We Are All Murderers Explained

We Are All Murderers
Director:André Cayatte
Producer:François Carron
Music:Raymond Legrand
Cinematography:Jean Bourgoin
Editing:Paul Cayatte
Studio:Union Générale Cinématographique
Jolly Film
Labor Film Produzione
Distributor:L'Alliance Générale de Distribution Cinématographique
Runtime:115 minutes
Country:France
Italy
Language:French

We Are All Murderers (French: Nous sommes tous des assassins, Italian: Siamo tutti assassini) is a 1952 French-Italian crime drama film written and directed by André Cayatte and starring Marcel Mouloudji, Raymond Pellegrin and Claude Laydu.[1] [2] It was shot at the Boulogne Studios in Paris. The film's sets were designed by the art director Jacques Colombier. It tells the story of René, a young man from the slums, trained by the French Resistance in World War II to kill Germans. He continues to kill long after the war has ended, as it is all he knows.It was entered into the 1952 Cannes Film Festival and won the Special Jury Prize.[3]

Plot

René Le Guen (Marcel Mouloudji) is a former resistance fighter trained as a young man as a professional killer. After World War II, he has no qualms in applying these skills and is arrested for murder. Convicted and condemned to death, he is held in a prison cell with other murderers sentenced to death. Men to be guillotined are taken out at night, so they wait in fear and only sleep after dawn. While Le Guen's lawyer (Claude Laydu) tries to achieve a pardon for his client, three of Le Guen's fellow inmates are executed, one by one, in the course of the film.

Cayatte used his films to reveal the inequities and injustice of the French system, and protested against capital punishment.

Cast

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Crisp p.235
  2. Hutton p.92
  3. Web site: Festival de Cannes: We Are All Murderers . 2009-01-18. festival-cannes.com.