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I Confess

 
Movies:

I Confess

  • Director: Alfred Hitchcock
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Drama
  • Movie Type: Psychological Thriller, Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Crisis of Conscience
  • Main Cast: Montgomery Clift, Anne Baxter, Karl Malden, Brian Aherne, O.E. Hasse
  • Release Year: 1953
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 95 minutes

Plot

Based on the turn-of-the-century play Our Two Consciences by Paul Anthelme, Hitchcock's I Confess is set in Quebec. Montgomery Clift plays a priest who hears the confession of church sexton O.E. Hasse. "I...killed...a man" whispers Hasse in tight closeup--and, bound by the laws of the Confessional, Clift is unable to turn Hasse over to the police. But police-inspector Karl Malden has a pretty good idea who the guilty party is: all evidence points to Clift. It seems that the dead man had been blackmailing Anne Baxter, who was once in a factually innocent, but seemingly exploitable compromising position with Clift. Tried for murder, Clift is released due to lack of evidence, but he is ruined in the eyes of the community. Then it is Hasse's turn to make that One Fatal Error. I Confess is frequently dismissed as a lesser Hitchcock, due mainly to the quirky performance of Montgomery Clift (who, it is said, steadfastly refused to take direction). Today, four decades removed from its on-set intrigues, the film has taken its place as one of the best of Hitchcock's "between the classics" efforts. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

A middling effort from Hitchcock, apparently attempting to adapt to the faux-documentary style then fashionable for crime stories, it features an interesting, turn by Clift. The film literalizes the symbolism of Catholic clergy as the representatives of Christ, with Clift's priest taking on the guilt for a murder due to the sanctity of the confessional. It's difficult to understand why the director chose to shoot such a musty contrivance of a play with the trappings of naturalism. Although, in The Wrong Man (1957), he was somewhat more effective with this style, his lack of interest in the normal range of human behavior hampered these films. Clift, who often chose to play characters seeking martyrdom, is well cast here, and provides what interest the film has in an underwritten part. It might have been better if the director had considered emphasizing the visual record of Clift's response to his public torment a la La Passion de Jeanne d'Arc (1928). ~ Michael Costello, All Movie Guide

Cast

Roger Dann - Pierre Grandfort; Dolly Haas - Alma Keller; Charles Andre - Father Millais; Judson Pratt - Murphy, a policeman; Ovila Legare - Vilette, the lawyer; Gilles Pelletier - Father Benoit; Nan Boardman - Maid; Henry Corden - Farouche; Carmen Gingras - First French Girl; Albert Godderis - Night Watchman

Credit

Edward S. Haworth - Art Director, George James Hopkins - Art Director, Barbara Keon - Associate Producer, Inspector Oliver Tangvay - Consultant/advisor, Fr. Paul la Couline - Consultant/advisor, Orry-Kelly - Costume Designer, Orry Kelly - Costume Designer, Don Alvarado - First Assistant Director, Alfred Hitchcock - Director, Rudi Fehr - Editor, Dimitri Tiomkin - Composer (Music Score), Ray Heindorf - Musical Direction/Supervision, Gordon Bau - Makeup, Robert Burks - Cinematographer, Sherry Shourds - Production Manager, Alfred Hitchcock - Producer, Edward S. Haworth - Set Designer, George James Hopkins - Set Designer, Oliver S. Garretson - Sound/Sound Designer, George Tabori - Screenwriter, William Archibald - Screenwriter, Paul Anthelme - Play Author

Similar Movies

The Rosary Murders; True Confessions; The Wrong Man; Absolution; Edge of Doom; Mortal Sins
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Wikipedia: I Confess (film)
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I Confess
Directed by Alfred Hitchcock
Produced by Uncredited:
Alfred Hitchcock
Written by Play:
Paul Anthelme
Screenplay:
George Tabori
William Archibald
Starring Montgomery Clift
Anne Baxter
Karl Malden
Brian Aherne
Roger Dann
Dolly Haas
Music by Dimitri Tiomkin
Cinematography Robert Burks
Editing by Rudi Fehr
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) Flag of the United States March 22, 1953
Running time 95 min.
Language English

I Confess (1953) is a film directed by Alfred Hitchcock. It stars Montgomery Clift as Fr. Michael William Logan, a Catholic priest, Anne Baxter as Ruth Grandfort, and Karl Malden as Inspector Larrue. This was the only film Hitchcock made with these three actors. Biographers say he had trouble with "method" actors such as Clift and Paul Newman, who worked with Hitchcock in Torn Curtain.

