Return From the Ashes


1h 47m 1965
Return From the Ashes

Brief Synopsis

A gigolo marries a wealthy widow, seduces her stepdaughter and plots to kill them both.

Film Details

Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Adaptation
Drama
Thriller
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
Pittsburgh opening: 13 Oct 1965
Production Company
Mirisch Corp.; Orchard Productions
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States
Location
England, United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Le retour des cendres by Hubert Monteilhet (Paris, 1961).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 47m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Synopsis

Scarred and prematurely aged Michele Wolf returns to Paris in 1945 after having been liberated from the German concentration camp at Dachau. She persuades an old friend and fellow doctor, Bovard, to reconstruct her face to look as it did before the war. As Bovard goes to work on her, she dreams of her past. Because she is Jewish, Michele flees from Germany to Paris and there meets the brilliant chess player and handsome gigolo, Stanislaus Pilgrin. She falls in love with him, and they are married. Shortly afterward, the Germans, who have occupied Paris, arrest her, leaving no traces of her; and Stanislaus and her friends assume that she is dead . Meanwhile, Stanislaus and Michele's stepdaughter, Fabienne, have been living together in her house and now plan to obtain a large inheritance bequeathed to Michele. Since they cannot prove that Michele is dead, however, they must wait 30 years before they can control the estate. Michele's operation is a success, and Fabienne, who does not recognize her stepmother, proposes to use the resemblance to gain the money. When Michele reveals her true identity, Stanislaus still plans to get the money and run away with Fabienne. Michele catches them conspiring and orders Fabienne from her house. Fabienne plots Michele's murder, but Stanislaus murders Fabienne while also planning the death of Michele. Dr. Bovard intervenes and thwarts Stanislaus' plans. Stanislaus is arrested, and Michele and Bovard remain together.

Film Details

Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Adaptation
Drama
Thriller
Release Date
Jan 1965
Premiere Information
Pittsburgh opening: 13 Oct 1965
Production Company
Mirisch Corp.; Orchard Productions
Distribution Company
United Artists
Country
United States
Location
England, United Kingdom
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel Le retour des cendres by Hubert Monteilhet (Paris, 1961).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 47m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Articles

Return from the Ashes


Only three years into what would mature into a lengthy and diverse career on stage, in films, and on television, British actress Samantha Eggar was begging her agents to get her into a comedy. By age 26, the convent-educated daughter of a brigadier general had made a name for herself within the British film industry by playing the partner in crime of Donald Pleasence's wife poisoner nonpareil Dr. Crippen (1964) and a pretty young thing whose schoolgirl amorality drives pregnant sister Patricia Neal to hysterical blindness in Psyche 59 (1964). The actress topped these dark-adapted turns by earning a Palme d'Or, a Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination as the doomed object of kidnapper Terence Stamp's unhealthy affection in The Collector (1965) but was herself the picture of perfidy in Return from the Ashes (1965), plotting the murder of stepmother (and Holocaust victim) Ingrid Thulin so she can possess the woman's husband (Maximilian Schell) and personal fortune.

Based on the 1961 French language novel Phoenix from the Ashes by Hubert Monteilhet, Return from the Ashes had been optioned originally by Monteilhet's countryman, Henri-Georges Clouzot, whose Les diaboliques (US: Diabolique, 1955) had, if not changed the shape of cinematic suspense, added some beguiling contours and set off something an international incident. Clouzot had outbid Alfred Hitchcock to obtain the screen rights to the Pierre Boileau-Thomas Narcejac novel on which Les diaboliques was based, prompting the Master of Suspense to adapt another Boileau-Narcejac work for his masterful Vertigo (1958). Though Vertigo was a box office disappointment, Hitchcock rebounded with Psycho (1960), a veritable American Les diaboliques, complete with its own classic twist in the tail. Psycho's unexpected success spawned a host of like-minded thrillers worldwide, more than a few of which came from the United Kingdom.

