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Meurtre sous contrat

Original title: Murder by Contract
  • 1958
  • 16
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
5K
YOUR RATING
Meurtre sous contrat (1958)
Claude is a ruthless and efficient contract killer - until he finds his next target is a woman.
Play trailer1:58
1 Video
99+ Photos
Film NoirCrimeDramaThriller

Claude is a ruthless and efficient contract killer - until he finds his next target is a woman.Claude is a ruthless and efficient contract killer - until he finds his next target is a woman.Claude is a ruthless and efficient contract killer - until he finds his next target is a woman.

  • Director
    • Irving Lerner
  • Writers
    • Ben Simcoe
    • Ben Maddow
  • Stars
    • Vince Edwards
    • Phillip Pine
    • Herschel Bernardi
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Irving Lerner
    • Writers
      • Ben Simcoe
      • Ben Maddow
    • Stars
      • Vince Edwards
      • Phillip Pine
      • Herschel Bernardi
    • 69User reviews
    • 41Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Trailer

    Photos107

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Vince Edwards
    Vince Edwards
    • Claude
    Phillip Pine
    Phillip Pine
    • Marc
    Herschel Bernardi
    Herschel Bernardi
    • George
    Caprice Toriel
    • Billie Williams
    Michael Granger
    Michael Granger
    • Mr. Moon
    Kathie Browne
    Kathie Browne
    • Mary
    • (as Cathy Browne)
    Joseph Mell
    Joseph Mell
    • Harry
    Frances Osborne
    Frances Osborne
    • Miss Wiley
    Steven Ritch
    • Detective Shooting Tear Gas
    Janet Brandt
    Janet Brandt
    • Woman in Movie Theater
    Davis Roberts
    Davis Roberts
    • Hall of Records Clerk
    Don Garrett
    • James William Mayflower
    Gloria Victor
    • Miss Wexley
    Albert Cavens
    Albert Cavens
    • Theatre Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Cisco Houston
    • Gun Salesman
    • (uncredited)
    William H. O'Brien
    William H. O'Brien
    • Hotel Take-Out Delivery Man
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Irving Lerner
    • Writers
      • Ben Simcoe
      • Ben Maddow
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews69

    7.25K
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    Featured reviews

    8MOscarbradley

    A small classic

    A B-movie and something of a small classic comparable to Melville's "Le Samourai" which it may have influenced. Vince Edwards in his pre-Ben Casey days is the young man who actually wants to be a contract killer and the movie is about his somewhat clinical initiation into the job. Superbly written by Ben Simcoe, brilliantly photographed in black and white by Lucien Ballard and with a terrific yet simple score by Perry Botkin this movie comes close to perfection. It was directed by Irving Lerner who up to then hadn't really done anything of note, (perhaps he was just waiting for the right material). Edwards is superb as the almost overly confident killer who comes undone when he has to kill a woman. It's a very simple picture, in which almost all the killings are kept off-screen concentrating instead on the killer's psychology and how he goes about his work. Never a commercial success it has now build up a considerable cult following.
    7secondtake

    Stylized and spare to the point of awkwardness, but somehow utterly fresh, too...

    Murder by Contract (1958)

    This cult-style low budget film is both fascinating and detached to the point of coldness (if not boredom), and whether you'll like or not might depend on attitude. The relentlessly cold-blooded murderous main character (played by Vince Edwards), in his late-50s handsome and sharply dressed style, is just false enough (if not exactly unconvincing) to keep the movie from taking on a life of its own in any conventional sense. We spend a lot of time watching this man get phone calls and then perform murders of various kinds (off camera, for the most part), and then zero in on the big one with a couple cronies watching. And yet he isn't especially fascinating or complex, just very hardened and determined. And so his functional presence, good looking as it might be to some viewers, isn't enough to lift up the movie.

    And yet the story is told in such rapid, spare, and matter-of-fact terms it's downright original. I can't think of a movie like it, though I just happened to see "Blast of Silence" which is a far better low-budget story of a gunman, and it comes from the same period (1961). What helped that later movie, and many other offbeat non-Hollywood affairs, is all the location shooting (that is, the locations themselves were fascinating), and "Murder by Contract" almost studiously avoids any sense of place, or mood and ambiance from a place (except for bright, spare, fringe of L.A. stuff, which is nice). This series of mostly rooms and interiors (some with the same oddly speckled walls and doors) creates a blankness that is both drab and defining.

