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Le Grand Chantage

Original title: Sweet Smell of Success
  • 1957
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 36m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
39K
YOUR RATING
Le Grand Chantage (1957)
Trailer for the classic drama Sweet Smell of Success, starring Burt Lancaster and Tony Curtis.
Play trailer3:05
1 Video
99+ Photos
Film NoirDrama

A powerful Broadway columnist coerces an unscrupulous press agent into breaking up his sister's romance with a jazz musician.A powerful Broadway columnist coerces an unscrupulous press agent into breaking up his sister's romance with a jazz musician.A powerful Broadway columnist coerces an unscrupulous press agent into breaking up his sister's romance with a jazz musician.

  • Director
    • Alexander Mackendrick
  • Writers
    • Clifford Odets
    • Ernest Lehman
    • Alexander Mackendrick
  • Stars
    • Burt Lancaster
    • Tony Curtis
    • Susan Harrison
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    39K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alexander Mackendrick
    • Writers
      • Clifford Odets
      • Ernest Lehman
      • Alexander Mackendrick
    • Stars
      • Burt Lancaster
      • Tony Curtis
      • Susan Harrison
    • 203User reviews
    • 106Critic reviews
    • 100Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Sweet Smell of Success
    Trailer 3:05
    Sweet Smell of Success

    Photos100

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    + 93
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    Top cast70

    Edit
    Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster
    • J.J. Hunsecker
    Tony Curtis
    Tony Curtis
    • Sidney Falco
    Susan Harrison
    Susan Harrison
    • Susan Hunsecker
    Martin Milner
    Martin Milner
    • Steve Dallas
    • (as Marty Milner)
    Jeff Donnell
    Jeff Donnell
    • Sally
    Sam Levene
    Sam Levene
    • Frank D' Angelo
    Joe Frisco
    Joe Frisco
    • Herbie Temple
    Barbara Nichols
    Barbara Nichols
    • Rita
    Emile Meyer
    Emile Meyer
    • Lt. Harry Kello
    Edith Atwater
    Edith Atwater
    • Mary
    Chico Hamilton
    Chico Hamilton
    • Self
    • (as The Chico Hamilton Quintet)
    Paul Horn
    • Self
    • (as The Chico Hamilton Quintet)
    Fred Katz
    • Self
    • (as The Chico Hamilton Quintet)
    Buddy Clark
    • Self
    • (as The Chico Hamilton Quintet)
    Jay Adler
    Jay Adler
    • Manny Davis
    • (uncredited)
    Mary Bayless
    • Bar Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Nicky Blair
    Nicky Blair
    • Patron at Toots Shor's
    • (uncredited)
    Nick Borgani
    Nick Borgani
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alexander Mackendrick
    • Writers
      • Clifford Odets
      • Ernest Lehman
      • Alexander Mackendrick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews203

    8.038.5K
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    Featured reviews

    8Doylenf

    Cynical look at how power corrupts...brilliant performances...

    BURT LANCASTER was at the height of his illustrious film career when he played J.J. Hunsecker, the Broadway gossip columnist who dipped his pen in poison to destroy careers. TONY CURTIS was a long way from the days when he was ridiculed for saying "Yonda is the castle of my fadder" in films like SON OF ALI BABA and THE BLACK SHIELD OF FALWORTH.

    Here, Curtis is every bit up to the chore of playing the slavishly obedient but hateful publicity man who seems to be fawning over Lancaster, but really despises him. Two towering performances in a film with some of the sharpest exchanges of dialog ever heard.

    The cruel side of show biz gets full and rich observation from screenwriter Clifford Odets from a novel by Ernest Lehman. The bright lights of Broadway play against the rainswept streets of Broadway and Times Square, a shadowy sort of film noir background for the brutal story being told.

    The story abounds in quotable moments, such as when Lancaster tells Curtis, "You're a cookie full of arsenic." The jazz score background sets the appropriate mood for a story as cynical as this, and the twists and turns of the plot will keep you hooked until the uncertain ending. The main plot line has Lancaster opposed to his sister's suitor, a jazz musician (MARTIN MILNER) and his efforts to get this man out of his sister's life with the help of his obedient slave.

