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A Man Escaped
Overlook Pick

A Man Escaped

Robert Bresson's Prize Winning Film
79
User Score616 ratings
TMDB 7.916+19561h 41mFrench
DramaThriller

Synopsis

A captured French Resistance fighter during World War II engineers a daunting escape from prison.

Director
Robert BressonFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Gaumont2 production companies
Release
November 11, 1956Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 12
François Leterrier
François Leterrier
Fontaine
Charles Le Clainche
Charles Le Clainche
Jost
Maurice Beerblock
Maurice Beerblock
Blanchet
Roland Monod
Roland Monod
Priest of Leiris
Jacques Ertaud
Jacques Ertaud
Orsini
Jean Paul Delhumeau
Hebrard
Roger Treherne
Terry
Jean Philippe Delamarre
Le Prisonnier 110

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
tmdb47633491
Apr 7, 2018

You can see much of where Tarkovsky got his patience from. The ending is given away by the title but somehow the last half hour / escape sequence is still, to quote another reviewer, unbearably suspenseful. I much prefer this Ian Curtis performance to anything he did for Joy Division.

CinemaSerf
Dec 25, 2022

Probably my favourite film from Robert Bresson, this tells the story of "Fontaine" (François Leterrier). He has been arrested by the Nazis on charges of spying and bombing, and is imprisoned without trial. His prognosis is not very good, but he is determined not to succumb to the fear and intimidation of his oppressors. One night in his cell, he observes that the door that holds him is made of oak and other, softer wood - can he find a way to escape before he faces the inevitable firing squad? It's the meticulous pace of this that is really effective. Leterrier is super as we, the audience, feel like we are sharing his daily risks. Day to day, never knowing whether he will survive. Surrounded by fellow inmates who may (or may not) be trustworthy. When he is unexpectedly saddled with a room-mate his choices and options become limited and imperative - and right to the very end, we are never quite certain as to what the denouement may bring. Mozart could never have imagined that his "Kyrie" and his "Agnus Dei" pieces could ever have been used to such chilling effects and the whole film just reeks of peril and authenticity right from the start. If you get a chance to see it on a big screen, then I'd heartily recommend you take it - it's only 100 minutes, but they are intense and compelling.

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