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The Long Night

The Long Night

  • Status: Released
  • 28-05-1947
  • Runtime: 101 min
  • Score: 5.743
  • Vote count: 35

City police surround a building, attempting to capture a suspected murderer. The suspect knows there is no escape but refuses to give in.

Henry Fonda

Joe Adams

Barbara Bel Geddes

Jo Ann

Vincent Price

Maximilian the Great

Ann Dvorak

Charlene

Howard Freeman

Sheriff Ned Meade

Moroni Olsen

Chief of Police Bob McManus

Elisha Cook Jr.

Frank Dunlap

Queenie Smith

Mrs. Tully

David Clarke

Bill Pulanski

Charles McGraw

Policeman Stevens

Melinda Byron

Peggy

Davis Roberts

Freddie

Murray Alper

Mac - Bartender (uncredited)

Ellen Corby

Observer in Crowd (uncredited)

Byron Foulger

Man with Bike (uncredited)

Mary Gordon

Old Woman in Crowd (uncredited)

Ray Teal

Mr. Hudson (uncredited)

Will Wright

Mr. Tully - the Janitor (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

The claustrophobic setting and the photography here really do promise much, but as the story unravels it becomes all a bit disappointing. Henry Fonda is beleaguered war veteran “Joe” who has returned to discover that a lot has changed since his departure. For a start, his beloved “Jo Ann” (Barbara Bel Geddes) turns out to have been slightly economical with the truth about her relationship with the odious magician “Max” (Vincent Price). On that front, his former assistant “Charlene” (Ann Dvorak) is not entirely unknown to “Joe” either. Now this is told via flashback, and so we know that “Joe” is holed up in an apartment that’s been riddled by official bullets and that someone is dead at his hands. What we don’t yet know is who and why. That explanation doesn’t work so well here, despite a strong effort from Fonda and a gently engaging one from the ladies. Price has the best role in the story, I think, but he just over-eggs his character and what little sense of jeopardy the flashbacks allow is replaced by more than an hint of rather stolidly played out love-quadrangle melodrama. It’s based on a much grittier story by Jacques Viot - that has nothing to do with war, veterans nor psychological exhaustion, and that imbues the characters with much more nuance and passion than we see here as “Joe” is almost given excuses for his behaviour by his traumatic experiences in France. Sadly, after a really compelling and dark start it heads to a conclusion that just leaves very little to the imagination.