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LE RÉCUPÉRATEUR DE CADAVRES

The Body Snatcher

1945 US HMDB
mai 25, 1945

Edimbourg, XIXe siècle. Le docteur MacFarlane fait appel aux services du voleur de cadavres Gray pour les besoins de ses expériences médicales. Malheureusement ce dernier, faute de cadavres frais, va rapidement trouver une nouvelle source d'approvisionnement terriblement macabre...

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Equipe

Production: Jack J. Gross (Executive Producer)
Scenario: Val Lewton (Screenplay)Philip MacDonald (Screenplay)
Musique: Roy Webb (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Robert De Grasse (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Alessio Gradogna
Édimbourg, 1831 : le professeur MacFarlane, étudiant en anatomie, a besoin de corps pour continuer ses expériences, les illustrer à ses étudiants, et pour sauver la vie d'une petite fille malade. À lui fournir la "matière première" est un cocher sans scrupules, abject et diabolique, qui, dans un premier temps, vole les cadavres dans les cimetières, puis se les procure directement par le meurtre, finissant par faire chanter le docteur, qui le tuera mais qui, par remords, finira par devenir fou. L'un des meilleurs films d'horreur des années 1940, tiré d'une nouvelle de Stevenson, voilé sur les suggestions typiques du cinéma de Val Lewton (ici producteur et scénariste), malsain et riche en ambiguïtés dans la manière de montrer avec précision les mérites et surtout les limites de l'usage inconditionnel de la science médicale qui, dans son ambition débridée, peut conduire à l'autodestruction. À enrichir le film, la présence des deux acteurs-icônes Bela Lugosi et Boris Karloff (l'un des rares films dans lesquels on les voit ensemble), avec ce dernier, dans le rôle du cocher fou, remportant définitivement le défi, grâce aussi à une excellente réalisation qui le place continuellement en contrastes de lumières et d'ombres qui en soulignent avec une efficacité absolue son caractère répugnant.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (1)

John Chard

John Chard

9 /10

Grave robbing is one thing, but murder is quite another.

Dr. MacFarlane and John Gray share a murky past, but just what is this hold that the lurching Gray has over the eminent Doctor?. Based on a Robert Louis Stevenson short story, The Body Snatcher contains tight direction from Mr Versatile, Robert Wise - all the classy Gothicism one comes to expect from producer Val Lewton - and a stunningly effective performance from Boris Karloff. The piece neatly puts itself out as a kind of sequel to the infamous story of Burke & Hare, where here our main protagonists are clouded over by a link to the dastardly duo who purloined cadavers for cash in the 1820s.

What stands out with this picture is the wonderful pacing, nothing is rushed to try and jolt fear into the viewer, it's sedate and framed in a marvellous Gothic texture by the makers. The core story line is of course one of great distaste, but this is a medical quandary in the name of research that makes for a thought provoking narrative. We are put into a position very early on where we so want to see a young girl cured of her ills, and thus this axis of the film is neatly surrounded by the lurking horror that begins to unfold. You have to suggest that this is great writing from Stevenson, Lewton & MacDonald.

Boris Karloff is Gray, a large shuffling man who is the body snatcher of the title, he be a smirking and well spoken Gent, which really shouldn't be scary, and yet Karloff manages to chill the blood in every scene that he is in. Henry Daniell is MacFarlane, a very emotive performance as the character is twisted by his pursuit of medical achievements whilst having Gray's looming presence constantly hovering over him. Rounding out the cast with thespian effect is Russell Wade as protégé in waiting, Donald Fettes, Bela Lugosi (a classic horror fans dream comes real in one great sequence with Karloff) as Joseph, and Edith Atwater as loyal love interest Meg Camden.

However, the actors all play second fiddle to the makers' work here. Gloomy cobbled streets come shining to the fore, Gray's hovel like abode is cloaked in dark shadows with the odd flicker of fire light, while the stone surrounds come across as monolithic structures. Some great sequences as well, a particular one uses the characters' shadows to tell the story under the watchful gaze of Gray's cat, and then the final reel, which is mood personified and perfectly puts closure on this fine piece of fevered Gothic work. Highly recommended. 8/10

Avis fournis par TMDB