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Un Américain bien tranquille

Original title: The Quiet American
  • 1958
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 2m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Un Américain bien tranquille (1958)
A young naive American and a cynical older British diplomat disagree over politics in 1952 Vietnam and over a beautiful young native girl.
Play trailer2:16
1 Video
9 Photos
Political ThrillerDramaRomanceThrillerWar

A young naive American and a cynical older British diplomat disagree over politics in 1952 Vietnam and over a beautiful young native girl.A young naive American and a cynical older British diplomat disagree over politics in 1952 Vietnam and over a beautiful young native girl.A young naive American and a cynical older British diplomat disagree over politics in 1952 Vietnam and over a beautiful young native girl.

  • Director
    • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
  • Writers
    • Graham Greene
    • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
  • Stars
    • Audie Murphy
    • Michael Redgrave
    • Claude Dauphin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Writers
      • Graham Greene
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Stars
      • Audie Murphy
      • Michael Redgrave
      • Claude Dauphin
    • 31User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:16
    Trailer

    Photos8

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    Top cast21

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    Audie Murphy
    Audie Murphy
    • The American
    Michael Redgrave
    Michael Redgrave
    • Thomas Fowler
    Claude Dauphin
    Claude Dauphin
    • Inspector Vigot
    Giorgia Moll
    Giorgia Moll
    • Phuong
    Bruce Cabot
    Bruce Cabot
    • Bill Granger
    Fred Sadoff
    Fred Sadoff
    • Dominguez
    Kerima
    Kerima
    • Phuong's Sister
    Richard Loo
    Richard Loo
    • Mr. Heng
    Peter Trent
    • Eliot Wilkins
    Georges Bréhat
    • French Colonel
    • (as Georges Brehat)
    Clinton Anderson
    Clinton Anderson
    • Joe Morton
    Yôko Tani
    Yôko Tani
    • Rendezvous Hostess
    Nguyen Long
    • Boy with Mask
    C. Long Cuong
    • Boy in Watchtower
    Tu An
    • Boy in Watchtower
    Vo Doan Chau
    • Cao-Dai Commandant
    • (uncredited)
    Le Van Le
    • Cao-Dai Pope's Deputy
    • (uncredited)
    Cho Cha Lung
    • Hotel Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • Writers
      • Graham Greene
      • Joseph L. Mankiewicz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.72.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8bkoganbing

    Hindsight and foresight

    The next thing to do after seeing The Quiet American is to see the version done 44 years later. The novel by Graham Greene is set in French Indo-China in 1952 and this version is prophetic. The other one surely has the advantage of a whole lot of hindsight. This film done in 1958 has a lot of foresight.

    I don't know what to make of Audie Murphy's character, it's never brought out, but he seems to be a CIA man. In the novel he's from the Ivy League, but due to Murphy's speech pattern, his character is from Texas. He's bringing in plastic for industrial purposes purportedly, but we see how the 'plastic' is really used.

    The political picture of Indo-China in 1952 has the United States already seeing the French won't hold on and they're getting ready to put in their own surrogate in when the French do fall. Murphy is forever talking about a 'third force' who will bring western style democracy.

    Murphy also becomes romantically involved with Giorgia Moll who is also the mistress of British newspaper correspondent Michael Redgrave. The rivalry between the two prevents either from acting coherently though Redgrave has a much better idea of what's really happening.

    Interestingly enough the United Kingdom was also fighting to hold on in Malaya the same way that the French were trying to hold on to Indo-China next door. The British were far more successful though.

