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Compulsion (1959)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
May 1959 (West Germany) moreTagline:
Sometimes murder is just a way to pass the time. morePlot:
Two wealthy law-school students go on trial for murder in this version of the Leopold-Loeb case. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
Nominated for BAFTA Film Award. Another 1 win & 4 nominations moreNewsDesk:
(2 articles)
Mandy Patinkin to Star in Compulsion at Yale Rep, Directed by Oskar Eustis in 2010 (From BroadwayWorld.com. 7 October 2009, 10:19 AM, PDT)
Movie Reviews: Murder By Numbers
(From Studio Briefing - Film News. 19 April 2002)
User Comments:
Orson Welles, We Did You Wrong more (37 total)Cast
(Complete credited cast)| Orson Welles | ... | Jonathan Wilk | |
| Diane Varsi | ... | Ruth Evans | |
| Dean Stockwell | ... | Judd Steiner | |
| Bradford Dillman | ... | Arthur A. Straus | |
| E.G. Marshall | ... | District Attorney Harold Horn | |
| Martin Milner | ... | Sid Brooks | |
| Richard Anderson | ... | Max Steiner | |
| Robert F. Simon | ... | Police Lt. Johnson (as Robert Simon) | |
| Edward Binns | ... | Tom Daly | |
| Robert Burton | ... | Charles Straus | |
| Wilton Graff | ... | Mr. Steiner | |
| Louise Lorimer | ... | Mrs. Straus aka 'Mumsy' | |
| Gavin MacLeod | ... | Padua - Horn's Assistant | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Ina Balin | ... | Mike's girlfriend (scenes deleted) | |
| Edmund Cobb | ... | Policeman (scenes deleted) | |
| Frank Conroy | ... | (scenes deleted) | |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
103 min | 99 min (FMC Library Print)Country:
USALanguage:
EnglishColour:
Black and WhiteAspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreSound Mix:
4-Track Stereo (35 mm magnetic prints) (Westrex Recording System) | Mono (35 mm optical prints) (Westrex Recording System)Certification:
USA:Approved (certificate #19194) | Canada:PG (video rating) | Finland:K-16 | Sweden:15Filming Locations:
Los Angeles High School - 4650 W. Olympia Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USAFun Stuff
Trivia:
Because Orson Welles was having tax problems during the production, at the end of shooting his salary for the movie was garnisheed by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. This upset Welles so much that just before he finished looping his dialogue in post-production, he stormed off the studio and left the country. All that was left to be looped was the last 20 seconds of his end speech in the courtroom. Incredibly, editor William Reynolds fixed this problem without needing Welles. Reynolds took words and pieces of words Welles had spoken earlier in the movie, and pieced them one by one into those 20 seconds. moreQuotes:
[first lines]Judd Steiner: To the perfect crime!
Arthur Straus: Crime. Oh, my wealthy fraternity brothers. 67 dollars, and a second-hand typewriter.
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We can add Welles to Wilde, Monroe and others who we never respected until they were gone. His pleading for the lives of those crazy boys (as Clarence Darrow did) is an eloquent plea for the ending of the death penalty. Funny, how a barometer like the death penalty tells us so much about a society's relative civility. The US had backed away from it, but is now swinging back toward even public executions (which I would much prefer, as they show all of us how barbaric we have become).
Note that the movie dwells on their 'craziness' and 'richness', not the Jewishness or the homosexual relationships that evoked the wrath of the public in the real case. Both Dillman and Dean Stockwell do an excellent job of drawing out your anger until you find yourself one of the mob yelling for blood. To stem the tide, in comes Orson Welles. Welles' phrasing and meaningful looks struck me again with what a magnificent actor he was, as well as director.
Now I have to go read 'Compulsion', the novel around which this movie was made, to determine what was left out and if it would have contributed to some of the obviously omitted details that make this movie a little choppy. This movie performs the task that great art must take on itself: to provide us insights into life and how it should be lived. That can be done either negatively or positively, by point or counter-point.
Of course, unless you had some excellent writers and actors of the stature of Welles, you wouldn't come up to the quality of this movie. Definitely, black and white contributed to the brooding quality of the film. Color would have detracted, and you'll seldom 'hear' me say this.