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IMDbPro

Jack l'éventreur

Original title: Jack the Ripper
  • TV Mini Series
  • 1988
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
6K
YOUR RATING
Jack l'éventreur (1988)
Period DramaCrimeDramaMysteryRomanceThriller

In Victorian-era London, Scotland Yard Police Inspector Frederick Abberline battles his drinking problem while he investigates the Jack the Ripper murders and discovers a conspiracy that lea... Read allIn Victorian-era London, Scotland Yard Police Inspector Frederick Abberline battles his drinking problem while he investigates the Jack the Ripper murders and discovers a conspiracy that leads all the way up to the Queen.In Victorian-era London, Scotland Yard Police Inspector Frederick Abberline battles his drinking problem while he investigates the Jack the Ripper murders and discovers a conspiracy that leads all the way up to the Queen.

  • Stars
    • Michael Caine
    • Armand Assante
    • Ray McAnally
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Michael Caine
      • Armand Assante
      • Ray McAnally
    • 67User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Episodes2

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    TopTop-rated1 season

    Photos139

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    Top cast61

    Edit
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Inspector Frederick Abberline
    • 1988
    Armand Assante
    Armand Assante
    • Richard Mansfield
    • 1988
    Ray McAnally
    Ray McAnally
    • Sir William Gull
    • 1988
    Lewis Collins
    Lewis Collins
    • Sergeant George Godley
    • 1988
    Ken Bones
    Ken Bones
    • Robert James Lees
    • 1988
    Susan George
    Susan George
    • Catherine Eddowes
    • 1988
    Jane Seymour
    Jane Seymour
    • Emma
    • 1988
    Harry Andrews
    Harry Andrews
    • Coroner Wynne Baxter
    • 1988
    Lysette Anthony
    Lysette Anthony
    • Mary Jane Kelly
    • 1988
    Roger Ashton-Griffiths
    Roger Ashton-Griffiths
    • Rodman
    • 1988
    Peter Armitage
    Peter Armitage
    • Sergeant Kerby
    • 1988
    Desmond Askew
    Desmond Askew
    • Copy Boy
    • 1988
    Trevor Baxter
    Trevor Baxter
    • Lanyon
    • 1988
    Mike Carnell
    • Newsvendor
    • 1988
    Ann Castle
    • Lady Gull
    • 1988
    Deirdre Costello
    Deirdre Costello
    • Annie Chapman
    • 1988
    Jon Croft
    • Mr. Thackeray
    • 1988
    Angela Crow
    • Liz Stride
    • 1988
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews67

    7.46K
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    Featured reviews

    dbdumonteil

    Made -for -TV works can also be great....

    ....When it achieves such perfection :lavish costumes,splendid settings,excellent performances (a topflight cast,with a wonderful Caine as the lead ,the beautiful Jane Seymour and all the others providing adequate support).It really brings us back in Victorian London and the screenplay features very clever ideas such as the introduction of Stevenson's "Doctor Jekill and Mr Hyde" (the scene on the stage is mind-boggling).If the telly made such gems every week,nobody would go to the movie theaters anymore.
    jrb1802

    My favourite Jack the Ripper movie

    This version (out of many on the subject of Britain's most famous serial killer) is by far, my favourite.

    I have studied Jack the Ripper for many years, read many books, seen many documentaries, and even been on the Jack the Ripper tour in Whitechapel, where I saw the actual murder sites.

    The acting is first class from everyone involved (notably from Lewis Collins as Sgt. Godley, Steve Payne as Billy White and Amande Assante as Richard Mansfield), and the direction is first class.

    There are only two things I didn't like about this:

    1) The Killer's Identity - I just do not agree that he was Jack the Ripper.

    2) Once again, the Prostitutes were portrayed as good looking showgirls, when in reality they were ugly, toothless old crones. (Only Mary Jane Kelly was attractive, and Lysette Anthony who played her in this film, bares a remarkable resembelance to the real Kelly).

    It's a shame this movie is not available on video or DVD. I was fortunate enough to have taped it off the TV, and have kept it ever since.

    For any budding Ripperologists out there, I would strongly recommend you see this. But I`ll leave it up to you, if you agree with who they say it was -- I certainly don't.
    rmax304823

    Past Imperfect

    Well, it's not perfect, but what is? This one is a cut above the others I've seen, in some of which the victims were all "dance hall girls" or whatever. I thought Michael Caine was a good as he usually is, which is to say, pretty good. The other performances were also above average. (I thought Lysette Anthony was Helena Bonham Carter grown inexplicably more mature with the receding years.) Armand Assante does a great job of turning into Mr. Hyde on stage. Jane Seymour is beautiful but takes up screen time that otherwise could be put to better use, granted that three and a half hours constitutes a lot of screen time. A problem, though is that there are too many red herrings, too many dead ends gone into at length, at the expense of more interesting material. Every theory dreamed up by any manque criminologist with a pulp sensibility has been dragged into the story, and some made up that have never before been proposed. (How about: Jack was an alien from outer space?) I'd like to have known more details about the cases -- the sign about the "Juwes" and the bag of "cashous" found by Nichols' body.

