Madeleine

Here are the virile, violent facts that caused the most famous jury verdict in history...

6.7
19501h 55m

Madeleine's middle-class family cannot understand why she puts off marrying a respectable young man, as they know nothing about her long-term affair with a Frenchman.

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Madeleine 1950 trailer

Madeleine 1950 trailer

Cast

Photo of Ann Todd

Ann Todd

Madeleine Hamilton Smith

Photo of Norman Wooland

Norman Wooland

William Minnoch

Photo of Ivan Desny

Ivan Desny

Emile L'Angelier

Photo of Leslie Banks

Leslie Banks

James Smith

Photo of Elizabeth Sellars

Elizabeth Sellars

Christina Haggott

Photo of André Morell

André Morell

Defense Attorney

Photo of Barbara Everest

Barbara Everest

Mrs. Smith

Photo of Susan Stranks

Susan Stranks

Janet Smith

Photo of Patricia Raine

Patricia Raine

Bessie Smith

Photo of Barry Jones

Barry Jones

Prosecuting Attorney

Photo of Jean Cadell

Jean Cadell

Mrs. Jenkins

Photo of Irene Browne

Irene Browne

Mrs. Grant

Photo of John Laurie

John Laurie

Scots Divine

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Ann Todd becomes better as she plays herself into the character of a rather devious and unscrupulous girl in this adaptation of a famous Glasgow murder (or, perhaps that should be murrrrdurrrr) tale from 1857. "Madeleine" is the daughter in a well-to-do family whose father (a seriously authoritarian Leslie Banks) can't quite figure out why she won't marry a suitable young man - unawares that she has been having a fling with an equally unscrupulous Frenchman who has his sights set on her family's wealth. His attempts at blackmail terminally backfire and before long she is on trial for his killing. The subsequent courtroom drama features strong performances from Barry Jones and André Morell as the barristers and this helps lift this rather slow-moving drama along to quite a gripping denouement (an unique peculiarity of the Scottish legal system). Maybe not David Lean's best or most notable work, but you can see his hallmark style all over this. (PS: keep an ear out for a wonderfully presbyterian performance from John Laurie - you will recognise his voice long before he comes into shot).

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