NOTE IMDb
7,4/10
6,8 k
MA NOTE
Après avoir abattu l'administrateur nazi de Tchéquie, l'assassin tente d'échapper à la Gestapo et réprime son envie de se rendre alors que des otages sont exécutés.Après avoir abattu l'administrateur nazi de Tchéquie, l'assassin tente d'échapper à la Gestapo et réprime son envie de se rendre alors que des otages sont exécutés.Après avoir abattu l'administrateur nazi de Tchéquie, l'assassin tente d'échapper à la Gestapo et réprime son envie de se rendre alors que des otages sont exécutés.
- Nommé pour 2 Oscars
- 2 victoires et 3 nominations au total
William Roy
- Beda Novotny
- (as Billy Roy)
Hans Heinrich von Twardowski
- Reinhard Heydrich
- (as H. H v. Twardowski)
Ludwig Donath
- Schirmer
- (as Louis Donath)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOriginally, Bertolt Brecht was denied story credit by the Screen Writer's Guild, even though he worked closely with writer John Wexley on the project.
- GaffesIn reality, Heydrich was assassinated by a team of Czech exiles sent back to the country by the British government.
- Citations
Czech Patriot: Your mothers were slimy rats! Their milk was sewer water!
- Crédits fousThe end of the film reads "NOT The End".
- Versions alternativesOPENING CREDIT ON 2012 RESTORATION: "Restored in 2012 by the Restoration Department Pinewood Studios UK utilising the best of the surviving archive film elements that included some original 1943 nitrate. With thanks to the BFI National Archive for preserving and supplying original film material."
- ConnexionsFeatured in Hooray for Holyrood (1986)
- Bandes originalesVltava
(The Moldau) (uncredited)
From "Má vlast (My Country)"
Music by Bedrich Smetana
Played in the movie theater
Also played on the radio during dinner
Commentaire à la une
Hangmen Also Die! (1943)
The best part of this movie is knowing it was made right in the middle of the war, not in some recreation of the events. It's a little hyperbolic, for sure, but really well acted (both the Nazis and the Czechs), and it ends up being a battle of wits and tricks between the two sides.
Fritz Lang was a refuge from Nazi Europe and made this in Hollywood, with an expected sensibility for the cruelties and barbarism of the occupying nasties. And they probably were this nasty--worse, in truth, though less comically so, as the movie sometimes pushes it a bit. Still, really enjoyable, in all. Yet, somehow, it was long. The twists from one scene to another started to sound familiar, and the tension was sustained rather than invigorated, if that makes any sense.
Brian Donlevy is the leading good guy here, and he's always a little less than compelling, though he is not in most of the scenes so I suppose that's fine. The double-crosser was played by Gene Lockhart, whose presence grows as the movie gets on, and by the end he's really pretty amazing (far beyond the caricature of, say, the judge he played in "Miracle on 34th Street"). Walter Brennan makes an appearance, recognizable mostly by his voice. Two of the Nazi higher-ups were terrific, both the Pilsner guzzling brute and the slightly comical but scary gestapo head.
Lang is no fool, and he makes this movie not only a pleasure, but an important tool to remind viewers to be involved, to realize that you can fight oppression, even Nazi oppression, with enough wits and sacrifice.
The best part of this movie is knowing it was made right in the middle of the war, not in some recreation of the events. It's a little hyperbolic, for sure, but really well acted (both the Nazis and the Czechs), and it ends up being a battle of wits and tricks between the two sides.
Fritz Lang was a refuge from Nazi Europe and made this in Hollywood, with an expected sensibility for the cruelties and barbarism of the occupying nasties. And they probably were this nasty--worse, in truth, though less comically so, as the movie sometimes pushes it a bit. Still, really enjoyable, in all. Yet, somehow, it was long. The twists from one scene to another started to sound familiar, and the tension was sustained rather than invigorated, if that makes any sense.
Brian Donlevy is the leading good guy here, and he's always a little less than compelling, though he is not in most of the scenes so I suppose that's fine. The double-crosser was played by Gene Lockhart, whose presence grows as the movie gets on, and by the end he's really pretty amazing (far beyond the caricature of, say, the judge he played in "Miracle on 34th Street"). Walter Brennan makes an appearance, recognizable mostly by his voice. Two of the Nazi higher-ups were terrific, both the Pilsner guzzling brute and the slightly comical but scary gestapo head.
Lang is no fool, and he makes this movie not only a pleasure, but an important tool to remind viewers to be involved, to realize that you can fight oppression, even Nazi oppression, with enough wits and sacrifice.
- secondtake
- 4 déc. 2010
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- How long is Hangmen Also Die!?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 850 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée2 heures 14 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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What is the Mexican Spanish language plot outline for Les bourreaux meurent aussi (1943)?
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