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I Confess (1953)
In director Hitchcock's and Warner Bros.' noirish and
somber psychological crime (melo)drama - it was based upon journalist
Paul Anthelme's 1902 French play Nos Deux Consciences (translated Our
Two Consciences), with a screenplay by George Tabori and William
Archibald. It was another of Hitchcock's 'wrong-man' thrillers although
it was one of his lesser-known, under-appreciated works in his filmography.
The contrived tale of blackmail, scandal, confessions, human suffering,
a secret love affair, murder, and guilt performed poorly at the box-office,
with revenue of only $2 million.
The solemn morality play concerned the predicament of a Catholic priest who
learned of a murder during a church confessional, and then became
the prime suspect, but due to his conflicted religious vows and personal
passivity, he was powerless to defend himself. The
film's tagline asked: "If you knew what he knew, what would
you do?" I Confess was the precursor to
Hitchcock's similarly-themed film The Wrong Man (1956).
At the time of the atmospheric and moody film's release
in the mid-1950s, French New Wave directors (i.e., Francois Truffaut,
Jean Luc Godard, and Claude Chabrol) all considered I Confess
(1953) to be a masterpiece. The musical score by Dimitri Tiomkin,
and visually-stunning, expressionistic cinematography (Robert Burks)
and religious martyrdom symbolism added
to the film's dark atmosphere.
- during and after the film's opening title sequence
set in Quebec City, Canada on an August evening, there were views
of the magnificent Château Frontenac Hotel but it was under
dark clouds; Hitchcock's cameo (his silhouetted figure walked along
the top of a steep set of stairs) was followed by many angled street
signs ("DIRECTION")
pointing to the right - toward a crime scene
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Street Signs in Quebec City, Canada
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- a tracking shot through an open window of a nearby
house revealed the dead body of a man on the floor, later identified
as lawyer Monsieur Villette (Ovila Légaré); the killer
hastily exited and ran down a dark, shadowy cobblestoned street,
wearing the disguise of a priest's cassock that he removed, before
entering Ste. Marie's Rectory in Quebec City, Canada; the rectory's
devout Roman Catholic priest Father Michael
Logan (Montgomery Clift), on the job for two years, observed from
an upper window as the man entered through a side door into the
nave; Father Logan entered the sanctuary and asked: "Who's
there?" -
the film's first line of dialogue
- the Father took a candle to the rear of the sanctuary,
and approached his caretaker-handyman Otto Keller (O.E. Hasse),
a grateful German war refugee-immigrant
who was praying in a pew; the heavily-accented Keller (who had
been working for Father Logan for six months) nervously insisted
that he must offer a confession, although it was late at night:
("I must confess to you. I must tell someone. I want to make a confession");
in the church confessional, the distressed and guilt-ridden
Keller was compelled to confess to the Father while receiving the
sacrament of penance, that he had
sinned - he had accidentally killed Mr. Villette while trying to
rob him of $2,000 dollars, to start a new life with his wife Alma
(Dolly Haas), the church's housekeeper
Otto Keller (O.E. Hasse) - Praying in the Rear of
the Church Sanctuary
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Keller's Confession of Sin in the Booth to Father
Logan
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Keller Also Confessed to His Wife Alma (Dolly Haas)
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- later that evening, Otto also revealed his dark
secret to his wife Alma that he had committed murder; he assured
her that his secret was safe, because Father Logan was barred and
forbidden from revealing information acquired by a confession:
("He cannot tell them what he heard in confession")
- the next morning, Otto proceeded to return to Villette's
house at his regularly scheduled work time, one
day a week (on Wednesdays) as a part-time gardener; back in the church,
Father Logan had breakfast with Father Millars (Charles Andre) and
Father Benoit (Gilles Pelletier); one of the film's running jokes
was Father Benoit's clumsy dealings with his bicycle
- the troubled Father Logan abruptly left the breakfast
table when he heard Alma mention that Otto was at Mr. Villette's
house for his gardening job; he briskly walked to Villette's home
and found it to be a bustling crime scene with investigators and
a crowd that had gathered; he arrived, learned of the murder, and
was ushered inside to meet Inspector Larrue (Karl Malden) in charge
of the case, claiming that he had an appointment (for an unspecified
reason); Logan overheard from Inspector Larrue how his employee
Keller had found Villette's body and reported the death to the
police; it appeared that Keller had brought
back the stolen money (as he had promised Father Logan) and then
pretended to be shocked to find Villette's body
- through Villette's front windows, Inspector Larrue
took notice that Father Logan met with a well-dressed, short-haired
blonde female on the street - he whispered to her: "Villette's
been murdered" - she responded with relief: "I can't
believe it, we're free"; [Note: she was shortly later identified
as Ruth Grandfort (Anne Baxter), the wife of Pierre Grandfort (Roger
Dann), a prominent member of the Quebec Parliament whom she met for lunch.]
