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IMDbPro

Quelqu'un derrière la porte

  • 1971
  • 13
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Quelqu'un derrière la porte (1971)
CrimeDrama

A neurosurgeon with a cheating wife takes an amnesiac into his home and conditions him to believe that the cheating wife is his own and to take the "appropriate" action.A neurosurgeon with a cheating wife takes an amnesiac into his home and conditions him to believe that the cheating wife is his own and to take the "appropriate" action.A neurosurgeon with a cheating wife takes an amnesiac into his home and conditions him to believe that the cheating wife is his own and to take the "appropriate" action.

  • Director
    • Nicolas Gessner
  • Writers
    • Marc Behm
    • Nicolas Gessner
    • Jacques Robert
  • Stars
    • Charles Bronson
    • Anthony Perkins
    • Jill Ireland
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    1.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nicolas Gessner
    • Writers
      • Marc Behm
      • Nicolas Gessner
      • Jacques Robert
    • Stars
      • Charles Bronson
      • Anthony Perkins
      • Jill Ireland
    • 34User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos56

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    Top cast14

    Edit
    Charles Bronson
    Charles Bronson
    • The Stranger
    Anthony Perkins
    Anthony Perkins
    • Laurence Jeffries
    Jill Ireland
    Jill Ireland
    • Frances Jeffries
    Henri Garcin
    Henri Garcin
    • Paul Damien
    Adriano Magistretti
    • Andrew
    Agathe Natanson
    Agathe Natanson
    • Lucy
    Viviane Villamont
    • Young Girl on Beach
    • (as Viviane Everly)
    André Penvern
    André Penvern
    • Intern
    Carl Studer
    Carl Studer
    • Fisherman
    • (as Carl J. Studer)
    Denise Péronne
    • Nurse
    Isabelle Del Rio
    • Nurse
    Silvana Blasi
    • Mrs. Evans
    Colin Mann
    • Sgt. Gordon
    Yves Elliot
    • Policeman
    • Director
      • Nicolas Gessner
    • Writers
      • Marc Behm
      • Nicolas Gessner
      • Jacques Robert
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    5.81.8K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7Hey_Sweden

    You can see a different side of Bronson here.

    Two legendary movie stars make the most of the situation in this enjoyable, if not exactly that believable, drama. Anthony Perkins is Laurence Jefferies, a neurosurgeon working in Britain who intends to do something about his cheating wife Frances (Jill Ireland, a.k.a. Mrs. Charles Bronson). He realizes that an amnesiac (Bronson) whom he's just met will make the perfect patsy. All he has to do is convince the stranger that Frances is *his* wife, lay out evidence of the affair, and let the stranger get revenge on behalf of him.

    The script (adapted from a novel by Jacques Robert) may not exactly be airtight, but the set-up is still pretty irresistible. Director Nicolas Gessner ("The Little Girl Who Lived Down the Lane") handles things in capable if not overly stylish fashion. Part of the effectiveness stems from enjoying the machinations of this doctor, and how he's spent so much time working on solving his problem. True enough that he may be tops in his field, but as we can see, he's been a highly inadequate husband. Perkins is so much fun to watch in this antagonistic role.

    But any fan of Bronson will find this particularly compelling since Bronson is not a macho man of action, but a highly suggestible and vulnerable character (who doesn't even receive a proper name). Ireland delivers one of her better performances as the wife; good support is provided by Henri Garcin as the lover, Adriano Magistretti as Jefferies' brother-in-law, Agathe Natanson as Lucy, and Colin Mann as the police sergeant.

    The conclusion to the film may come as disappointing to some viewers, since very little is resolved, but others may find it intriguing that the film ends with a question mark. (All those cuts, back and forth, between two of the main characters get annoying quickly, however.)

    Thankfully, "Someone Behind the Door" is over and done in a reasonable amount of time, so at least it doesn't go on longer than it really should.

    Seven out of 10.
    7lost-in-limbo

    I'm keeping my hands clean.

    A man is brought to a hospital with a severe case of amnesia and neurosurgeon Laurence Jeffries takes it upon himself to help out the patient. He dismisses it as intoxication, and pretends to take him to the station. However he brings him back to his home, but the motivation for this is unclear, and everything he's doing to supposedly treat him is done in secrecy. The identity of the stranger is becoming clearer, but so are the doctor's true intentions as he begins to manipulate the situation.

    Confined, low-key low-budget French/Italian psychological drama with commendable performances by Charles Bronson and Anthony Perkins. The whole-set-up is like a stage show, were it lies heavily upon the expressively versatile performances and ambitiously novel material. The layer-bound premise is totally illogical, but strangely absorbing with its unforeseeable offbeat nature of offering up numerous surprises, and interestingly unlikely developments. However there are some questionable, teething problems involving the scheming, and its possible outcome. There's just too many cracks, to make it bullet proof that you just wonder if there was much thought put in behind it. Still there are elements that are smartly conceived, and this can be contributed to the manipulative tension (where the repressed anger, and violence is played out through a human tool) and mind-messing that director Nicolas Gessner (the man behind the superb 'The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane (1976)') ably works in. As well the believably committed turns of the two leads. Bronson and Perkins worked off each other magnificently. Perkins' cold, planned performance with Bronson's disorientated, assailable figure is sincerely pre-figured. There's no doubt this is one of Bronson's best acting turns. Jill Ireland is adequate in her small role. Gessner's sure-footed direction subtly paints a glum, intrusive puzzle with unique filming techniques that slowly strings you along to a powerfully bitter climax, which finally concludes on an inspired final shot of possible sickening regret. Sometimes it loses out by ponderously stretching it out too much with some raggedy editing, and another weak spot was the playful, but unremarkable misplaced music score by Georges Garvarentz. It just didn't add any sort of punch, or feel. Pierre Lhomme's slick cinematography is steadily framed.
    5gridoon

