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IMDbPro

Juste avant la nuit

  • 1971
  • X
  • 1h 46m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
Stéphane Audran, Michel Bouquet, Anna Douking, and François Périer in Juste avant la nuit (1971)
CrimeDrama

Charles Masson, an advertising executive, is having an affair with Laura, the wife of his best friend, the architect François Tellier. Charles strangles Laura when one of their S&M games goe... Read allCharles Masson, an advertising executive, is having an affair with Laura, the wife of his best friend, the architect François Tellier. Charles strangles Laura when one of their S&M games goes too far. Dazed, Charles walks out of the borrowed apartment in Paris and soon bumps into... Read allCharles Masson, an advertising executive, is having an affair with Laura, the wife of his best friend, the architect François Tellier. Charles strangles Laura when one of their S&M games goes too far. Dazed, Charles walks out of the borrowed apartment in Paris and soon bumps into François in a nearby bistro. They drive back together to Versailles, where they have beau... Read all

  • Director
    • Claude Chabrol
  • Writers
    • Claude Chabrol
    • Edouard Atiyah
  • Stars
    • Celia
    • Marina Ninchi
    • Michel Bouquet
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Claude Chabrol
    • Writers
      • Claude Chabrol
      • Edouard Atiyah
    • Stars
      • Celia
      • Marina Ninchi
      • Michel Bouquet
    • 24User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Photos36

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    Top cast22

    Edit
    Celia
    • Jacqueline
    Marina Ninchi
    • Gina Mallardi
    Michel Bouquet
    Michel Bouquet
    • Charles Masson
    Stéphane Audran
    Stéphane Audran
    • Hélène Masson
    François Périer
    François Périer
    • François Tellier
    Jean Carmet
    Jean Carmet
    • Jeannot
    Dominique Zardi
    Dominique Zardi
    • Prince
    Henri Attal
    Henri Attal
    • Cavanna
    Paul Temps
    • Bardin
    Daniel Lecourtois
    Daniel Lecourtois
    • Dorfmann
    Clelia Matania
    Clelia Matania
    • Mme Masson
    • (as Clélia Matania)
    Pascal Gillot
    • Auguste Masson
    Brigitte Périn
    • Joséphine Masson
    Marcel Gassouk
    Marcel Gassouk
    • Barman
    Anna Douking
    • Laura Tellier
    Roger Lumont
    • Commissaire Delfeil
    Gilbert Servien
    • Un policier
    Dominique Marcas
    Dominique Marcas
    • Mme Ortiz
    • Director
      • Claude Chabrol
    • Writers
      • Claude Chabrol
      • Edouard Atiyah
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews24

    7.22.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8kurtralske

    Crime and Punishment, 70s-style

    "Just Before Nightfall" is a slow, grim, gritty, no-nonsense film. It seems as if director Claude Chabrol is saying to the viewer, "Look, don't expect to be charmed or pleased by this film -- that would be pointless for everyone. I'm interested in one thing, and one thing only: the theme of the story. Anything else would be a pointless distraction." If the viewer is willing to go along with Chabrol for the ride, Just Before Nightfall is a rich and moving film.

    "Just Before Nightfall" is not a whodunnit, or even a why-dunnit. "It" -- a murder -- kind of just happened, possibly accidentally, and the question facing the characters is: what shall we do about it, now? The lead character knows he is guilty, and his desire to conceal his guilt slowly changes to a desire to confess his guilt. In this, he is like the character of Raskolnikov in Dostoevski's "Crime and Punishment". More astonishing is how his friends and family respond to his confession: they are eager to forgive and forget, to deny and bury the past. And this, in turn, creates an even worse situation for the anti-hero.

    1971 was dark moment, politically and culturally. Many films of that year feel like they are suffering from a hangover from the 60s: the time of exuberant exploration and new possibilities has passed, and in its place is a cosmic-scale exhaustion and hopelessness. You see this kind of industrial-strength bleakness in US films like "Five Easy Pieces", "Carnal Knowledge", "Two-Lane Blacktop". If you enjoy 70s bleakness, or, you are interested in guilt and forgiveness, or, you want to watch a director go after his message with an intensely single-minded focus -- then "Just Before Nightfall" is well worth your time.
    PeggyLee

    A middle-class morality tale, a compassionate study of a murderer

    An extraordinary film. Chabrol turns his keen eye and powers of observation to middle-class morality and psychological torment, never losing his rich sense of humor. The characters are complex and their motivations not always easy to discern. Chabrol views them caustically but also with compassion. It is part of a series of several terrific films he made between 1968 and 1973. Most fans of Chabrol consider this his pre-eminent period, and this film one of his very best.
    10Theaetetus

    A Study in Moral Complexity

    This is the most morally exquisite of Chabrol's many explorations of the human condition. Guilt, forgiveness, revenge coexist and mutually triumph. Many of us assume these three moral stances are mutually incompatible. Chabrol balances them against each other and then fuses them together. The actors reveal their inner dilemmas with gestures more than words. Deep intentions run across surface motives. And the final gesture of this compelling film casts all that went before into another, deeper level. Of course, no deed is as simple as it seems. But few appreciate as Chabrol does here that our all too common morally mixed motives can continue to coexist to the grave. No evil deed is ever straightforward, but neither are the best ones.