Britain's Hammer Film Productions put its weight behind a run of Hitchcockian psycho-thrillers, among them Seth Holt's Taste of Fear (US: Scream of Fear, 1961) and Freddie Francis' Nightmare (1964) - both written by Jimmy Sangster. Seeing profit in paranoia, United Artists, then making a significant investment in British filmmaking, partnered with the Mirisch Corporation to add Return to the Ashes to the conversation. Purchasing the rights from Clouzot, UA put screenwriter Julius J. Epstein (Casablanca) on the adaptation and brought Bristol-born director J. Lee Thompson home from Hollywood, fresh from his successes with The Guns of Navarone (1961) and Cape Fear (1962). Thompson's involvement guaranteed a significant role for Samantha Eggar, then under exclusive contract to Thompson's production company. As the avaricious Fabienne "Fabi" Wolf, she was awarded second billing, after Schell (whose preferential billing reflected his 1961 Oscar for Judgment at Nuremburg) and ahead of Thulin, the film's actual star but less of a box office draw.

Though he had gotten accustomed to working with large casts and crews in Hollywood, J. Lee Thompson had cut his teeth on small-gauge British dramas film rooted in contradictory and conflicting human passions. Two early efforts, the noir Murder Without Crime (1950) and the fact-based Yield to the Night (1956), were crime tales - the latter scripted by his first wife, Joan Henry, whose insider knowledge of the workings of the British penal system came from a 1951 conviction for fraud. Thompson may have felt an uncomfortable affinity for the love triangle at the cold black heart of Return from the Ashes, having scuttled his marriage to Henry by entering into an illicit relationship with the actress Susan Hampshire. His personal life plagued as well by alcoholism and amphetamine use, Thompson likely welcomed the time away from the corrupting influence of Tinseltown however this latest project may have seemed to reflect darker aspects of his personal life. Though set in and around Paris in the aftermath of World War II, Return from the Ashes was shot entirely on the MGM backlot at Borehamwood, the illusion of location strengthened by the importation of a large supporting cast of French character actors.

For the film's American release, United Artists crafted poster art and advertising materials that drew a tacit parallel to Psycho, announcing that "No One May Enter the Theater After Fabi Enters Her Bath." Three months later, Return from the Ashes was given a gala premiere at the Prince Charles Cinema in London but critical indifference and poor word of mouth was already killing its forward momentum. It is likely that comparisons to Psycho did the film more harm than good; an unforgettable pre-title sequence set aboard a moving train and the aforementioned bathtub setpiece notwithstanding, Return from the Ashes lacked Hitchcock's perversion and seemed, by 1966, old fashioned. UA quickly fobbed the feature off on a double bill with Walter Grauman's trashy John O'Hara adaptation A Rage to Live (1965). Untouched by the poor reception afforded Return from the Ashes, Samantha Eggar was permitted at long last to star in a comedy - the featherweight Walk, Don't Run (1966), in which her costar was Cary Grant in his final film role.

By Richard Harland Smith

Sources: British Film Makers: J. Lee Thompson by Steve Chibnall (Manchester University Press, 2000) Joan Henry obituary The Telegraph, January 1, 2001 "The Boys": Hollywood and the Awakening of a Young Writer by Leslie Epstein (lg-la.com)
Return From The Ashes