- Inspector Larrue contacted Chief Crown Prosecutor
Willy Robertson (Brian Aherne), who was informed of the Villette murder
case with "no clues, no fingerprints, no motives, no suspects";
in Larrue's and Robertson's presence in the police station on Wednesday
afternoon, two young French schoolgirls (Carmen Gingras and Renée
Hudon) were called in from their school-day to testify that they
saw a priestly-dressed figure leaving Villette's house between
11:00 and 11:30 pm the previous evening (Tuesday night) while returning
home from baby-sitting
- the smug and practical-minded Larrue called Father
Logan in for further questioning that evening at the police station;
meanwhile, to hide evidence and frame Father Logan, the malicious
and villainous Otto Keller (off-screen) planted the unwashed bloody
cassock that he wore on the night of the murder in Logan's trunk
in his room
- during Father Logan's questioning,
he refused to provide any specific information about his past acquaintance
with Villette, the reason for his appointment, the
identity of the lady he met on the street, or any other possible
alibi to dogged Inspector Larrue ("I'm not able to help"); when
confronted by the fact that a priest was seen leaving Villette's
house at the time of the murder, Father Logan admitted he was out
walking with someone around 11:00 pm on the night of the murder,
but was unable to answer any further details about Larrue's questions:
"It isn't possible for me to answer them"; his
denials prompted the Inspector to suspect Father Logan's involvement;
off-screen, Larrue ordered Detective Murphy
(Judson Pratt) to trail Logan
- certain that Father Logan was guilty, Larrue immediately
contacted Robertson by phone, who was socializing that evening
at a party hosted by Ruth Grandfort and her long-suffering, jealous
husband Pierre Grandfort; after the call, Ruth asked about Prosecutor
Robertson's discussion with Larrue concerning the Villette murder
case (and learned about the suspicion of a priest's possible guilt
- "A
priest was actually seen leaving Villette's house....Larrue thinks
it's Logan from St. Marie's Church")
- after the guests had
left, Pierre noticed his wife Ruth's obvious distress about Logan's
troubling predicament - and surmised: "You're still in love
with him....What does one do when one's wife is in love with a
priest?";
Ruth directly admitted she was in an unhappy marital relationship
with Pierre: "You can leave me...I'm not in love with you.
