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The Fallen Idol |
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The Fallen Idol - 1948 | 92mins | Thriller, Drama | B&WThe Production TeamDirector: Carol
Reed. Asst Director: Guy Hamilton. Producer: Carol Reed. Associate Producer: Phil Brandon. Script: Graham Greene. Additional dialogue by Lesley Storm and William Templeton. (from the story The Basement Room by Graham Greene) Cinematography: Georges Périnal. Special Effects: W. Percy Day. Art Direction: Vincent Korda and James Sawyer. Editing: Oswald Hafenrichter. Sound: Bert Ross. Music Score: William Alwyn. Music Direction: Dr. Hubert Clifford. |
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The CastRalph Richardson
- Baines Michèle Morgan - Julie Jack Hawkins - Detective Ames Bernard Lee - Detective Hart Sonia Dresdel - Mrs. Baines Dora Bryan - Rose Denis O'Dea - Inspector Crowe Walter Fitzgerald - Dr. Fenton Karel Stepanek - First Secretary Joan Young - Mrs. Barrow Dandy Nichols - Mrs. Patterson Geoffrey Keen - Detective Davis Bobby Henrey - Philippe Gerard Heinz - Ambassador James Hayter - Perry |
Plot SynopsisCarol Reed's The Fallen Idol was loosly adapted from
the Graham Greene story The Basement Room, it's told almost completely
from a child's eye view - Philippe (Bobby Henrey), eight-year-old son
of an ambassador in London, is left for a weekend in the care of the
butler Baines and his stern housekeeper-wife (Sonia Dresdel). Baines,
whom Philippe hero-worships, is in love with Julie (Michele Morgan),
a typist at the embassy. The little boy follows the lovers to a tea
shop and overhears their decision to part, as the future can hold no
happiness for them. Mrs Baines tricks him into repeating the conversation;
later he hears a violent quarrel between husband and wife.
While spying on Julie, Mrs Baines falls to her death from a window above the stone hall. Terrified, the boy runs into the street in his pyjamas when the police bring him back, he tries to shield his hero, who is suspected of murder. The police find a clue, however, which, even though they misinterpret it, leads them to exonerate the butler. Philippe now finds that though they believed him when he lied, they will not listen to his truthful explanation of the clue. His disillusionment is completed by the realisation that Baines had lied to him, with stories of an adventurous life, merely to entertain him. Indeed, his world seems to be crashing about him. Then the ambassador and his wife return. With the resilience of youth, Philippe’s doubts and dismay are forgotten in the joy of having his mother and father home again. |
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