A hard-line judge is tempted toward mercy-killing by his wife's terminal cancer.
982 people rated
🔇
Le droit de tuer
1948
R
1 h 31 m
États-Unis
Crime
Drame
Film-Noir
A hard-line judge is tempted toward mercy-killing by his wife's terminal cancer.
More
6.9 /10
982 people rated
Regarder en ligne
Dans l’appli
Épisodes
film
lklk
Netflix
Plex
Bande-annonce
Meilleurs acteurs(18)
Fredric March
Judge Calvin Cooke
Edmond O'Brien
David Douglas
Florence Eldridge
Catherine Cooke
Geraldine Brooks
Ellie Cooke
Stanley Ridges
Doctor Walter Morrison
John McIntire
Judge Ogden
Frederic Tozere
Charles Dayton
Will Wright
Judge Jim Wilder
Virginia Brissac
Mrs. Russell
Francis McDonald
Mr. Russell
Mary Servoss
Julia
Don Beddoe
Pearson
Clarence Muse
Mr. Pope
Charles Bedell
Barker
Maurice Brierre
Pedestrian
Paul E. Burns
Old Man with Dog
Joël Colin
Boy
Pat Combs
Young Man
Avis des utilisateurs
Sarah Hassan
08/06/2023 01:27
Moviecut—An Act of Murder
Diarra
29/05/2023 22:23
source: An Act of Murder
glow princess
16/11/2022 13:41
An Act of Murder
Mauriiciia Lepfoundz
16/11/2022 02:04
Fredric march is the stern judge here forced to deal with his wife's terminal illness. Interesting to note that at no time in the film does the term inoperable brain tumor spoken despite the fact that this is the problem facing Florence Eldridge, the judge's wife and real life wife of March.
Our judge is forced to reexamine his attitude and ethics in this excellent moral dilemma.
Eldridge is in fine form as the doomed wife and Geraldine Brooks is perky but on spot as the daughter.
The ending may be viewed by some as a cop out once it is revealed how the wife really died. Yet this solution may also cause an ethical dilemma.
Mother of memes
16/11/2022 02:04
Fascinating Film that Daringly Approaches the Subject of Euthanasia. In Doing so it also has Liberal Elements Inserted about the Rigid Judicial System that has a Tendency Toward Antiquated ("Powdered Wigs") by the Book Procedures.
Edmond O'Brien is the Lawyer that Questions a Hard-Boiled Judge, while Dating His Daughter. The Judge Played by Fredric March goes through a Tumultuous Time Dealing with His Wife's Terminal Illness. But the Acting Accolades must go to Florence Eldridge who Gives a Riveting Performance.
This Thoughtful Piece of Social Commentary is Rich and Rewarding with Taut and Suspenseful Scenes that can at Times be Heartbreaking. This is an Odd Movie to be Sure, and is Well Worth a Watch for its Genuine Concern about Troubling Things that are Rarely Discussed (especially in 1948), but Linger on the Fringe of Everyday Life.
Maria Nsue
16/11/2022 02:04
This film's relentless plotline marches straight-ahead forward as you squirm, fascinated, in your chair. The story is the familiar one about the onset of terminal illness within a solid American family of the 1940s. Never mind that it delves into MGM-style sermonizing; the great real-life husband/wife team of Fredric March and Florence Eldridge portray the couple whose once-comfortable lives are now being separated by an unstoppable and fast-advancing disease. The helpless husband, the uncomplaining wife, and their final attempt to recapture happier days with a doomed weekend outing is the stuff of deep film drama indeed. The sense of onrushing darkness is tangible through the film-noir camera shadings of Hal Mohr (Captain Blood, Phantom of the Opera [1943], The Climax), and Daniele Amfitheatrof's rich musical score. "An Act of Murder" makes a profound statement on the value, and the fragility, of life.