I've never been in love with you, you know that...I've never pretended
anything with you"; alone in the study, Ruth (off-camera)
phoned Michael to plan to secretly meet with him with important
information the next morning on the 9 o'clock ferry from Québec
to Lévis
- the next day, Father Logan was trailed by Murphy
and Det. Sgt Farouche (Henry Corden) as he left the Rectory on
foot to meet up with Ruth on the ferry; during the trip, she warned
him that he was a murder suspect; she urged him to
admit to the police that they were together on the night of the
murder: ("The only thing is for me to tell them you were with
me that night"), but Logan protectively refused: ("You've
got to think of yourself, think of your husband"); she
told him that even after 7 years of marriage, she didn't love Pierre
and still loved Michael: ("I love you, Michael. I've always
been in love with you...I know it's wrong. I can't help it");
he vowed that he had "changed" and now had made the commitment
to being a priest: ("I chose to be what I am. I believe in
what I am...I want you to see things as they are and not, and not
go on hurting yourself"); in response, she turned away and
told him: "I shan't
bother you again"
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On the Ferry: Ruth to Father Logan: "I love
you, Michael"
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- after trailing and watching Logan on the ferry,
the two detectives reported back to Larrue that the female
on the ferry was also the person who had spoken to Logan outside
the Villette residence - Ruth Grandfort - they had positively identified
her after following her back to her home
- the probing Inspector Larrue began to consider that
all of Father Logan's associates were potential suspects (all of
whom eventually turned out to be 'red herrings'); he called in
both Ruth and Logan for questioning in the presence of her husband
Pierre and Chief Prosecutor Robertson; Ruth claimed that all of
her recent contacts with Father Logan were for "personal" matters;
she also described how they briefly interacted outside Villette's
home the morning after the murder, when Logan told her that Villette
had been murdered and there was no need for an appointment with
lawyer Villette; and then she added how she and Logan
had met together in her car on the previous night to discuss things
at the time of the murder - between 9 and 11 pm;
therefore, Logan couldn't have killed Villette
- Larrue pressed Ruth to learn the reason for an
appointment with Villette - she told how she was the victim of
lawyer Villette's blackmail scheme: "Monsieur
Villette was blackmailing me. I had met Father Logan to ask his
advice"; during their late-night discussion,
Father Logan had agreed to intercede for her and meet with Villette
the next morning, but obviously by that time, Villette had been discovered
dead
- in order to clear Father Logan's name and her own
reputation, Ruth was pressured into revealing - from her point
of view - her past nostalgic history and complicated former love life with Father
Logan (before he was a priest): "The blackmail was about me and Father Logan"
- Ruth narrated a series of romanticized flashbacks and montages (out of
place from the rest of the film) - to provide
what could be judged as an inappropriate or forbidden love
affair, and to explain how the murder victim had blackmailed them.
[Note: Censors undoubtedly whitewashed Ruth's and Logan's relationship
that involved a true sexual liaison and possibly an illegitimate child.]:
- she and Michael Logan had fallen
in love after being childhood friends, but when World War II
broke out and he volunteered for military service with the
Regina Rifle Regiment, he didn't want to marry and then make
her a widow: ("He asked me not to wait for him")
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Flashback: Michael Logan's and Ruth's Love Affair
Before the War
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- they lost contact after he eventually stopped writing to her; she married her employer
Pierre after working for him as his secretary,
and Ruth thought she had put Logan out of her mind: ("I thought
I was through with..."), but it was a loveless relationship;
she met Villette for the first time at her wedding
- the day after Logan returned
from the war, he and Ruth spent a summer day on a nearby
island, but she didn't tell him that she was married; a storm
forced them to miss the last ferry, and they had to shelter
for the night in a summer gazebo; Villette - the owner of
the house - found them there in the morning in a compromised
situation; Logan knocked Villette down onto the ground after he made a condescending
remark, and then Villette looked up and greeted Ruth with her married
name - "Good morning, Madame Grandfort"; for the first time, Michael
learned that Ruth was married: (Ruth: "What could I say to Michael?")
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Flashback: Villette to Ruth - "Good morning,
Madame Grandfort" - Revealing that Ruth Was Married
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- the next time Ruth saw Logan was five years
later during his ordination ceremony to be a priest - Villette
was also in the audience, and appeared to be starting to stalk
her: ("Then I began running into Villette all the time.
He appeared everywhere I went"); recently, shady shyster
lawyer Villette had approached Ruth to persuade her husband
Pierre to help him escape a tax scandal, and when she refused,
Villette threatened to blackmail her in 24 hours by publicizing
the night she spent with Logan years earlier
- fearing a personal scandal, on the night of
the murder, Ruth met with Father Logan
(until 11 pm) to get his advice without telling Pierre; the
two agreed to meet in front of Villette's house the following
morning at 9:30 am to confront the lawyer with his blackmailing
scheme, unaware that Villette had been murdered; the next morning,
Father Logan told Ruth that Villette was dead, and Ruth reacted
that she was "free"
- it appeared that Ruth had
provided a solid alibi for Logan's whereabouts; however, Inspector
Larrue discovered that the autopsy report
about Villette's death indicated that Villette had died at around
11:30 pm; this fact suggested that Logan could have had enough
time to kill Villette after speaking to Ruth, and that Villette's
blackmail scheme provided Father Logan with a motive for the murder;
Ruth's testimony had unintentionally provided the authorities with
more incriminating and entrapping evidence against Logan, making
him the prime suspect; she admitted as much to Pierre: "I was going
to help Michael, but I've destroyed him," and realized that she
did further damage to her own marriage
- Ruth met with Father Logan and alerted him
to the fact that he would soon be arrested, and wondered: "There
must be something I can do," but he felt powerless; afterwards
in the sanctuary, the craven and unstable
Otto Keller began to fear that after Father Logan's arrest, he
would expose his crime to the police and break his vow of silence
- he taunted Father Logan: ("You're trying to frighten me,
perhaps. You think by telling me that, I will give myself up....Perhaps
you'll point your finger at me. Perhaps you'll say: 'It's Keller'....Perhaps
you will tell them. You can't tell them as long as you are a priest.
