Seul dans la nuit
- 1945
- Tous publics
- 1h 40m
A series of crimes is being perpetrated around a famous singer. Strangely, during each of the crimes, the artist's voice is heard humming his favorite song. Suspicions lead to a chase throug... Read allA series of crimes is being perpetrated around a famous singer. Strangely, during each of the crimes, the artist's voice is heard humming his favorite song. Suspicions lead to a chase through a nocturnal Paris, ending in a disused theater where the assassin has lured his final vi... Read allA series of crimes is being perpetrated around a famous singer. Strangely, during each of the crimes, the artist's voice is heard humming his favorite song. Suspicions lead to a chase through a nocturnal Paris, ending in a disused theater where the assassin has lured his final victim.
Photos
- Madame Laforgue
- (as Ariane Muratore)
- L'inspecteur Legal
- (as Robert Lefort)
Featured reviews
It's also a whodunit that simply isn't that interesting because it's fairly obvious who IS NOT the killer and the film only comes up with one other possible option. I feel like this could have been a 1hr bottom of the bill picture and fared just as well. The acting is good and dialogue is fine, but not much happens in 100 minutes.
I managed to purchase a pristine print with excellent subtitles because I could not find it anywhere else -- not sure if it was woth it.
Competent direction, quality interpreters, music of the time and a script interesting enough to entertain the viewer, but without ever truly enthusing.
A hybrid that oscillates between romantic musical, Charlie Chan-style crime comedy and noir thriller. It all results in an indecisive film. Pleasant but unmemorable.
All that remains is generally unexciting:a singer (Jacques Pills who was a singer in real life but is best remembered as one of Edith Piaf's husbands)enjoys a big hit -so to speak,cause there were no charts at the time - with a song called "seul dans la nuit" (alone in the night).Alas there's a serial killer in the town ,and every time a woman is killed ,this ditty is heard ;and there's worse:all these unfortunate victims sent a letter to the artist.Could he be a killer? But around him,there are enough suspects to make cop Bernard Blier's task hard.
Does this film really need to be restored when so many Duvivier early movies are still waiting?
The basic situation is hardly original (a C. I. D. Investigation into a ladystrangler), but the way the subject is handled is more so. Without ever losing the thread of the investigation, the director, skilfully illustrating the script by the even more obscure Jacqueline and Yves Boisyvon, mixes genres with a certain ease: detective story (as already mentioned), comedy (thanks to Marc-Gilbert Sauvajon's sharp pen and actors who know how to bring out the best in his lines), musical film (the hero, Jacques Sartory, is a crooner), a documentary aspect on show business on a daily basis (meetings with the artistic team, organization of tours, answers to fan mail on the radio and even - in 1945! - a concert filmed live in an auditorium on television).
Add to this a fine job by cinematographer Christian Matras (especially in the night-time sequences) and, of course, a remarkable cast bringing to life a varied range of characters: (Bernard Blier, still wiry and shy lover), Sophie Desmarets (vivacious, assertive, not at all a trophy wife), Louis Salou (as an eccentric, clinging witness), and so on. Among them, Jacques Morel's little-known talent as an impersonator stands out here, as Fernandel, he's exceptional.
The most dated aspect of this film is Sartory's singing. Jacques Pills (Edith Piaf's future husband), almost in his own role, no longer appeals to today's ears, and the director could (and should) have refrained from filming him cooing a song three times - and in extenso. On the other hand, Pills turns out to be an excellent actor, subtly revealing his state of mind as a public idol whose pedestal suddenly wobbles.
Apart from this minor flaw, the film is constantly entertaining and intriguing. At one point, it does even more and better. I'm referring to the extraordinary sequence of Dalbret (Jean Davy)'s declamation: the man, disfigured after an accident, plays Lorenzaccio in a disused theater. He no longer looks the part, but his passion hasn't left him. It's a moment of profound emotion, not only for the characters played by Blier, Desmarets and Salou, but also for the viewer.
The scene precedes a finale that, while not reaching these heights, is not without its merits. Alone in the night, the petrolhead Thérèse (Sophie Desmarets) shows herself to be more fragile, more ambiguous.
A good quality film. Recommended.
Did you know
- TriviaFrench censorship visa # 778 delivered on 12-10-1945.
- Quotes
Inspecteur Pascal: Listen, Deval, stick to the press release.
le journaliste Deval: Well, for once I was almost going to tell the truth!
- ConnectionsFeatured in La Bonhomie façon Blier (2022)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Alone in the Night
- Filming locations
- Hôtel-Dieu, 1 place du Parvis Notre-Dame, Paris 4, Paris, France(hispital where Louise Chabot is treated)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1