barzman
      • Jules Dassin
      • Nikos Kazantzakis
    • Stars
      • Jean Servais
      • Carl Möhner
      • Grégoire Aslan
    • 20User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos49

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    Top cast22

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    Jean Servais
    Jean Servais
    • Priest Fotis
    Carl Möhner
    Carl Möhner
    • Lukas
    Grégoire Aslan
    Grégoire Aslan
    • Turkish Agha
    Gert Fröbe
    Gert Fröbe
    • Archon Patriarcheas
    • (as Gert Froebe)
    Teddy Bilis
    • Hadjinikolis
    René Lefèvre
    René Lefèvre
    • Yannakos…
    Lucien Raimbourg
    • Kostandis
    Melina Mercouri
    Melina Mercouri
    • Katerina…
    Roger Hanin
    Roger Hanin
    • Panagiotaros…
    Pierre Vaneck
    Pierre Vaneck
    • Manolios…
    Dimos Starenios
    Dimos Starenios
    • Ladas
    Nicole Berger
    Nicole Berger
    • Mariori
    Maurice Ronet
    Maurice Ronet
    • Michelis
    Fernand Ledoux
    Fernand Ledoux
    • Priest Grigoris
    Anna Armaou
    Nitza Avantagelou
    Nitza Avantagelou
    Joe Dassin
    Joe Dassin
    • Shepherd
    • (as Joseph Dassin)
    Panos Karavousanos
    Panos Karavousanos
    • Seizis
    • (as Pannayotaros Karavoussanos)
    • Director
      • Jules Dassin
    • Writers
      • Ben Barzman
      • Jules Dassin
      • Nikos Kazantzakis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    7.5999
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    Featured reviews

    7Bunuel1976

    HE WHO MUST DIE (Jules Dassin, 1957) ***

    Rather than go the usual Hollywood biblical epic route, this Good Friday I opted for an alternative "Communist" view of the tale of the Christ via 2 European films made by exiled American film-makers: Edward Dmytryk's British-made GIVE US THIS DAY aka Christ IN CONCRETE (1949) and the French film under review – both of which, incidentally, also share blacklisted screenwriter Ben Barzman. Naturally, neither of these movies is located in Roman-ruled Judea or features crucifixions and, in fact, they are allegorical in nature and modernized in setting. Celebrated Greek novelist Nikos Kazantzakis – on whose book "Christ Recrucified" Dassin's film was based – would die the same year HE WHO MUST DIE was released and is himself perhaps best-known for another controversial work on similar lines, "The Last Temptation Of Christ", that was filmed much later by fervently Catholic film-maker Martin Scorsese. Set in 1921 in a small Greek village under Turkish rule during Passion Week, the film deals with the moral dilemma caused by the arrival in town of a group of Greek fugitives led by their priest (Jean Servais) – the survivors of a nearby village that was burned to the ground by the Turks. The majority of the townspeople, headed by the fearsome local priest Grigoris (Fernand Ledoux) and the wealthy mayor (Gert Frobe), refuse them any help lest they be judged traitors by the Turks, but a handful are sympathetic to the fugitives' plight: Maurice Ronet (as Forbe's hesitant son), Melina Mercouri (as the popular local widow-whore) and Pierre Vanek (as a simple shepherd in Frobe's employ). HE WHO MUST DIE marked a departure for Dassin who, leaving behind his tried-and-tested noir territory in which he had excelled until then, goes straight for Art in this powerful but heavy-going drama. The villagers are deep in preparation for the annual Passion pageant on Good Friday (a tradition that is still highly popular in my neck of the woods – in fact, I had an uncle and a good friend of mine who both used to take part in local representations of this sort many years ago!) when the harassed band of countrymen pass through their town; needless to say, the resulting heated confrontations makes everybody forget all about the play but the Christ saga soon enacts itself in real-life in the person of the stuttering shepherd (who, unsurprisingly, had been the one chosen to portray Jesus in the first place). The reteaming of Servais and Carl Mohner (as a chief member of the fugitive group) – both from Dassin's legendary caper RIFIFI (1955) – could not have been more different, nor (the future Mrs. Dassin) Melina Mercouri's portrayal here – despite the surface similarities – of the proverbial "whore with a heart of gold" than that of her most famous role in Dassin's popular hit, NEVER ON Sunday (1960)! This unholy mélange of patriotism and sensuality – not to mention Communist solidarity and Christian hypocrisy – cannot fail to give rise to impressive sequences and performances (particularly a white-haired Frobe and the enigmatic 'Blond Christ' Vanek) along the way but also, at least, one major deficiency: the villagers' avowed fear of Turkish retaliation if they aid the fugitives – especially as displayed via the overstated performance of Ledoux as a vindictive Patriarch – rings false when set against the laid-back personality of the Turkish Agha (Gregoire Aslan), perennially clad in pyjamas, seemingly uninterested in anything that happens around him and perfectly happy (until the finale, that is) to let his Christian subjects fight it out amongst themselves! Likewise, the melodramatic tussles over Mercouri's favors, between the awkward, pacifist Vanek and the robust, violent Roger Hanin, seem intended to give the film an extra touch of Greek tragedy more than anything else. Nevertheless, I am grateful to have been provided with an opportunity to check out this elusive Dassin film, and also very glad that it was by way of such a (surprisingly) pristine widescreen copy.
    jimi-31

    The most moving passion story ever filmed.