    On the plus side, the crowded streets of 1888 London were colorfully evoked. The second murder took place in the small scruffy backyard of a tenement, next to a wooden fence, and to judge from the look of the scene the production designer worked directly from contemporary photographs. At least one of the props, a horse-drawn trolley with a Nestle ad, showed up virtually unchanged on Sherlock Holmes' Baker Street in the later Jeremy Brett series. Of course this isn't the REAL city. The London of the time would have been almost repellant as the lingering shots of the dismembered bodies which are mercifully absent from this film. This was industrial-strength capitalism in its most untrammeled form. What was glamorized as London "fog" we would nowadays call "smog" or simply "industrial smoke." In the absence of toilets, Whitechapel would have smelled like an outhouse.

    Why did all those women go out alone at night? One reason may be similar to the one than prompts people to live in large coastal cities in California. Oh, I know it's going to happen, but it won't happen to me. Another is that they may not have had much choice in the matter at a point in history with no social security or unemployment or medicare. If a man lost his arm at work, he was fired and was out on the streets. If a woman with no skills and no independent means lost her husband, she was out on the streets too, wearing the signature apron of her trade. For a few minutes unpleasantness in a dark corner she might earn enough for a drink of gin or a flea-ridden bed. Failing that she might find a seat in the lowest of flophouses, where there were no beds at all, just parallel lines of chairs with long ropes strung in front of them for sleeping patrons to lean across. Most of the poor looked like hell. And felt like it too, what with debilitating infectious illnesses and decaying teeth. It wasn't a good time to be broke.

    The problem with Ripper stories is that there is no satisfactory narrative conclusion, no neat ending, because the murderer was never discovered, let alone caught. Structurally it's a kind of coitus interruptus. So over the years we've pretended to solve it, using upstairs lodgers or effete royalty. The case file still exists but it's been so pared down over the years, through pilferage, loss, and souvenier hunting, that there are only a few original pages left.

    My bet? In the FBI typology he was a disorganized murderer, operating impromptu. As someone said in another comment, he was probably a local nonentity. He probably lived alone and kept to himself. If anyone noticed him at all, they probably thought of him as slightly goofy for talking to himself, believing in magic, or whatever.
    8marioprmpi

    Brilliant reconstruction

    Positive:
    • intense and atmospheric
    • played very well


    Negative:
    • the film provides a killer, although the real case has never been clarified beyond doubt
    9pverona67

    Caine at his best

    Michael Caine is truly brilliant in this outstanding mini-series. Despite the trappings of being a TV production, it transcends it's limitations and delivers a thrilling take on the infamous unsolved Jack the Ripper case.

    Outstanding work from al involved.

    More like this

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After Mary Jane Kelly's murder, there is a scene where Abberline hands Gull a photo of her body. That photo is an actual crime scene photo of the real Mary Jane Kelly.
    • Goofs
      The position of Mary Kelly's bed as viewed from the window into which Thomas Bowyer peered is wrong. It is shown with the foot of the bed closest to the window, when in fact from that angle the view should have been the same view of the bed as shown in the photograph of Mary Jane Kelly's remains (which was found by Donald Rumbelow).
    • Quotes

      [Chief Superintendent Arnold is complaining to Abberline about the press reports]

      Chief Insp. Frederick Abberline: I'm not responsible for the papers!

      DCS Arnold: No, you're responsible to me! And I want this case closed, Inspector!

      Chief Insp. Frederick Abberline: Yes, and why is that, Chief Superintendent? Mary Nicholls was a shilling whore. She wasn't killed for money, she didn't have any, her neighbours don't remember any enemies, and according to the doctor, she wasn't even sexually assaulted, yet somebody tore her to pieces in the streets!

      DCS Arnold: So find him.

      Chief Insp. Frederick Abberline: Do you want the killer, or will anybody do?

    • Alternate versions
      Both parts were re-framed in 1.78:1 aspect ratio for the Blu-ray editions.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 41st Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Beautifiul Dreamer
      (uncredited)

      composed by Stephen Foster (posthoumously in 1864)

      played on pub piano

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 10, 1990 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • La véritable histoire de Jack l'Éventreur
    • Filming locations
      • Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(Studio)
    • Production companies
      • Euston Films
      • Thames Television
      • Hill-O'Connor Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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