Return from the Ashes

Only three years into what would mature into a lengthy and diverse career on stage, in films, and on television, British actress Samantha Eggar was begging her agents to get her into a comedy. By age 26, the convent-educated daughter of a brigadier general had made a name for herself within the British film industry by playing the partner in crime of Donald Pleasence's wife poisoner nonpareil Dr. Crippen (1964) and a pretty young thing whose schoolgirl amorality drives pregnant sister Patricia Neal to hysterical blindness in Psyche 59 (1964). The actress topped these dark-adapted turns by earning a Palme d'Or, a Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination as the doomed object of kidnapper Terence Stamp's unhealthy affection in The Collector (1965) but was herself the picture of perfidy in Return from the Ashes (1965), plotting the murder of stepmother (and Holocaust victim) Ingrid Thulin so she can possess the woman's husband (Maximilian Schell) and personal fortune. Based on the 1961 French language novel Phoenix from the Ashes by Hubert Monteilhet, Return from the Ashes had been optioned originally by Monteilhet's countryman, Henri-Georges Clouzot, whose Les diaboliques (US: Diabolique, 1955) had, if not changed the shape of cinematic suspense, added some beguiling contours and set off something an international incident. Clouzot had outbid Alfred Hitchcock to obtain the screen rights to the Pierre Boileau-Thomas Narcejac novel on which Les diaboliques was based, prompting the Master of Suspense to adapt another Boileau-Narcejac work for his masterful Vertigo (1958). Though Vertigo was a box office disappointment, Hitchcock rebounded with Psycho (1960), a veritable American Les diaboliques, complete with its own classic twist in the tail. Psycho's unexpected success spawned a host of like-minded thrillers worldwide, more than a few of which came from the United Kingdom. Britain's Hammer Film Productions put its weight behind a run of Hitchcockian psycho-thrillers, among them Seth Holt's Taste of Fear (US: Scream of Fear, 1961) and Freddie Francis' Nightmare (1964) - both written by Jimmy Sangster. Seeing profit in paranoia, United Artists, then making a significant investment in British filmmaking, partnered with the Mirisch Corporation to add Return to the Ashes to the conversation. Purchasing the rights from Clouzot, UA put screenwriter Julius J. Epstein (Casablanca) on the adaptation and brought Bristol-born director J. Lee Thompson home from Hollywood, fresh from his successes with The Guns of Navarone (1961) and Cape Fear (1962). Thompson's involvement guaranteed a significant role for Samantha Eggar, then under exclusive contract to Thompson's production company. As the avaricious Fabienne "Fabi" Wolf, she was awarded second billing, after Schell (whose preferential billing reflected his 1961 Oscar for Judgment at Nuremburg) and ahead of Thulin, the film's actual star but less of a box office draw. Though he had gotten accustomed to working with large casts and crews in Hollywood, J. Lee Thompson had cut his teeth on small-gauge British dramas film rooted in contradictory and conflicting human passions. Two early efforts, the noir Murder Without Crime (1950) and the fact-based Yield to the Night (1956), were crime tales - the latter scripted by his first wife, Joan Henry, whose insider knowledge of the workings of the British penal system came from a 1951 conviction for fraud. Thompson may have felt an uncomfortable affinity for the love triangle at the cold black heart of Return from the Ashes, having scuttled his marriage to Henry by entering into an illicit relationship with the actress Susan Hampshire. His personal life plagued as well by alcoholism and amphetamine use, Thompson likely welcomed the time away from the corrupting influence of Tinseltown however this latest project may have seemed to reflect darker aspects of his personal life. Though set in and around Paris in the aftermath of World War II, Return from the Ashes was shot entirely on the MGM backlot at Borehamwood, the illusion of location strengthened by the importation of a large supporting cast of French character actors. For the film's American release, United Artists crafted poster art and advertising materials that drew a tacit parallel to Psycho, announcing that "No One May Enter the Theater After Fabi Enters Her Bath." Three months later, Return from the Ashes was given a gala premiere at the Prince Charles Cinema in London but critical indifference and poor word of mouth was already killing its forward momentum. It is likely that comparisons to Psycho did the film more harm than good; an unforgettable pre-title sequence set aboard a moving train and the aforementioned bathtub setpiece notwithstanding, Return from the Ashes lacked Hitchcock's perversion and seemed, by 1966, old fashioned. UA quickly fobbed the feature off on a double bill with Walter Grauman's trashy John O'Hara adaptation A Rage to Live (1965). Untouched by the poor reception afforded Return from the Ashes, Samantha Eggar was permitted at long last to star in a comedy - the featherweight Walk, Don't Run (1966), in which her costar was Cary Grant in his final film role. By Richard Harland Smith Sources: British Film Makers: J. Lee Thompson by Steve Chibnall (Manchester University Press, 2000) Joan Henry obituary The Telegraph, January 1, 2001 "The Boys": Hollywood and the Awakening of a Young Writer by Leslie Epstein (lg-la.com)