    But mainly, this is a film worth savoring to watch the intense performances of Lancaster and Curtis. I doubt whether either of them has ever done better work. For Lancaster, it only cemented his reputation as a man already judged to be a fine actor in the right role. For Curtis, it made film critics take this "pretty boy from Brooklyn" seriously for the first time and was the first big milestone in his budding film career.
    10bkoganbing

    "You want information, ask for it like a man, instead of scratching for it like a dog."

    The fact that in 1957 this film was made at all is proof that Walter Winchell's decline was already setting in. Burt Lancaster's J.J. Hunsecker based on Winchell and very frightening accurately portrays the columnist and the power he wielded.

    For those who are interested in how Winchell got to where he was J.J. Hunsecker I would recommend Neal Gabler's biography of him which came out a few years ago. Sweet Smell of Success is the story of a day in the life of this monster who everyone on the planet it seems is terrified of offending. Like Winchell at the Stork Club, Hunsecker holds court like some monarch at a nightclub where people are obsequiously asking for some recognition in his column.

    One of these is Sidney Falco, press agent and bootlicking dog extraordinaire. Hunsecker is mad at him because he sent him on an errand to break up a romance his younger sister is having with a jazz musician he doesn't approve of. The film is essentially Falco's attempts to carry out his master's wishes.

    Burt Lancaster had already received critical acclaim as an actor, but this was a breakthrough role for Tony Curtis as Sidney Falco. Up to then Curtis was the handsome romantic lead in many lightweight films for his home studio of Universal. Sidney Falco was a lot of things, but heroic wasn't one of them. Next year Tony Curtis would get an Oscar nomination for The Defiant Ones. How Lancaster and Curtis were ignored by the Academy for nominations is beyond me.

    The young lovers are Susan Harrison and Martin Milner. This was probably Marty Milner's finest screen role. As Lancaster was also the producer he personally cast Milner in the part having worked with him on Gunfight at the OK Corral. Susan Harrison strangely enough never had much of a career after a promising debut. She ultimately wreaks a terrible vengeance on one of our protagonists.

    One of the ironic lines in the film is Lancaster saying that he'd fold up if he had to exist on a press agent's tidbits. But ironically that's how Winchell/Hunsecker did exist. Winchell had no real skill as a reporter as Gabler's biography pointed out. When the tidbits stopped, he dried up and blew away.

    Sweet Smell of Success was a commercial flop, movie audiences did not take to the offbeat casting of the leads nor to the gritty realistic story. Today the film is a deserved classic.
    phiggins

    Oh yes.

    "I love this dirty town". "Match me, Sidney". "Maybe I left my sense of humour in my other suit". Great dialogue. Great script, great cinematography, great acting, great music. Christ, what do you want, blood? From the first moment we see Burt Lancaster as the impossibly sinister J.J., we know we're in for a cracking time. There he is, sitting at the restaurant table, wearing those strangely scary glasses, his face expressionless (perhaps he's smiling, just a little bit), talking to Sidney without even looking at him, firing the dialogue like bullets. When the action seeps into the New York streets, oozing menace, there's J.J. - master of all he surveys, twisting cops round his little finger, snarling and seething like some desperate animal. And there is something animal about this film: its characters writhe and twist in the lights and the shadows - demented, tortured creatures, all of them trying to maintain some semblance of normality, all of them aware, deep down, how corrupt and helpless they are. The symbols of goodness - J.J.'s sister and her boyfriend - are weak, pathetic, hopeless, unable to keep up with the neverending twists and turns of this awful labyrinth of manipulation and cruelty. Curtis and Lancaster were never better, and it's awesome to see them play such grotesque yet believable roles. How do people get like this? Where do they go from here? Perhaps it's best not to think about it, and just wallow in the brilliant nastiness of it all, before maybe going home and getting in the shower for a long, long time.
    9mattspringett76

    One of the best films Hollywood has ever produced.

