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The Scapegoat
Overlook Pick

The Scapegoat

He took another man's name... lived another man's life... loved another man's woman!
68
User Score40 ratings
TMDB 6.816+19591h 32mEnglish
MysteryCrimeThriller

Synopsis

An Englishman in France unwittingly is placed into the identity, and steps into the vacated life, of a look-alike French nobleman.

Director
Robert HamerFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Du Maurier-Guinness1 production companies
Release
August 6, 1959Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 21
Alec Guinness
Alec Guinness
John Barratt / Jacques De Gue
Bette Davis
Bette Davis
Countess
Nicole Maurey
Nicole Maurey
Bela
Irene Worth
Irene Worth
Francoise
Pamela Brown
Pamela Brown
Blanche
Annabel Bartlett
Annabel Bartlett
Marie-Noel
Geoffrey Keen
Geoffrey Keen
Gaston
Noel Howlett
Noel Howlett
Dr. Aloin

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Apr 4, 2022

Alec Guinness walks into a bar where he encounters his doppelgänger. They might be twins. His "Barratt" character is a teacher of French at an British university, his mirror image an impoverished local aristocrat. The two drink together, then end up sharing the latter man's hotel room. In the morning, "Barratt" wakes up and there is no sign of his roommate. Next thing, a chauffeur arrives and, assuming he is the aristocratic version of himself, takes him to their chateau where he meets the (his) family. Clearly he is being manipulated, but why and by whom? It does not take him long to realise that this family is pretty dysfunctional - lead by the morphine-addicted "Countess" (Bette Davis in her best Elizabeth I form), with his wife , his mistress and his daughter all adding to this familial maelstrom. Guinness is quite good here, but somehow the premiss didn't quite gel for me. He accepts the fake life and it's people all too readily. There are no protestations or police visits; his narrative (spoken throughout) does not reconcile easily with his actions and the ending, though I did quite like it, was all just a bit too rushed and convenient. The photography with them both on screen at the same time is flawless, and Bronislau Kaper's score fits well with the story too, but it's all just a little lacklustre.

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