The film is based on a 1902 French play by Paul Anthelme called Nos Deux Consciences, a play Hitchcock saw in the 1930s. The screenplay was written by George Tabori.

The movie was largely filmed on location in Quebec City, Canada, with numerous shots of the city landscape and interiors of its churches and other emblematic buildings, such as the Château Frontenac.

Contents

Plot

From the I Confess film trailer

Father Michael Logan (Montgomery Clift) is a devout Catholic priest in a church in Quebec City. To take care of the church and the rectory, Father Logan employes a caretaker, Otto Keller (O. E. Hasse), and a housekeeper, Otto's wife Alma (Dolly Haas), who are German immigrants with very little money, although in their homeland they were more affluent. Otto Keller also works part-time as a gardener for a few householders in Quebec City.

Very late one evening Keller asks if Father Logan will hear his confession. In the confessional, Keller confesses that he went to try to steal money from a person he gardens for, a rich lawyer called Villette, and in the process he killed him. Because of the binding nature of the secrecy of the confessional, Father Logan cannot tell the police anything he now knows about this crime.

At the time of the murder, two young girls saw someone leaving the house of the murdered man wearing a cassock. While this was just Otto's disguise, suspicion falls upon Father Logan himself (who can provide no alibi for the time of the murder, cannot talk about the confession he heard, and cannot name the true murderer), since it gradually becomes apparent that Logan, in his early life before he became a priest, had a girlfriend, Ruth (Anne Baxter), who has always loved him and still does, even though she is now married to someone else.

In flashbacks it is shown that Logan stopped writing to Ruth not long after he went off to war. After he came back, Ruth and Logan ended up stranded on an island during a storm, and were forced to shelter for the night in a gazebo. In the morning Villette finds them there, makes offensive comments about Ruth, and is punched by Logan. It turns out that Ruth had married a prominent politician without ever telling Logan, who leaves her and does not see her for years. But Ruth has been blackmailed by Villette, as both she and her husband's lives would be ruined if her post-marital relation with Logan were made public, and so she meets him on the night of the murder to ask for advice.

Villette's death is a relief to Ruth, and she tells the police about her meeting with Father Logan to provide him an alibi. In fact the police assumes that Father Logan killed the blackmailer Villette to protect Ruth and himself, and that there is an on-going scandalous relationship between the two of them. The situation is made worse by Otto Keller, who lies extensively to the police in order to try to ensure that he is safe from suspicion while Father Logan is convicted for murder.

Father Logan comes very close to being found guilty and executed for a crime he did not commit, a sort of martyrdom. At the end of his trial, he is just barely found "not guilty", but his reputation as a priest is ruined, and the people of Quebec City gathered on the courthouse steps revile him. Otto's wife cannot bear to see this, and starts to shout that it was her husband that killed the man, but Otto pulls out a gun and shoots his wife, to silence her.

Running away, Otto is cornered by the police in the grand ballroom of the Château Frontenac. The detective who investigated the story, unable to elicit any comment from Father Logan, suspects that Otto is really Villette's murderer, and asks him so. Otto assumes Father Logan broke the secret of his confession, declares his guilt, and tries to shoot Father Logan, who bravely attempted to approach him and reason with him. Instead, Otto himself is fatally wounded by a police sharpshooter. In extremis Otto calls out to Father Logan to forgive him, and receives absolution.

Subtle visual references to Christ, the cross, and the crucifix, occur frequently throughout the movie. The soundtrack uses the melody from the Gregorian Chant Dies Irae throughout.

Alfred Hitchcock's cameo is a signature occurrence in most of his films. In I Confess he can be seen (right after the credits) walking along the sidewalk at the top of a steep stairway.

Reaction

The film is considered a favorite among French New Wave film makers, according to filmmaker/historian Peter Bogdanovich.

The film was banned in Ireland because it showed a priest having a relationship with a woman (even though, in the movie, the relationship takes place before the character becomes a priest).[1]

The film was entered into the 1953 Cannes Film Festival.[2]

Featured cast

Actor Role
Montgomery Clift Fr. Michael William Logan
Anne Baxter Ruth Grandfort
Karl Malden Inspector Larrue
Brian Aherne Willy Robertson
Roger Dann Pierre Grandfort
Dolly Haas Alma Keller
Charles Andre Fr. Millars
O.E. Hasse Otto Keller

Adaptations in Other Media

I Confess was adapted to the radio program Lux Radio Theater on September 21, 1953 with Cary Grant in Montgomery Clift's role.

See also

Le Confessional, a 1994 film which dramatizes the filming of I Confess as the backdrop for a thematically-related story.

References

  • I Confess DVD documentary

External links


 
 

 

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