    The Quiet American should have been seen by policy makers in Washington through six administrations in America. A lot of valuable lessons could have been learned and a lot of valuable lives might never have been lost.
    10yostwl

    A Greene Masterwork

    Graham Greene did not have a comfortable vision of the world--or at least of the activities of human beings in the world. While very few movies do justice to books on which they are based, the Quiet American is a chilling forewarning of what the United States would be letting itself in for in the years to come. Murphy, always an appealing figure on the screen but not noted for truly great acting depth and breadth, is ideal for this understated role. A very well done thriller which addresses racism, colonialism, various "economic"isms, all the while focusing on the individual human impacts of high level decision-making. Are we just pawns, forced into just following orders, or do we have the responsibility to take action on the side of what we know to be right, in spite of the personal cost?
    9kijii

    Comparing the 1958 version with the 2002 version

    I've now seen the two versions of this movie, based on this Graham Greene's novel. Though the 2002 version with Michael Cain and Brendan Fraser is supposed to be more faithful to Green's novel, I much prefer the story that is presented in this 1958 version. On TCM, Ben Mankiewicz said that, for marketing reasons, the story in this version (directed by his uncle) had to be toned down to make it less anti-American than the novel. He also said that Audie Murphy was probably chosen for the title role because he was a well-known actor-war hero (a Congressional Metal of Honor winner who played himself in the autobiographical war movie, To Hell and Back.) Though this wide-screen, black-and-white movie about two men in far-off place, called Vietnam, then failed at the box office, the locale of its story would come back to haunt us for decades to come.

    Neither Audie Murphy nor Brendan Fraser stand out as actors that we tend to think of a 'top-notch.' But, ironically, the acting of the movie's title character doesn't need to be particularly great, just adequate. Both versions of this movie are more about THE MYSTERY of quiet American, Alden Pyle and what he is doing in Vietnam in 1952, than they are about the characters themselves. So, Audie Murphy (and Brendan Fraser in the 2002 version) only had to basically 'show up' in the movie to have the story work well. BUT FIRST, let's consider the plot of the 1958 movie, with cross-references to the actors that played the same characters in the boring 2002 version.

    As the movie opens, the people of Saigon are in the streets celebrating the Chinese New Year (Tet) with parades of noise makers, masks, and paper dragons. During the celebration, a Vietnamese man discovers the body of a white man, lying face down in the river. The body is that of Alden Pyle (Audie Murphy)(Brendan Fraser in 2002 version). Police Inspector Vigot (Claude Dauphin)(Rade Serbedzija in 2002 version) calls in a British journalist, Thomas Fowler (Michael Redgrave)(Micheal Caine in 2002 version), to identify the body. Fowler is also questioned about HIS whereabouts at the time of the suspected murder. At this point, there is a flashback that takes Fowler's recollections back to when and how he first met Pyle and what their relationship had been like during their acquaintance...

    Basically, they met since they were both white men working in an Asian country, and they tended to go to the same social clubs and restaurants to relax with other English-speaking people. When Pyle first meets Fowler, Fowler is accompanied by his live-in Vietnamese girlfriend, Phuong (Giorgia Moll—Do)(Thi Hai Yen in the 2002 version). While dancing with Phuong at one of the European clubs, Pyle is taken with her. When Pyle learns from Fowler that he is separated from his wife (who still lives in England and refuses to give him a divorce), he honorably tells Fowler that he wants to openly court Phuong. Fowler reluctantly offers to translate (English to French) Pyle's intentions to Phuong. Pyle tells Phunog that he loves her and wants to marry her and take her back to the US: he wants to offer her a future, away from Vietnam. This is something that Fowler—as a married man--can't do. But, Fowler deeply loves Phuong and wants to continue to life with her in Vietnam. The tension of the love triangle is heightened because Phunong's older sister is trying to look out for Phunong's future by hooking her up with the idealized 'rich American man from New York.' The fact that Pyle is neither rich nor from New York is only a minor problem for Phunong and her controlling sister. So, Phunong does leave Fowler for Pyle (respectfully living apart while courting).

    As a journalist looking for a story to keep his job in Vietnam, Fowler travels to Hanoi in the North. There, there is a Communist offensive against the French. When he arrives in the embattled North, he is surprised to find Pyle there too. But, why would Pyle there when his business is plastics? What do plastics have to do with an offensive in the North? Pyle tells Fowler that he just came up to see him and see the action for himself, but why? As the two return home in a jeep, they breakdown on the road and are attacked by Communist forces. Pyle then saves Fowler's life, and they return safely to Saigon.

