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    I Confess

    3.5 2

    Director: Alfred Hitchcock Cast: Montgomery Clift

    Montgomery Clift
    , Anne Baxter
    Anne Baxter
    , Karl Malden
    Karl Malden
    , Brian Aherne
    Brian Aherne
    , O.E. Hasse
    O.E. Hasse


    Blu-ray

    (Full Frame)

    $22.49
    $22.49

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 02/16/2016
    • UPC: 0888574367893
    • Original Release: 0000
    • Source: WARNER BROS.DIGITAL DIST
    • Presentation: [B&W]
    • Sound: [Dolby Digital Stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround]
    • Language: English
    • Sales rank: 5,726

    Special Features

    Making-Of Documentary Hitchcock's Confession: A Look At I Confess; Premiere Newsreel; Theatrical Trailer

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    Montgomery Clift Pater Logan
    Anne Baxter Ruth Grandfort
    Karl Malden Larrue
    Brian Aherne Robertson
    O.E. Hasse Otto Keller,Actor
    Dolly Haas Alma Keller
    Roger Dann Pierre Grandfort
    Charles Andre Father Millais
    Nan Boardman Maid
    Henry Corden Farouche
    Alfred Hitchcock Actor
    Judson Pratt Murphy, a policeman
    Ovila L?gar? Vilette, the lawyer
    Gilles Pelletier Father Benoit
    Carmen Gingras First French Girl
    Albert Godderis Night Watchman
    Dimitri Tiomkin Composer

    Technical Credits
    Alfred Hitchcock Producer
    Sidney Bernstein Producer
    George Tabori Screenwriter
    William Archibald Screenwriter
    Oliver Garretson Sound/Sound Designer

    Based on the turn-of-the-century play Our Two Consciences by Paul Anthelme, this Alfred Hitchcock film is set in Quebec. Montgomery Clift plays a priest who hears the murder confession of church sexton O.E. Hasse. Bound by the laws of the Confessional, Clift is unable to turn Hasse over to the police.

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    • I Confess
      Director: Montgomery Clift
      Average rating: 3.5 Average rating:
    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).
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