Can you?");
as Alma watched in their living quarters, Keller went to his dresser
and reached for his loaded gun ("I am ready!")
- realizing that he was about to be arrested, and
without telling anyone, Father Logan aimlessly walked out of the
Rectory into the city; his sudden absence caused panic among other
priests, Keller, and Inspector Larrue; as Father Logan pondered
all of his alternatives, and after he walked below a large silhouetted
statue - a Christ-like symbol of religious martyrdom, he finally
ended up in a city cathedral to seek solace, and then calmly and
voluntarily turned himself in to Inspector Larrue in his office
- during Logan's courtroom trial, detective Murphy
testified that a search of Logan's belongings revealed
a bloody cassock (the one that Otto had planted earlier in his
patent-leather trunk); a pathologist further testified that the
cassock's blood stains were type O and matched victim Villette's
blood type; Keller testified that he saw Logan acting "distressed" as
he allegedly entered the church after the murder, a little after
11:45 pm; in the audience, a disconcerted Alma nervously watched
as her husband lied on the stand
- also on the stand, Ruth reluctantly admitted in
public that she was in love with the "accused" during
the war, at the time of her marriage, and on the night of the murder;
Chief Prosecutor Robinson then asked insinuating questions about
whether there was any additional
"illicit" contact between her and Logan ("her lover")
after their night in the summer house: "I'm trying to discover
if Villette's blackmail was based on his knowledge not merely of
one night at his home, but also of a continuous, uninterrupted,
illicit...";
she denied an on-going, long-term romantic affair with Father Logan,
although her testimony wasn't entirely convincing
Courtroom Trial Sequence
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Chief Prosecutor Robinson
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Otto Keller
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Alma Keller
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The Judge
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Ruth Grandfort
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Father Logan
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- during Logan's testimony, he rejected the accusation
that he was the owner of the bloody cassock; he also repeatedly
vowed that during the night in the gazebo with Ruth, he did not
know that she was a married woman, and he was not yet a priest
who had taken his celibacy vows; he was forced to confess that
he had hit Villette outside the gazebo "in anger," but
adamantly told the court: "I'm not capable of murder";
when asked to corroborate Keller's account of a timeline on the
night of the murder, Logan stated he arrived back at the Rectory
at 11:15 pm, and could only state a simple disagreement ("The
rest is not true"), and then he steadfastly refused to elaborate
- without his own "version of the truth"
- although the Judge personally disagreed with the
verdict, the all-male jury ultimately ruled that Father Logan -
although suspicious - was not guilty (due to insufficient evidence
about his wielding of a weapon); the large hostile mob outside
the courthouse that disapproved of the acquittal harassed and almost
crushed Logan to death as he left the courthouse
- Otto's conscience-stricken wife Alma Keller was
so upset by the trial, and the danger that Father Logan was facing,
that she rushed to his side to do what's right and defend him, and
started to shout out that her husband was the murderer and that
Logan was innocent: ("Stop it. He's innocent. My husb...");
the worried Otto, realizing that he was about to be revealed as
the murderer, pulled out his gun and shot Alma in the midst of
the crowd; as the crowd dispersed and Alma was dying, Larrue asked
what she had shouted, and another officer replied: "She said
he was innocent"; confused, Larrue
queried Alma: "What about Villette, Mrs. Keller?"; she
only responded to the Father and begged him: "Forgive me" before
she died - sacrificing herself for Otto's sins
- Otto fled into the nearby Château Frontenac hotel where he was pursued by Murphy
and other police officers, Larrue and Father Logan; the desperate
Keller shot and killed a chef in the kitchen, and then was cornered
in the grand ballroom; Larrue was flabbergasted that Logan wouldn't
explain Keller's motive to shoot his wife: "What was she doing? Was
she trying to warn you or save you?...What more can you tell me about
him?....Father, what are you trying to do? Protect this Keller?"
