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Paris After Dark

  • 1943
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 25 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,3/10
198
IHRE BEWERTUNG
George Sanders, Philip Dorn, and Brenda Marshall in Paris After Dark (1943)
DramaKrieg

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuMembers of the French underground resistance, live their "normal" lives during the day, and fight the occupying Nazis in the war-torn Paris after dark. Some will end their lives fighting, an... Alles lesenMembers of the French underground resistance, live their "normal" lives during the day, and fight the occupying Nazis in the war-torn Paris after dark. Some will end their lives fighting, and some will find purpose in life once again.Members of the French underground resistance, live their "normal" lives during the day, and fight the occupying Nazis in the war-torn Paris after dark. Some will end their lives fighting, and some will find purpose in life once again.

  • Regie
    • Léonide Moguy
  • Drehbuch
    • Harold Buchman
    • Georges Kessel
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • George Sanders
    • Philip Dorn
    • Brenda Marshall
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,3/10
    198
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Léonide Moguy
    • Drehbuch
      • Harold Buchman
      • Georges Kessel
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • George Sanders
      • Philip Dorn
      • Brenda Marshall
    • 12Benutzerrezensionen
    • 3Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos1

    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung44

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    George Sanders
    George Sanders
    • Dr. Andre Marbel
    Philip Dorn
    Philip Dorn
    • Jean Blanchard
    Brenda Marshall
    Brenda Marshall
    • Yvonne Blanchard
    Madeleine Lebeau
    Madeleine Lebeau
    • Collette
    • (as Madeleine LeBeau)
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Luigi - Quisling Barber
    Robert Lewis
    Robert Lewis
    • Col. Pirosh
    Henry Rowland
    Henry Rowland
    • Capt. Franck
    Frank Arnold
    • French Soldier
    • (Nicht genannt)
    John Beverly
    • German Detective
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Curt Bois
    Curt Bois
    • Max
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Walter Bonn
    • German Detective
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Eugene Borden
    • Central Committee Member
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Louis Borel
    • Picard
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ann Codee
    Ann Codee
    • Mme. Benoit
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Simone D'Ambrogio
    • Servant Girl
    • (Nicht genannt)
    George Davis
    George Davis
    • Barfly
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Chavo de Leon
    • French Gunner
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Jean Del Val
    Jean Del Val
    • Papa Benoit
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Léonide Moguy
    • Drehbuch
      • Harold Buchman
      • Georges Kessel
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen12

    6,3198
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7arthur_tafero

    Paris After Dark - Intense Wartime Drama

    Yes, the film is a bit over the top. Yes, it is corny and sentimental in several instances. And yes, it does contain several stereotypes and cartoonish portrayal of Germans. However, despite all of these failings, the film is very successful for one reason; authenticity. The film is authentic because it was made smack in the middle of the German Occupation of France. The emotions portrayed by the French in this film are as genuine as one can get from a film.

    George Sanders plays a lower-case Schindler in the film, and does a very good job, despite having to play a good guy (he is so much more effective at playing cads, neer-do-wells, and unfeeling characters). Brenda Marshall does an outstanding job as the lead actress, and Philip Dorn is very effective in his role of a lifetime as a returned POW.

    The film does skip over one or two important elements of Vichy France, however. It plays up the resistance very well, but it does not really show how many of the French (Vichy Government) collaborated with the Germans. The single exception is an Italian barber, but Luigi is obviously not French (it is a sly slap at the Italians for being allied with the Germans). Luigi, to be sure, is a lowlife, but there were several thousand French lowlifes as well that supported the Vichy government. There are several good dramatic moments in the film, and one instance of selecting the lessor or two evils over the impulse to let a Nazi officer die. Compared to the dozens of other "French Resistance" films made since then, this one is easily in the top ten.
    6richard-1787

    A good but uneven World War II propaganda movie

    This movie has a lot of weaknesses, but its heart is in the right place, and there are definitely good moments for those who enjoy this sort of movie.

    The only other reviewer of this movie here on IMDb mentioned "Mrs. Miniver," and the comparison is very valid. That very stirring if often melodramatic movie was made to convince Americans in the early 1940s, still given to isolationism, that the English were worth helping because they were good, decent, and courageous people.

    "Paris After Dark" is very similar in that it was made to convince Americans that France, too, merited our help. The situation was very different, however, so the convincing had to be different.

    France had declared an armistice shortly after being overrun by the Nazi war machine in 1940. Maréchal Pétain, head of the French armed forces, convinced the government to do so, and then collaborated with the Nazis for the rest of the war, for which he was tried after it. As a result, many Americans saw the French as cowardly and lacking in the sort of moral fiber that "Mrs. Miniver" spends all its time demonstrating to be the very essence of the English character.

    So "Paris After Dark" spends a lot of time arguing that 1) the average Frenchman and -woman, Joe/Jane France, was really courageous, and had had nothing to do with signing the armistice, and 2) that all of France, all classes and both sexes, were already fighting the Nazis through the Resistance, even at the risk of their own lives - thereby showing their courage, moral fiber, etc.

    This produces a lot of stirring speeches by various of the characters, which, admittedly, often come off as unnaturally oratorical. But you can see what the scriptwriters and the director were trying to achieve.

    The acting is uneven. George Sanders and Philip Dorn are both very good. Both are men who have to be won over to the Resistance efforts, and their conversions are convincing. Brenda Marshall, the female lead, sometimes overacts, and is not at their level. Marcel Dalio, so good in so many movies, doesn't do a convincing job with the traitor barber.

    If you've seen American movies made in the 1930s that are set in France, you know that Hollywood had often presented the French as rather foolish. Here it does an admirable job of presenting a wide spectrum of French folk, among them lots of average but very noble individuals.