TCM Remembers - J. Lee Thompson


TCM REMEMBERS J. LEE THOMPSON, 1914 - 2002

Oscar-nominated director J. Lee Thompson died August 30th at the age of 88. Though he worked in several genres, Thompson was best-known for his action films. Thompson was born in Bristol England on August 1, 1914. After graduating from college he became a playwright and it was the appearance of one of his plays on London's famous West End that got him noticed by the British film studio, Elstree. His first filmed script was The Pride of Folly in 1937 and others appeared sporadically until his career was side-tracked during the war when Thompson served in the RAF as a B-29 tail gunner. (He also reportedly worked as a dialogue coach on Hitchcock's Jamaica Inn, 1939.) Thompson's directorial debut came in 1950 when he adapted his own play Double Error to the screen as Murder Without Crime. Throughout the decade he directed a variety of dramas and comedies until hitting it big in 1958 with Ice Cold in Alex (released in the US minus 50 minutes under the title Desert Attack). It was nominated for three BAFTAs and was enough of a commercial success that Thompson landed the film that made his career: The Guns of Navarone (1961). This enormous international hit snagged Thompson an Oscar nomination for Best Director. He immediately followed that with the original Cape Fear (1962) and his reputation was set. Though Thompson remained active almost three more decades he didn't reach that level again. He worked on Westerns (Mackenna's Gold, 1969), horror films (Eye of the Devil, 1967), literary adaptations (Huckleberry Finn, 1974) and others. During this time, Thompson directed two Planet of the Apes sequels but was kept most busy working with Charles Bronson, for whom he directed nine films. Thompson's last film was in 1989.

KATRIN CARTLIDGE, 1961 - 2002

The news of actress Katrin Cartlidge's death at the age of 41 has come as a shock. It's not just the age but the thought that even though Cartlidge was already a major actress--despite a slender filmography--she held out the promise of even greater work, a promise that so few artists of any type can make. "Fearless" is perhaps the word most often used to describe Cartlidge but emotions are never enough for an actor; much more is required. Director Mike Leigh said she had "the objective eye of an artist" while remarking on her "her deep-seated suspicion of all forms of woolly thinking and received ideas."

Cartlidge was born in London on May 15, 1961. Her first acting work was on the stage, in tiny independent theatres before she was selected by Peter Gill for the National Theatre. Cartlidge also worked as a dresser at the Royal Court where she later made one of her final stage appearances. She began appearing in the popular British TV series Brookside before making her first film in 1985, Sacred Hearts. A small role in the Robbie Coltrane-Rik Mayall vehicle Eat the Rich (1987) followed before Cartlidge had her first leading role in Mike Leigh's scathing Naked (1993).

Cartlidge never took a safe approach in her films. She told The Guardian that "I try to work with film-makers who I feel will produce something original, revealing and provoking. If something provokes a reaction, it's well worth doing." You can see this in her choice of projects. Before the Rain (1994) dramatized violence in Macedonia in the wake of the Yugoslavian break-up and made Cartlidge something of a star in the area. She appeared in Lars Von Trier's controversial look at redemption, Breaking the Waves (1996), Leigh's sharply detailed story of aging friends Career Girls (1997), as one of Jack the Ripper's victims in From Hell (2001), as a call girl trying to leave the business in Clair Dolan (1998) and in the Oscar-winning film about Bosnia-Herzegovina, No Man's Land (2001). Her last work included a BBC adaptation of Crime and Punishment (2002), playing Salvador Dali's wife Gala in the BBC comedy-drama Surrealissimo (2002) and an appearance in Rosanna Arquette's directorial debut, Searching for Debra Winger (also 2002), a documentary about women in the film industry.

Cartlidge died September 7th from septicaemia brought on by pneumonia.

