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IMDbPro

L'invraisemblable vérité

Titre original : Beyond a Reasonable Doubt
  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 20min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
6,3 k
MA NOTE
Joan Fontaine and Dana Andrews in L'invraisemblable vérité (1956)
A novelist aided by his future father-in-law conspires to frame himself for the murder of a burlesque dancer as part of an effort to ban capital punishment.
Lire trailer2:41
1 Video
31 photos
CriminalitéDrameDrame juridiqueFilm noirProcédure policière

Un romancier aidé par son futur beau-père conspire à se faire passer pour le meurtrier d'un danseuse burlesque dans le cadre d'un effort pour interdire la peine de mort.Un romancier aidé par son futur beau-père conspire à se faire passer pour le meurtrier d'un danseuse burlesque dans le cadre d'un effort pour interdire la peine de mort.Un romancier aidé par son futur beau-père conspire à se faire passer pour le meurtrier d'un danseuse burlesque dans le cadre d'un effort pour interdire la peine de mort.

  • Réalisation
    • Fritz Lang
  • Scénario
    • Douglas Morrow
  • Casting principal
    • Dana Andrews
    • Joan Fontaine
    • Sidney Blackmer
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    6,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Fritz Lang
    • Scénario
      • Douglas Morrow
    • Casting principal
      • Dana Andrews
      • Joan Fontaine
      • Sidney Blackmer
    • 82avis d'utilisateurs
    • 40avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    Original Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 2:41
    Original Theatrical Trailer

    Photos30

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux74

    Modifier
    Dana Andrews
    Dana Andrews
    • Tom Garrett
    Joan Fontaine
    Joan Fontaine
    • Susan Spencer
    Sidney Blackmer
    Sidney Blackmer
    • Austin Spencer
    Arthur Franz
    Arthur Franz
    • Bob Hale
    Philip Bourneuf
    Philip Bourneuf
    • Dist. Atty. Roy Thompson
    Edward Binns
    Edward Binns
    • Lt. Kennedy
    Shepperd Strudwick
    Shepperd Strudwick
    • Jonathan Wilson
    Robin Raymond
    Robin Raymond
    • Terry Larue
    Barbara Nichols
    Barbara Nichols
    • Dolly Moore
    William F. Leicester
    • Charlie Miller
    • (as William Lester)
    Dan Seymour
    Dan Seymour
    • Greco
    Rusty Lane
    Rusty Lane
    • Judge
    Joyce Taylor
    Joyce Taylor
    • Joan Williams
    Carleton Young
    Carleton Young
    • Allan Kirk
    Trudy Wroe
    • Hatcheck Girl
    Joe Kirk
    Joe Kirk
    • Clothing Store Clerk
    Charles Evans
    Charles Evans
    • Governor
    Wendell Niles
    Wendell Niles
    • Announcer
    • Réalisation
      • Fritz Lang
    • Scénario
      • Douglas Morrow
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs82

    6,96.2K
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    Avis à la une

    Howard_B_Eale

    why BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT is Lang's best US film

    Sometimes, in the world of 1940s-1950s film noir, we are given a film so transparently impossible and contrived that we can see ourselves giving up on watching it half way through. But is extremely rare that we are faced with a film where the very response the viewer is having holds the key to the success, rather than the failure, of the film.

    Such is the case with BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT, which has - to its credit - been completely misunderstood by many. When we reach the film's conclusion, we realize that even the title of the film itself is a joke, perhaps the ultimate prank on the viewer. Yet to offer analysis of the film would be to destroy its main and most sinister motive; you can't "explain away" the glaring plot holes and contrivances without revealing the twist the film takes in its climax, and to do would rob the viewer of a genuine experience. So... I won't.

    Suffice it to say, BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT is far more than it seems and is nothing without the sum of its parts, in total. Lang tackles the story of a person who creates a fictitious role for himself in order to, essentially, pull a fast one on the legal profession for personal gain (or, as it appears on the surface, someone else's). In the world of film noir, of course, we know that such a character won't get away with it, but when Lang depicts the tragedy the viewer knows will come, he majestically turns the entire premise on its head. As a result, it's a cold slap in the face - a devastating critique of the complicity of the audience in following along, hungrily, with such contrivances in cinema.

    Every part of the film fits perfectly by not fitting at all. Even the visual style of the film is a cold, rarely pleasing one, almost daring you to suspend your disbelief just a little bit longer without even granting the pleasure of emotionally charged close-ups at key moments. The editing is brutal and jarring, cutting away practically mid-sentence and moving to a similar conversation elsewhere.

    As a swan song to his Hollywood career, BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT does to the audience what Billy Wilder does to the industry in SUNSET BLVD. - biting the hand that feeds. The result is a total masterpiece.
    7blanche-2

    good drama wrapped in a B production

    "Beyond a Reasonable Doubt" is a curious film - it has the look and feel of a B movie and two stars who had seen better days - Dana Andrews and Joan Fontaine - yet it's a good script directed by Fritz Lang. A novelist (Andrews) and his future father-in-law, a newspaper magnet (Sidney Blackmer) work together to prove that the death penalty isn't justified by framing Andrews for a recent murder.

    I thought the story excellent with some exciting twists, though the whole movie has an underplayed (not to mention inexpensive) feeling to it. Fontaine seemed a little old for her role. However, she does a good job as a sophisticate, and Andrews is good as well. Barbara Nichols does a fine job in a typical supporting role for her.