    From the opening credits to the climatic ending, the scintillating dialogue and the magnetic performances from both Burt Lancaster and Tony Curtis this is Hollywood at its cerebral best. The king of the thinking mans cinema. Has better dialogue ever been written, the meetings between all the different characters that inhabit this world of shadows and intrigue, constantly draw the viewers attention to this masterpiece. When the so called film buffs compile there lists of the "best" films and so on, this should always be talked of in the top five and yet though recognised more as the years go by this is still a highly overlooked film. That Marlon Brando, De niro, Nicholson and the like should be recognised so often in said lists when Burt Lancaster in this film and in so many others has equalled or surpassed there best performances is a real scandal. Perhaps because this film strikes at the very heart of the establishment and shows the media and press up for the unscrupulous scum they are that this is one those fellows would like to forget. It is always difficult to look the truth of oneself in the mirror and this is one mirror the media should look very closely at. A masterpiece from Lancaster, who's courage never failed when making films and was always ready to tackle the kind of film making that lesser men would not have dared to, not to mention casting himself in a "bad guy" role that defied his heroic, handsome leading man status. Let us not forget that this is the same man who through out his life was never afraid to speak out on subjects that were important to him, a life long liberal and contemptuous of anyone who excepted limitation. I love this film and both Lancaster and the picture were far ahead of their time.
    8seymourblack-1

    Cynicism, Sleaze & Blistering Dialogue

    The main characters in "Sweet Smell Of Success" are two of the most unpleasant, unprincipled and unsympathetic people imaginable. Both are utterly corrupt and would do whatever it takes to achieve their own perverse ends.

    J J Hunsecker (Burt Lancaster) is a gossip columnist who wields enormous power in New York and has the ability to make or break the careers of anyone who features in his articles. He plies his vicious trade without any concern for those whose lives he damages and frequently influences people to do his bidding by threatening to expose some unflattering or scandalous information about them. Sidney Falco (Tony Curtis) is a press agent who makes his living by providing material for Hunsecker's column. When Hunsecker becomes unhappy about a relationship that has developed between his sister and a jazz guitarist, he orders Falco to do whatever's necessary to break them up. Hunsecker racks up the pressure on Falco by not accepting any of his contributions for the column until he succeeds in his mission.

    Hunsecker's power and threatening manner preclude him from having any genuine or meaningful relationships with other people. He is unconcerned about this but has an unnaturally close relationship with his sister, who on various occasions, he describes as being all that he's got.

    In his efforts to get a smear about the guitarist published, Falco threatens to blackmail one columnist by telling his wife about one of his indiscretions with a cigarette girl and also provides another columnist with an inducement to print the story by getting his girlfriend to prostitute herself. He later plants marijuana in the guitarist's pocket and tips off a corrupt police officer who has the guitarist arrested.

    Hunsecker thrives on the amount of power and control that he is able to use and it's ironic that he has such a hard time using his power successfully in the area of his life which is most personal and important to him.

    "Sweet Smell Of Success" is expertly directed by Alexander Mackendrick and the story and it's characters are considerably more original in nature than those found in the vast majority of movies. The dialogue is impressively incisive throughout and some of the remarks made by Hunsecker are delivered with great panache. When he says "I love this dirty town", the comment exemplifies what he's all about and also highlights the source of his power. His remarks that Falco is a "cookie full of arsenic" and "lives in moral twilight" are typical quick-fire put-downs. These and his "40 faces speech" could seem pretentious and contrived if uttered by some characters but sound perfectly credible when said by Hunsecker, who is clearly very literate and well practised in coining such bitter and brutal insults. Lancaster and Curtis both contribute exceptional performances which must rank among the greatest achieved in their illustrious careers.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The Chico Hamilton Quintet was chosen to play the jazz band in the film partly because they represented the West Coast and cool jazz styles popular at the time, but also because they were "clean". The producers screened them for months to make sure they weren't drug users to avoid giving Walter Winchell anything that he could use against the film.
    • Goofs
      (at around 2 mins) When Sidney peruses J.J. Hunsecker's 'The Eyes of Broadway' column on page 21 of the New York Globe newspaper, it can be seen that several of the paragraphs are repeated. Of the nine paragraphs visible, it can be seen that paragraph 7 is an exact copy of paragraph 2; 8 is a copy of 5, and 9 is a copy of 4.
    • Quotes

      J.J. Hunsecker: I'd hate to take a bite outta you. You're a cookie full of arsenic.

    • Crazy credits
      introducing Susan Harrison
    • Connections
      Featured in Mackendrick: The Man Who Walked Away (1986)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 30, 1957 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • La mentira maldita
    • Filming locations
      • Brill Building - 1619 Broadway, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Norma Productions
      • Curtleigh Productions
      • Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $3,400,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $8,025
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 36m(96 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1(original ratio)

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