TCM REMEMBERS LEO MCKERN, 1920-2002

The recent death of Leo McKern, 82, marked the passing of one of Britain's finest and most respected character actors. He was suffering from ill health in recent years and was moved to a nursing home a few weeks before his death on July 23 2002 in Bath, England. An actor of commanding presence with a deep-throated voice, the portly, bulbous-nosed McKern had a long, distinguished career spanning more than half a century, earning numerous plaudits along the way in all major mediums: theatre, film and television.

Born Reginald McKern on March 16, 1920 in Sydney, Australia; he served with the Australian Army during World War II and worked in regional theatre in his native Sydney before immigrating to England in 1946. It was a slow start, but after a three-year apprenticeship of painting scenery, stage-managing and acting, McKern eventually joined the celebrated Old Vic theatrical company in 1949 and proved one of the more versatile actors in the troupe tackling diverse roles in comedy, the classics and serious contemporary parts.

His film debut came in Murder in the Cathedral (1952) but it took a few years before he made his mark in cinema. Some of his best film work included roles as Peter Sellers' comic henchman in the classic satire The Mouse That Roared (1959); a bungling train robber in the charming Disney film The Horse Without a Head (1963); a nefarious professor who kills off his colleagues for amusement in the brilliant black comedy A Jolly Bad Fellow (1964); Clang, a cartoonish villain in the Beatles' pop film Help! (1965); Cromwell, the persecutor of Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966) and as Thomas Ryan in the David Lean drama, Ryan's Daughter (1970).

Yet despite all the accolades McKern earned in theatre and films, it was television where he foundinternational fame as the wily, irascible barrister Horace P. Rumpole in John Mortimer's Rumpole of the Bailey in 1975. Infusing the character with beguiling skill and energy, McKern made the acerbic, wine swilling, Tennyson-quoting Rumpole a much loved figure that was adored by critics, audiences and even its creator Mortimer. Perhaps Mortimer offered the most fitting tribute when he once referred to McKern - "His acting exists where I always hope my writing will be: about two feet above the ground, a little larger than life, but always taking off from reality." Enough said.