- surrounded by police and ordered to surrender, the
defiant Otto moved about the ballroom's stage and main floor area;
when Larrue asked him: "What about Villette?", Otto
responded with a self-incriminating answer: "So the priest talked";
he was unknowingly tricked into accusing
the Father of breaking his vow of silence and betraying him to
the police: "My only friend, Father Logan. How kindly he hears
my confession and then a little shame, a little violence, that's
all it takes to make him talk. It was too much for you, huh? You
are a coward like all other people, aren't you? A hypocrite like
all the rest"; thus, he hypocritically admitted and confessed to his own sinful
act of murder; as he ranted, Inspector Larrue
finally deduced that the reprehensible Otto Keller was Villette's murderer
- Larrue ordered his police sharpshooter to wound
Otto in the right shoulder; Logan attempted to warn Otto: ("Don't
make them do it, Keller!"), but Otto fired first and
was struck and mortally wounded; defying orders and putting himself
in great danger, Logan entered the ballroom and slowly approached
to talk to the dying Otto and prevent further gunfire and violence:
("Put the gun away. There's been enough bloodshed
already"); Otto threatened to shoot Logan, but the fearless
Father continued walking toward him; when Keller was told of his
wife Alma's death, he blamed Logan as the "guilty" one;
ironically, Keller had murdered the woman he loved and wanted to
save, in order to save himself; he insanely rationalized
that he would put the Father out of his misery: ("To
kill you now would be a favor to you"); as he raised his gun,
Keller was shot a second time; he fell into Logan's arms and in
his last dying breath, asked to have his sins absolved
"Put the gun away, There's been enough bloodshed already"
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"To kill you now would be a favor to you"
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The Dying Keller to Father Logan: "Forgive
me"
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Hitchcock's Cameo - Shortly After the Opening Title Credits
Sequence
Crime Scene - Dead Body of Murdered Victim (Mr. Villette)
Killer - Dressed in Priest's Garb, Fleeing From the Scene
Roman Catholic Priest Father Michael Logan (Montgomery
Clift)
Inspector Larrue (Karl Malden)
Ruth Grandfort (Anne Baxter) With Father Logan Outside the Villette Residence
After the Murder
Ruth With Her Husband Pierre Grandfort (Roger Dann) in the Quebec Parliament
Chief Crown Prosecutor Willy Robertson (Brian Aherne)
Two Young Schoolgirls Testifying That They Saw a Priest-Figure Leaving
the Murder Scene
Logan Refusing to Answer Questions Presented by the Dogged Inspector Larrue:
"I'm not able to help"
Ruth (off-camera) Phoning Logan to Plan To Meet Up With Him on the Ferry
Intense Questioning of Ruth by Inspector Larrue About Her Late
Night "Personal" Meeting with Father Logan
Ruth's Flashback
Flashback: At the End of the War, Ruth and Logan Met Up Again For a Summer
Day and Night
Villette's Blackmail Threat Against Ruth
The Unstable Keller Worried That After Logan's Arrest, He Would Break
His Vow of Silence
Father Logan Walking in the City, Pondering Whether to Turn Himself In
or Not - as a Martyr
Logan Calmly and Voluntarily Turning Himself In to Larrue
The Hostile Mob Facing the Acquitted Logan After the Trial
Alma Rushing to Father Logan's Side and Pointing Back to Otto: "Stop it.
He's innocent. My husb..."
Otto Silenced His Wife Alma in the Crowd
Alma's Death After Asking Logan's Forgiveness
Otto Keller Cornered and Seriously Wounded in a Hotel's
Ballroom
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