    If this movie isn't really existential in the dramatic Orson Welles sense (or Carol Reed, or what the heck, Stanley Kubrick), the main character really is a film noir staple of a man out of place in the world and utterly utterly alone. His solution is a cold and increasingly false one--kill kill kill. For money, all toward some dream house on the Ohio River, of all places. I think the idea there is that his dream is actually modest, not some love nest in the south of France, but rather a place of honest comfort, like the farm Sterling Hayden returns to in "Asphalt Jungle." It may be no coincidence that Ben Maddow worked on the screenplay for both films.

    So if you can adapt to the minimalist style (and acting), and absorb the rather intelligent cinematography by Lucien Ballard (a big name for this small film), you might start to see why it has such a lasting reputation. The music is pretty terrific, a kind of 1950s electric guitar ambiance ahead of its time. In fact, much of the movie is forward thinking out of desperation to make it cohere and succeed without any money. Director Irving Lerner (famously caught spying for the Soviets during WWII though never prosecuted) has had a long career as a secondary director or editor to some of the greats in Hollywood, and some of that talent and visual acumen is shown off here, whatever the larger limitations.
    8antcol8

    Noir existentialism

    Murder by Contract is a unique little film. It operates within its own little hermetic (back- projected) world, and it is no accident that one of its main scenes is set on an abandoned film studio. Vince Edwards plays a disaffected antihero, and, with its brilliant minimalistic guitar score (by Perry Botkin) it could be possible to read this film as Jarmushian WAY avant la lettre! The ending is quite disappointing - the film just kind of peters out, but there are so many beautifully observed details along the way. Not for nothing is the great Lucien Ballard the cinematographer. But who is Irving Lerner and what happened to him? Hershel Bernardi plays such a perfect kind of Second Avenue Theater role as one of the two "boys" who are the hit-man's handlers, and the over-sensitive call-girl scene is hilarious. Highly recommended - see it in a theater if you can! A film like this makes me angry at films like the way - over-hyped Reservoir Dogs. That film is SO overdetermined - the antithesis of a modest work like this one, which only reveals itself to the patient viewer.
    7sol-

    Of a Dangerous Mind

    Selected for an important contract killing due to his detached and unemotional approach towards murder, an arrogant young assassin questions his own skills after discovering that his next target is a woman in this slick thriller. Vince Edwards is excellent as the confident contract killer who simply sees murder as a great way to supplement his income. Along the lines of 'Strangers on a Train', he also professes that "the only type of safe killing is when a stranger kills a stranger" and the film has some fun comic relief moments as he often unsettles two goons sent to accompany him. Solid as Phillip Pine and Herschel Bernardi are as the goons though, their purpose is never clear and film veers close to being a comedy at times with the goons and his failed attempts to kill the woman from afar. Generally speaking though, this is an intense and riveting thriller. The film benefits from a catchy, taunting music score inspired by 'The Third Man' and Edwards has an undeniably fascinating character. Is he worried about killing her because he has more moral fibre than he would like to admit or is it genuinely harder to kill a woman? Whatever the case, this is a fascinating look into a dangerous mind.
    8ehorton2-2

    Tense

    I first saw this movie when I was a kid and had a crush on Vince Edwards as Ben Casey. Well I am all grown up, no longer have a crush, and still think this movie was excellent for its time. The cold blooded approach of Edwards character Claude, his lack of affect, makes him more menacing than those shouting gun waving villains you usually see in film. This guy knows his job and that's all it is, a job. The music is so monotonous it fits the characters attitude (or lack of one). Even the other bad guys in the film know there is something not quite right about their hired gun. I liked it. Whenever it's on I make it point to try and catch at least some of it.

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    Related interests

    Lauren Bacall and Humphrey Bogart in Le grand sommeil (1946)
    Film Noir
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Shot in seven days.
    • Goofs
      Claude crawls through quite a length of drain pipe and the crawl space beneath Billie's house, but emerges into her living room with no dirt on his clothes or person.
    • Quotes

      Claude: The only type killing that's safe is when a stranger kills a stranger. No motive. Nothing to link the victim to the executioner. Now why would a stranger kill a stranger? Because somebody's willing to pay. It's business. Same as any other business. You murder the competition. Instead of price-cutting, throat-cutting. Same thing. There are a lot of people around that would like to see lots of other people die a fast death... only they can't see to it themselves. They got conscience, religion, families. They're afraid of punishment here or hereafter. Me...

      [laughs]

      Claude: I can't be bothered with any of that nonsense, I look at it like a good business. The risk is high but so is the profit.

    • Connections
      Featured in Century of Cinema: Un voyage avec Martin Scorsese à travers le cinéma américain (1995)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 26, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Murder by Contract
    • Filming locations
      • Chaplin Studios - 1416 N. La Brea Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Orbit Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 21m(81 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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