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The 25th Hour (film)

(redirected from The 25th Hour (1967 film))
The 25th Hour
(La Vingt-cinquième Heure)
A25 heure.jpg
Film poster by Howard Terpning
Directed byHenri Verneuil
Produced byCarlo Ponti
Written byFrançois Boyeur
Wolf Mankowitz
Henri Verneuil
StarringAnthony Quinn
Virna Lisi
Music byGeorges Delerue
Maurice Jarre
CinematographyAndreas Winding
Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date
  • 16 February 1967 (US)
  • 26 April 1967 (France)
Running time
196 minutes (Europe)
CountryFrance
Italy
Yugoslavia
LanguageFrench
English
Romanian

The 25th Hour (French: La Vingt-cinquième Heure) is a 1967 anti-war drama film directed by Henri Verneuil and starring Anthony Quinn and Virna Lisi.[1] It was produced by Carlo Ponti.[2] The film is based on the best selling novel by C. Virgil Gheorghiu.[3] It follows the troubles experienced by a Romanian peasant couple caught up in World War II.[4]

Plot

In a small Transylvanian village in Romania, a local police constable frames Johann Moritz (Quinn) on charges of being Jewish, because Moritz' wife, Suzanna, has refused his advances. Moritz is sent to a Romanian concentration camp as a Jew, Jacob Moritz. He escapes to Hungary with some Jewish prisoners, where the Hungarians imprison them for being citizens of an enemy country (Romania). The Hungarian authorities eventually send them to Germany to fill German "requests" for foreign labourers. In Germany, Moritz is spotted by an SS officer who designates him as an Aryan German-Romanian, freeing him from the labour camp and forcing him to join the Waffen-SS. After the war, Moritz is brutally beaten by the Soviets for having been a member of the Waffen-SS; he is then arrested and prosecuted as a war criminal by the Americans. Eventually he is released and re-united with his wife and sons in occupied Germany.

The movie is based on the novel of the same name by Constantin Virgil Gheorghiu. The story line includes Hungary's alliance with Nazi Germany, the forced cession of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina to the Soviet Union in 1940, and subsequent events in Central Europe during and after the Second World War.

Cast

References

  1. ^ "La 25e Heure (1967)". BFI.
  2. ^ "The 25th Hour (1967) - Articles - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies.
  3. ^ "C. Virgil Gheorghiu; Romanian Author, 75". June 24, 1992 – via NYTimes.com.
  4. ^ "La Vingt-Cinquième Heure (1967) - Henri Verneuil | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related". AllMovie.

External links

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