    Plodding film, but it's refreshing to see Bronson actually acting.

    Back in the good old days, before the success of "Death Wish" forced him into playing the same role of the angry vigilante over and over again, Charles Bronson was a fine, versatile actor; in this 1971 film, he actually plays the victim of a larger scheme (though he does some victimizing of his own, too), and he's the best - if not the only - reason to see this otherwise static, plodding thriller. Anthony Perkins disappoints as the slightly deranged brain surgeon. The version I saw was in French, though the actors clearly spoke English on the set; this only added to the strangeness of the experience. Oh, and good luck to anyone trying to figure out what the title has to do with anything else. (**)
    dbdumonteil

    A cast against type Bronson.

    Bronson's fans would be very surprised ,had they the opportunity to see this Nicolas Gessner movie.He's not here the he-man they expect.He plays an amnesiac,caught like a fly in a cobweb by shrink Perkins.In this kind of thriller ,Perkins' "psycho prestige" works and it makes the audience feel he's watching a Hitchcock ersatz-which is not that much bad after all,a Hitchcock ersatz may be much better than a genuine X....... thriller.The main problem lies in the fact that most of the time,it seems like a filmed stage production.Hitchcock could easily get away with such works as "the rope " or "dial M for murder".Gessner has not his genius and his directing becomes sometimes ponderous. Hitchcok's lessons will be much better applied on "sleuth" ,Mankiewicz's triumph the following year,and to a lesser degree,on Penn's "dead of winter" (1987).

    Late Jill Ireland plays the female part ,as it was often the case in those days,as far Bronson movies were concerned.Nicolas Gessner continued his work with American actors on his follow-up which would be a long time coming (late seventies) "la petite fille au bout du chemin" (the little girl who lives down the lane)and featured Jodie Foster and Martin Sheen.It was probably his best .Then he worked abroad without great success.His most notable work was for French TV "le château des oliviers " (early nineties,with Brigitte Fossey)which gained the audience's approval.
    8TheFearmakers

    Crest of Bronson's Europe Phase with Tony Perkins

    French shot/English speaking psychological thriller mirroring François Truffaut mirroring Alfred Hitchcock has a perfectly cast Anthony Perkins as a neurosurgeon taking an amnesiac patient to his plush home in order to (supposedly) help the nameless stranger, played by an only slightly miscast Charles Bronson, pacing taut and timid like a caged beast during his pre-fame European Phase...

    But this is really Perkins' ride, providing another hiding-a-dark-secret creepy guy role...

    And from the mellow cadence, what could have been cat-and-mouse is more like mouse-and-mouse, or mouse and toothless cat, even during Bronson's sporadic tantrums in a noirish plot involving Jill Ireland as the doc's cheating wife (employing a cute Agathe Natanson as their maid, who'd have fit the ingenue role much better)...

    It's no irony that both Bronson and Perkins are ultimately best remembered playing killers the audience sympathizes with, and director Nicolas Gessner uses effective zoom shots and strategic camera angles/setups to the advantage of this "chessboard mystery" (mainly involving one set) where both antagonist and protagonist seem equally sinister and vulnerable...

    And despite SOMEONE BEHIND THE WINDOW wielding an art-house short film plot-line stretched to 90-minutes, it doesn't drag either way.

    Related interests

    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

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although this is a French film, none of the three lead actors is French. Bronson and Perkins are American (although the latter seems to be playing an Englishman) and Jill Ireland is British, although she had been working and living in America for some years by then. The rest of the cast is European. In addition, the film was shot in an English version as well as a French one. The director was Hungarian.
    • Goofs
      After Frances finishes her bath, she says to her husband Larry, "Gary, I have to get dressed."
    • Quotes

      The Stranger: How long am I gonna stay here?

      Laurence Jeffries: Well, that depends.

      The Stranger: It's, uh, considerate of you.

      Laurence Jeffries: Not at all, it's my job.

      The Stranger: Uh, what was in that, uh, shot you gave me?

      Laurence Jeffries: Are you feeling sleepy?

      The Stranger: Yeah...

      Laurence Jeffries: Good.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Bleeder (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Symphony No. 9 in E minor Op. 95 'From the New World' II. Largo
      Written by Antonín Dvorák (as A. Dvorak)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 28, 1971 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Someone Behind the Door
    • Filming locations
      • Folkestone, Kent, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Comacico
      • Lira Films
      • Medusa Distribuzione
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 37m(97 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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