    Lang returned to Germany after this film, his last in America. It's an effective plot but one wishes the man who made Metropolis and so many other fine films was given more of a budget for his swansong.
    susanhathaway

    The Elephant in the Room: Obstruction of Justice

    While Sidney Blackmer and Dana Andrews cook up and carry out their scheme to prove that an innocent person can be convicted of a murder, everyone ignores the fact that, by getting this innocent person convicted, they're helping the real murderer escape justice. Just sayin'.
    bob the moo

    Not as taut as it should have been or as meaningful

    Tom Garrett is a writer engaged to the daughter of wealthy newspaper man Austin Spencer. Spencer is also firmly against the death penalty. With Tom looking for a subject for a second novel, Spencer suggests that they set Tom up for an unsolved murder using circumstantial evidence to prove how easy it would be for the courts to kill an innocent man. Once Tom is sentenced to the chair, Spencer will expose the failings in the system and free him. However when Spencer is killed in car crash and none of the evidence can be found then Tom faces the chair.

    A very interesting concept still needs a good delivery to make for a good film. This not only had a good idea but it was also a fair point to be made about the death penalty. The film moves along with a good build up for the whole first half. However once Tom finds himself in real trouble then the film strangely doesn't manage to deliver as much tension as it really should have done. Conversely the film becomes more of a melodrama for a while and it loses a lot of momentum. There are some nice touches at the end but they can't completely make up for the weaknesses in the middle section.

    It is quite atmospheric but not to the point that I had hoped but Lang does a good job on direction. The cast are OK. Andrews has long been one of my favourite actors from the period and he gives a solid if unspectacular show here. Fontaine is weaker and doesn't quite convince as well as Andrews but is fine. Blackmer is pretty enjoyable as Austin Spencer and Ed Binns is a familiar face as Lt. Kennedy.

    It doesn't quite work as you'd hope as the tension drops off at the exactly the moment that it needs to step up a notch. It is worth watching but it is not one of Lang's better films.
    Oct

    Too low-key to thrill

    Fritz Lang's twenty years as a Hollywood refugee, which had started so spiritedly with "Fury", gradually wound down to the grey, listless offering that is "Beyond a Reasonable Doubt". True, Lang's first and last titles have family resemblances. "Fury" concerns a man who may or may not have committed a capital crime but who deserves due process rather than lynching; "Doubt" is about a guy who frames himself to prove that the irrevocable sentence of capital punishment, legal or not, is never justifiable if the law is fallible.

    But whereas the argument of "Fury" was driven full steam ahead by a master of montage ("Metropolis") and suspenseful pacing ("M"), "Doubt" consists largely of two- or three-shots of men in suits with "display kerchiefs", arguing in paneled offices with unraised voices. The story has its due ration of twists as Dana Andrews's writer is persuaded by his prospective father-in-law, a crusading press magnate, to set himself up as a burlesque dancer's killer; the two of them will keep records of the plot that are sure to exonerate Andrews before he faces the chair. (Wouldn't he get a stiff sentence for wasting the cops' time, though?)

    But the focus shifts awkwardly from Andrews to his girl and lawyer as it unwinds, and the scenario is oddly bare of dramatic crises. For example, the press boss's death occurs off screen and his exoneration is brought in by his lawyer, not tracked down by his daughter, Andrews's fiancée. Only a few backstage scenes with the dancing girls, all peroxide and nasal cynicism, enliven proceedings. Andrews had begun to freeze into the stone faced stolidity which hampered his later career, while 39 year old Fontaine (the classic aging actress's age) is matronly in costume, maquillage and demeanor: encased in stately prissiness like other English ladies of Hollywood such as Garson and Kerr.

    Apart from Fontaine the production looks as well as feels impoverished, aesthetically like Ida Lupino's and Collier Young's problem pics but without their punch. The final twist is not signaled strongly enough to give smarter audience members a decent chance of foreseeing it. At one ludicrous moment, the publisher suggests his guests catch up on the day's highlights in Andrews's murder trial: he turns on a TV which immediately and obligingly recounts them, like George Burns's magic set on "The Burns and Allen Show". Incidentally, was covering trials and commenting on them normal for American television c. 1955?

    "Beyond a Reasonable Doubt" was a swansong not only for Lang but for RKO. It had abandoned production three years earlier after being wrecked by Howard Hughes, had sold its studio to Desi and Lucy and was now reduced to releasing outside product: in this instance from one Bert Friedlob. It really was time for Herr Lang to catch the plane back to de-Nazified Germany.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Final American film made by Fritz Lang before returning to Germany. It was a box-office failure.
    • Gaffes
      WHile the trial is shown on TV there is a frontal shot of Tom sitting at the defendants desk. This would not be possible as the television camera was stationed behind and to the side of the desk. It's not feasible that the large 1950's era television camera would have been moved to the front of the courtroom for the shot.
    • Citations

      Tom Garrett: Well, could I get in touch with you?

      Dolly Moore: You've touched enough already!

    • Connexions
      Featured in Propriété privée (1960)
    • Bandes originales
      Beyond A Reasonable Doubt
      Sung by The Hi-Los (as The Hi-Lo's)

      Music by Herschel Burke Gilbert

      Lyrics by Alfred Perry

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    FAQ

    • How long is Beyond a Reasonable Doubt?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 31 juillet 1957 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Invraisemblable vérité
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Chicago, Illinois, États-Unis(location shooting)
    • Société de production
      • Bert E. Friedlob Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 20 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White

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    Joan Fontaine and Dana Andrews in L'invraisemblable vérité (1956)
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    By what name was L'invraisemblable vérité (1956) officially released in India in English?
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