    Had Chabrol filmed this in the style of Bergman, this film would be a Criterion Classic. But filmed as a thriller, it has sadly failed to gain the audience and admiration it so richly deserves. It is a philosophical triumph!
    8oOgiandujaOo_and_Eddy_Merckx

    cold, pneumonic, black

    I love a line in this movie from the executive Masson, he said he had his house designed by a modern architect to avoid the sclerosis of becoming bourgeois. Thats exactly what I think when I see modernist furniture and architecture. It's made for future people, dysfunction-free, productive, and clairvoyant. Only that's not quite how it works out. Here we have post-bourgeois people, who find themselves, like all the best swimmers, more likely to drown. They try to reinvent morality and instead trespass into treacherous areas which the ignorant forbid themselves through superstition, in the process jettisoning the wisdom of ages.

    Yes this is a Chabrol film but don't believe it's a thriller, what we have here is more along the lines of Bergman. The police in this film are portrayed as merely being obnoxious, a nuisance to everyone involved in the murder. We are constantly waiting for the detective Cavanna to disappear from the screen.

    We have a view here of people whom I'm sure Matthew Barney would call almost crystalline, devoid of potentiality. The film is so awful in this respect that it almost made me glad that we only tend to live eighty years. The tired-eyed men in this movie are weighed down with disillusion and regret, waiting for the end, their successes mere dust. Just before the night, indeed. Gone are their protean days, gone are the Alpheuses of youth. It's not so much a murder thriller as an essay into death. Masson, Tellier et al would welcome the cool breeze whispering through the cypresses on the island of the dead. One startling shot from a train shows Paris in twilight, looking grubby and ready for death itself.

    I think more than anything this film is about mortality. Nowhere do we see hot blood in this film, only palsy and the damp skin of the pneumonic, the husband of the mudered woman even comforts the murderer. One part of the movie that I find astonishing is when Masson sees his employee of many many years, who has just been caught embezzling by the police and is now in custody. Masson looks at him with compassion, but the old man, who is now in a sense freer than he ever has been, looks him straight in the eye and tells him to screw himself. Masks off and a bonfire of the vanities.

    This film is concentrated sulphuric acid, for more of the same see Les Bonnes Femmes and Les Cousins.
    7Bunuel1976

    JUST BEFORE NIGHTFALL (Claude Chabrol, 1971) ***

    Though coming from Chabrol's major phase (1967-1975), this was only recently released on DVD – and exclusively on R2 at that!; still, I had missed an incongruous Saturday morning broadcast of the film on Italian TV several years back. Ironically, even if it can lay a claim to being among the director's best-regarded efforts, I admit to having found such lesser-known Chabrol titles as DEATH RITE (1976) and ALICE OR THE LAST ESCAPADE (1977) – both of which immediately preceded this viewing – more readily satisfying…though the fact that JUST BEFORE NIGHTFALL treads typically bourgeois i.e. inherently mundane territory, whereas the others were fanciful (thus essentially lightweight), may have had more to do with this than anything else!

    Actually, my main quibble with the film is its overlength (due to the protagonist's wallowing in self-pity, this being basically an update of Dostoyevsky's literary classic "Crime And Punishment", during the last act); in a way, it is also a reversal of Chabrol's own LA FEMME INFIDELE (1969), with the very same stars (Michel Bouquet and Stephane Audran) no less. In the latter she is initially oblivious – and eventually forgiving – of his having learnt about her infidelity and murdered the other man, while here it is he who has a clandestine affair, kills the woman concerned and then confesses to both the wife and his best friend (husband of the deceased and played by Francois Perier), both of whom try to convince the guilt-stricken hero thereafter not to give himself up to the Police (she even taking extreme measures to this end)! Audran, still at the height of her statuesque beauty, is a particular delight and she went on to win a BAFTA award for it (shared for the actress' famously unruffled turn in that Luis Bunuel masterpiece THE DISCREET CHARM OF THE BOURGEOISIE [1972]).

    A subplot, then, depicts a comparable folly to the protagonist's – where the elderly and meek-looking cashier in Bouquet's firm embezzles funds to sustain his unlikely romance with a much younger woman (not that the perennially exhausted hero bore the looks of a Casanova himself but, at least, his sluttish mistress is clearly shown to be into sado-masochism). Ultimately, such ironic yet provocative (indeed quasi-surrealist) psychological nuances, are what make Chabrol's work so intriguing and quietly rewarding – more so, in fact, than perhaps any other of the "Nouvelle Vague" film-makers.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This is the last film of Claude Chabrol's 'Hélène cycle', in which actress Stéphane Audran starred, playing characters called Hélène in The Unfaithful Wife (1969), Le boucher (1970), and The Breach (1970). The only film in the cycle which Audran didn't star in was Que la Bête Meure (1969), the role of a character called Hélène was instead played by Caroline Cellier.
    • Connections
      Version of The Stranger Within a Woman (1966)
    • Soundtracks
      Silent Night
      Original lyrics by Joseph Mohr and music by Franz Xaver Gruber, French lyrics by unknown lyricst

      Played and sung in the Christmas morning scene

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 31, 1971 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Italy
      • France
    • Language
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Just Before Nightfall
    • Filming locations
      • Le Touquet, Pas-de-Calais, France(beach)
    • Production companies
      • Cinegai S.p.A.
      • Cinemar
      • Les Films de la Boétie
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 46 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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