    Yes, it's preachy at times. But the cause justified that.

    If Hollywood's contributions to the war effort interest you, you will find much of interest here.

    -------------------

    A note after a second viewing: This movie, released in 1943 before we had landed on the Normandy beaches, deals with France at what was a real turning point in the Occupation.

    On the one hand, the collaborationist prime minister, Pierre Laval, had just negotiated an exchange of workers to be sent to Germany - the STO, Service du Travail obligatoire - in exchange for French prisoners to be released home to France. (The Germans were holding 1.9 million French soldiers prisoner as part of the Armistice Pétain signed in June, 1940.) The ratio was 3:1, three Frenchmen - or women - sent to Germany to work in exchange for one French soldier to be released. It created further hatred for Germany, as the occupying forces began enforcing the "obligation" for men to leave. Many faced with such deportation joined the French Résistance, as Georges and his three friends try to do in this movie.

    On the other hand, American forces landed in French North Africa - Morocco and Algeria - at the end of 1942, and after a rather swift campaign, defeated the Germans and Italians there. (If you've ever seen "The Desert Fox", you know that story.) It was called Operation Torch, and, as we see near the end of this movie, it gave the French their first real shot of hope that the Allies had not abandoned them and would, someday, free France as well.

    As I wrote above, a lot of this movie is oratorical. People give speeches, sometimes even to the camera. But the last part, where Jean is won over to the cause of the Resistance, is really very moving.
    6adrianovasconcelos

    Good Sanders in soggy WWII propaganda piece

    Director Léonide Moguy rings no bells in my memory and certainly will not after watching this middling propaganda piece relating to the French Resistance during German occupation.

    George Sanders - great actor with a sound French pronunciation and accent to boot! - is the outstanding item in this rather pedestrian B picture. Sadly, he is not helped by a cast that strikes me as amateurish at best. Brenda Marshall, as female lead, disappoints as a French woman, unable even to pronounce the rife Christian name of Jean, saying John instead.

    Cinematography by Lucien Andriot is run of the mill, possibly because of shoestring budget limitations. The screenplay by Harold Buchman is riddled with clichés but the final idea of one man saving 50 hostages by giving up his own medically condemned life is interesting... though I have the greatest doubts about the Gestapo sparing any French lives, even if the purported killed turned himself in. 6/10, mostly because of Sanders' classy contribution.
    8Danryd80

    A War-time Film of Conviction

    Set in German-occupied Paris, the plot concerns the day-to-day struggles of the French resistance during WWII, made all the more believable by a cast chosen from among real-life refugees – in other words those who were eye-witnesses to the film's historical backdrop. I suspect that when "Paris After Dark" played in small-town America, the world it unveiled was still rather exotic. Even with full-on U.S involvement after Pearl Harbor, the idea of an underground resistance for most Americans was something shadowy and obscure. New York Times reviewer Bosley Crowther, though not at all impressed, did acknowledge "the terrible tragedy of the French people under Nazi occupation" which the film evoked. However, this is a film that holds its own alongside similar portrayals of the war in Europe, such as Robert Stevenson's "Joan of Paris" and William Wyler's "Mrs. Miniver", the latter in which the inimitable Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon bolstered the moral imperative of continued U.S. involvement.

    Fans of "Casablanca" (1942) will recognize the lovely Madeleine LeBeau in a supporting role. According to Wikipedia, LeBeau, along with her husband, Marcel Dalio, escaped from Paris in June, 1940, just ahead of the Nazi advance, eventually finding their way to the U.S. Fans of George Sanders will love his role as a heroic leader of the underground movement. But the stars of the film are Brenda Marshall and Philip Dorn. Some viewers may recall Marshall as the scientist Nora Goodrich in Anthony Mann's "Strange Impersonation" (1946). The Dutch-born Dorn was better known as an actor in Germany but who also moved to the U.S. with the war's outbreak. Director Leonide Moguy sought refuge in the States in a similar manner. He also directed the interesting noir, "Whistle Stop" (1946), with George Raft and Ava Gardner before returning to France. In short, this was a cast and company that appeared to know first-hand what they were portraying during one of the war's bleakest periods.

    As of this writing, it is available as a Fox Cinema Archives release, and well worth tracking down, if only for the history lesson it movingly portrays.
    8clanciai

    French resistance turned into a melodrama

    This is not a great war film, and today it is hopelessly outdated. The credits of the film is that the actors (almost all escaped from France during the occupation) act with absolute sincerity and conviction, giving the film a character of genuine honesty as an effort to communicate how life was in Paris for Parisians during the occupation. The documentary character is missing, however, being replaced by a rather uncouth sentimentality, as if it was contaminated by Hollywood, which it apparently was. It was made for the Americans to show them how hard life was in Europe for civilians under the German occupation, and the excellent acting by Philip Dorn, Brenda Marshall and George Sanders add to the credibility. So if you can forget the sentimental smear over it all, you will find it a most valuable and realistic account of life in the resistance. One warning: there are no human Germans here.

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    Handlung

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    Wusstest du schon

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    • Wissenswertes
      Several people working on this movie were WW2 refugees from France.
    • Zitate

      Yvonne Blanchard: A present from the grocer - an egg.

      Mme. Benoit: If only I had the chicken it came from.

      Papa Benoit: Oh, you're asking too much, dear.

    • Verbindungen
      Referenced in Inglourious Basterds (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      The Sun Will Shine Again
      Music and Lyrics by Margot Fragey

      Revised Lyrics by Charles Henderson

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 15. Oktober 1943 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Französisch
      • Deutsch
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Paris Underground
    • Drehorte
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Twentieth Century Fox
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 25 Min.(85 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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