    I saw this movie in about 1959 and it is seared into my mind. It is the most ordinary, but miraculous story of a parallel of Christ's life. I have searched diligently for a copy of the film, either in Digital Video Disk or VHS format. I might even be able to afford a copy of the film, although I have no idea what a print would cost.

    It depicts a Greek village's reenactment of the passion play, done each year in the community. The man who is selected to play the part of Christ (as well as the other players) is encouraged to behave as much like Christ as he can imagine. the net result is that he must die because of the nature of the humans (including the organized religion in the community).

    I mean, this is the most moving, thought provoking story I've EVER seen on film. Any help by others in finding a copy would be greatly appreciated.
    elitak

    The best film I've ever seen relating to the Passion of Jesus Christ

    I saw HE WHO MUST DIE in Edinburgh, Scotland (1957). No film relating to Jesus Christ, before or since, has had such an emotional/spiritual impact on me. Its imaginative plot (preparations made in a small Greek village for a Passion Play during the Turkish occupation of Greece) has some affinity to biblical events leading to Jesus' crucifixion. Powerful in presentation, it never gets excessively sentimental or superficial as do typical "Hollywood" religious productions, nor as sadistically brutal as Gibson's THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST. I've not seen a film about Jesus, or related to Jesus, that I like, not one ... except HE WHO MUST DIE. Brilliantly conceived and executed, it is one of the finest films ever made! I wish I could find it on VHS.
    dbdumonteil

    The last crucifixion of Christ

    The same writer wrote "last temptation of Christ" where the Savior and Mary Magdelene played prominent parts too.

    Dassin was driven from his country in the wake of the witch hunt.He came to France where he made an estimable film noir " Du Rififi Chez les Hommes "(which does not cut his best American works such as " night and the city" or "brute force" )"Celui qui doit mourir is his second film in seven year ,and although it took place in Greece ,it was essentially made with French money and French actors (Pierre Vaneck,Fernand Ledoux,Maurice Ronet,Roger Hanin,Jean Servais are all first-class thespians),the only important Greek artist being Melina Mercouri (it was the first time Dassin had directed her and he was to marry her afterward).

    Unfairly despised in France," he who must die" is probably Dassin's best European work.In a Greek village ,under Turkish occupation ,a bunch of refugees asks for help:they are starving and they would like to settle in the hills ,where they could clear pieces of lands which the inhabitants do not cultivate.But their priest does not agree and he tells them so :they have cholera and they could contaminate us all! In the village they get ready for a commemoration of the Passion:a shepherd will be Christ,a widow,Mary Magdelene ,some other inhabitants ,the apostles...but what's the point of this masquerade,which becomes a farce if some people are dying only a mile from your place?the "actors" take a rebel stand and they side with the refugees.Then the new "crucifixion" is around the corner.The Turks turn into some kind of Romans and their chief some Pilate who can wash his hands without tears.

    God gives the stammering shepherd the power of speech.The rich young man gives all he owns to the Poor ...

    NB: Joseph Dassin aka Jo Dassin ,the director's son ,who was very famous as a singer in Europa ,in the sixties/Seventies ,appears briefly as a young refugee :you can spot him in the scene when their priest tells his flock he dreamed he saw saint George last night.
    10gwendress

    Brilliant allegory of religious morality in our times.

    Let's suppose Jesus Christ returned to modern times. What would be the fate that befalls him? That is the question that the great writer Nikos Kazantzakis (1883-1957) poses in his deeply moving novel "The Greek Passion", brilliantly realized by black-listed director Jules Dassin in the film "He Who Must Die".

    The story's answer to this question was not to the liking of the Greek Orthodox Church, who promptly excommunicated the author Kazantzakis, who also wrote the novels "Zorba the Greek", "The Last Temptation of Christ", and "Saint Francis", among other works. (He is rumored to have been nominated 5 times for the Nobel Prize for Literature.) This tale is about much more than a religious passion play put on in a Greek village towards the end of the 400-year Turkish occupation. In a century in which religious morality and the church's real-politics have been severely criticized, this tale hits us right between the eyes. Definite food for thought. Could the church's silence in the face of so much unspeakable evil during the 20th century be one reason that religious thought has become largely irrelevant in our daily lives (politics, business, diplomacy, etc). A solid philosophical perspective is found in Robert Boldt's brilliant review (above).

    Why this film has not been released on video is totally beyond me -- a nice DVD would certainly be appreciated--especially now, when more and more of Jules Dassin's work is being restored and released (especially on the Criterion label).

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Celui qui doit mourir (1957) was based on the novel Christ Recrucified by Greek writer Nikos Kazantzakis, also known for another book including the Christ (The Last Temptation of the Christ) and for Zorba the Greek (both adapted into films). Kazantzakis was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature nine times.
    • Quotes

      Priest Fotis: Why should human kindness be a miracle?

    • Connections
      Referenced in O Dassin stin kriti (1956)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 4, 1957 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • He Who Must Die
    • Filming locations
      • Crete, Greece
    • Production companies
      • Indusfilms
      • Prima Film
      • Cinétel
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $14,568
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 2 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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