    While Fowler is ready to believe the worst about Pyle's third force, a fellow British reporter puts him in contact with a Vietnamese friend. The friend leads him to think the worst about Pyle and his reason for being in Vietnam. (Plastics are used in toys but they are also use in explosives.) When circumstantial evidence confirms the Vietnamese contact's incriminating evidence against Pyle, Fowler's ideas only seem more solid. The final outcome of this movie reveals more about Fowler and Pyle, and it has a quirky twist to it.

    In spite of what other reviewers and critics have said about THIS version of Green's novel, I find it far superior to the later, more true-to-the-novel 2002 version (with the 20-20 hindsight epilogue). To me, there is nothing, whatsoever, corny about the ending of this version. In fact, I think that it is very ingenious!! It weaves political intrigue and a murder mystery together and shows how even an objective investigative journalist can be duped when his own ego is involved.
    7filmalamosa

    Not like original book

    A love triangle played out in early 50s Saigon (prior to independence). A British reporter gets to know a younger American of seemingly innocent intent--the American wants the British reporter's mistress for a wife.

    There were at least 2 versions of this book made into films this one (1958) and a later one with Michaeal Caine.

    This movie has a plot twist not in the book that makes it in a way a bit more interesting but not nearly as realistic. Most viewers would probably disagree. I thought at first I had forgotten the story from the book.

    Greene's best novels are about as good as they get....a lot of the lines in the movie are lifted from the book--which makes for a very good quality script.

    Recommend...need to see the Caine version....to compare. Have my doubts about it being better as it was made in the modern PC era.
    7dfinberg

    Mankiewicz's Quiet American is interesting for reasons other than it is from a Graham Greene novel.

    Audie Murphy is wooden in his portrayal of the American and, in a twist to the novel, is the hero of the piece. Not quite what Greene had in mind but relevant to events in the USA during the McCarthy era when this film was made (1958).

    Phuong has not been given the importance she demands in the novel. The way in which she is 'colonised' by first Fowler and then the American (Pyle in the novel, but not named in this film) is a comment on the way in which the foreign landscape is depicted and also on how the country has been colonised. Despite this she is also manipulative.

    However, having said some negative things about this production of The Quiet American, it is a MUST view for the portrayal of tensions in the cold war era and the USA's twist to events as they unfold. Remember that Audie Murphy and Joseph L. Mankiewicz testified for HUAC against their fellow actors and colleagues at the height of McCarthyism.

    This film is totally relevant to events unfolding today and for all those interested in the effects of colonialism and the rise of the Vietnam War. What is interesting about this film is the different take on events portrayed in Greene's superb novel, unfortunately, some of which were omitted or subverted in the 1958 film.

    This film should be followed by the Philip Noyce version of The Quiet American (2001) with Michael Caine as Thomas Fowler and Brendan Fraser as Pyle (the American in the Mankiewicz version). There is a good opportunity to contrast and compare the two versions which are very different, given that the Noyce Quiet American is closer to the novel.

    I would also recommend for light relief that viewers watch the Mash Season 2 TV series in which we see Colonel Flag of the CIA raising a few loud laughs.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The first Hollywood movie made in Vietnam.
    • Goofs
      Right before the explosion at The Continental, Fowler was limping with a cane. When he hears the explosion, he leaves his cane and runs smoothly down the street.
    • Quotes

      Inspector Vigot: You know that it is a mistake to say that communism is appealing to the mentally advanced. I think it is only true when the mentally advanced are also emotionally retarded.

    • Connections
      Featured in Dangerous Edge: A Life of Graham Greene (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      La Cathédrale engloutie
      (uncredited)

      Composed by Claude Debussy

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 9, 1958 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Vietnamese
    • Also known as
      • El americano tranquilo
    • Filming locations
      • Saigon, Vietnam(city exteriors / relgious ceremonies / outdoor market)
    • Production company
      • Figaro
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 2m(122 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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