By Michael T. Toole

TCM Remembers - J. Lee Thompson

TCM REMEMBERS J. LEE THOMPSON, 1914 - 2002 Oscar-nominated director J. Lee Thompson died August 30th at the age of 88. Though he worked in several genres, Thompson was best-known for his action films. Thompson was born in Bristol England on August 1, 1914. After graduating from college he became a playwright and it was the appearance of one of his plays on London's famous West End that got him noticed by the British film studio, Elstree. His first filmed script was The Pride of Folly in 1937 and others appeared sporadically until his career was side-tracked during the war when Thompson served in the RAF as a B-29 tail gunner. (He also reportedly worked as a dialogue coach on Hitchcock's Jamaica Inn, 1939.) Thompson's directorial debut came in 1950 when he adapted his own play Double Error to the screen as Murder Without Crime. Throughout the decade he directed a variety of dramas and comedies until hitting it big in 1958 with Ice Cold in Alex (released in the US minus 50 minutes under the title Desert Attack). It was nominated for three BAFTAs and was enough of a commercial success that Thompson landed the film that made his career: The Guns of Navarone (1961). This enormous international hit snagged Thompson an Oscar nomination for Best Director. He immediately followed that with the original Cape Fear (1962) and his reputation was set. Though Thompson remained active almost three more decades he didn't reach that level again. He worked on Westerns (Mackenna's Gold, 1969), horror films (Eye of the Devil, 1967), literary adaptations (Huckleberry Finn, 1974) and others. During this time, Thompson directed two Planet of the Apes sequels but was kept most busy working with Charles Bronson, for whom he directed nine films. Thompson's last film was in 1989. KATRIN CARTLIDGE, 1961 - 2002 The news of actress Katrin Cartlidge's death at the age of 41 has come as a shock. It's not just the age but the thought that even though Cartlidge was already a major actress--despite a slender filmography--she held out the promise of even greater work, a promise that so few artists of any type can make. "Fearless" is perhaps the word most often used to describe Cartlidge but emotions are never enough for an actor; much more is required. Director Mike Leigh said she had "the objective eye of an artist" while remarking on her "her deep-seated suspicion of all forms of woolly thinking and received ideas." Cartlidge was born in London on May 15, 1961. Her first acting work was on the stage, in tiny independent theatres before she was selected by Peter Gill for the National Theatre. Cartlidge also worked as a dresser at the Royal Court where she later made one of her final stage appearances. She began appearing in the popular British TV series Brookside before making her first film in 1985, Sacred Hearts. A small role in the Robbie Coltrane-Rik Mayall vehicle Eat the Rich (1987) followed before Cartlidge had her first leading role in Mike Leigh's scathing Naked (1993). Cartlidge never took a safe approach in her films. She told The Guardian that "I try to work with film-makers who I feel will produce something original, revealing and provoking. If something provokes a reaction, it's well worth doing." You can see this in her choice of projects. Before the Rain (1994) dramatized violence in Macedonia in the wake of the Yugoslavian break-up and made Cartlidge something of a star in the area. She appeared in Lars Von Trier's controversial look at redemption, Breaking the Waves (1996), Leigh's sharply detailed story of aging friends Career Girls (1997), as one of Jack the Ripper's victims in From Hell (2001), as a call girl trying to leave the business in Clair Dolan (1998) and in the Oscar-winning film about Bosnia-Herzegovina, No Man's Land (2001). Her last work included a BBC adaptation of Crime and Punishment (2002), playing Salvador Dali's wife Gala in the BBC comedy-drama Surrealissimo (2002) and an appearance in Rosanna Arquette's directorial debut, Searching for Debra Winger (also 2002), a documentary about women in the film industry. Cartlidge died September 7th from septicaemia brought on by pneumonia. TCM REMEMBERS LEO MCKERN, 1920-2002 The recent death of Leo McKern, 82, marked the passing of one of Britain's finest and most respected character actors. He was suffering from ill health in recent years and was moved to a nursing home a few weeks before his death on July 23 2002 in Bath, England. An actor of commanding presence with a deep-throated voice, the portly, bulbous-nosed McKern had a long, distinguished career spanning more than half a century, earning numerous plaudits along the way in all major mediums: theatre, film and television. Born Reginald McKern on March 16, 1920 in Sydney, Australia; he served with the Australian Army during World War II and worked in regional theatre in his native Sydney before immigrating to England in 1946. It was a slow start, but after a three-year apprenticeship of painting scenery, stage-managing and acting, McKern eventually joined the celebrated Old Vic theatrical company in 1949 and proved one of the more versatile actors in the troupe tackling diverse roles in comedy, the classics and serious contemporary parts. His film debut came in Murder in the Cathedral (1952) but it took a few years before he made his mark in cinema. Some of his best film work included roles as Peter Sellers' comic henchman in the classic satire The Mouse That Roared (1959); a bungling train robber in the charming Disney film The Horse Without a Head (1963); a nefarious professor who kills off his colleagues for amusement in the brilliant black comedy A Jolly Bad Fellow (1964); Clang, a cartoonish villain in the Beatles' pop film Help! (1965); Cromwell, the persecutor of Sir Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons (1966) and as Thomas Ryan in the David Lean drama, Ryan's Daughter (1970). Yet despite all the accolades McKern earned in theatre and films, it was television where he foundinternational fame as the wily, irascible barrister Horace P. Rumpole in John Mortimer's Rumpole of the Bailey in 1975. Infusing the character with beguiling skill and energy, McKern made the acerbic, wine swilling, Tennyson-quoting Rumpole a much loved figure that was adored by critics, audiences and even its creator Mortimer. Perhaps Mortimer offered the most fitting tribute when he once referred to McKern - "His acting exists where I always hope my writing will be: about two feet above the ground, a little larger than life, but always taking off from reality." Enough said. By Michael T. Toole

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Opened in London in February 1966; running time: 104 min. Sources conflict in crediting the actors portraying the roles of the 2d detective and the man in the train.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Fall October 13, 1965

Released in United States Fall October 13, 1965