Promise at Dawn


1h 41m 1970

Film Details

Also Known As
La promesse de l'aube
MPAA Rating
Genre
Biography
Drama
Release Date
Jan 1970
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 16 Dec 1970
Production Company
Avco Embassy Pictures Corp.; Nathalie Films
Distribution Company
Avco Embassy Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play First Love by Samuel Taylor (New York opening: 25 Dec 1961) and the novel La promesse de l'aube by Romain Gary (Paris, 1960).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 41m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Synopsis

Nina Kacew, a flamboyant Russian actress who appears in silent films made in Leningrad during the 1920's, has grandiose ambitions for her 9-year-old son, Romain, and devotes her life to making them come true. Attempting to end her affair with movie idol Ivan Mosjoukine (who Romain later learns is his father), Nina joins an acting troupe that ends its tour in Krakow, Poland, where Nina pretends to represent a Paris designer and opens a dress shop. When her fraud is exposed, Nina takes Romain to Nice and befriends Jean-Michel Serusier, a jeweler. In order to pay for Romain's education, Nina plunges into a variety of jobs. Encouraged by his mother to pursue a literary career, Romain attempts to fulfill her ambitions, especially when he learns that she is suffering from diabetes. When World War II breaks out, Romain joins the French Air Force and later the R.A.F. in England. Wounded in action, he recuperates in a North African hospital, where Nina's letters still manage to reach him, each one expressing her love and belief in him. After France's liberation, Romain returns to Nice a hero and plans to present to Nina the Cross of the Liberation he was awarded by General de Gaulle. He learns, however, that Nina died more than 2 years ago but had written 250 letters in advance to sustain him through the war.

Film Details

Also Known As
La promesse de l'aube
MPAA Rating
Genre
Biography
Drama
Release Date
Jan 1970
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 16 Dec 1970
Production Company
Avco Embassy Pictures Corp.; Nathalie Films
Distribution Company
Avco Embassy Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the play First Love by Samuel Taylor (New York opening: 25 Dec 1961) and the novel La promesse de l'aube by Romain Gary (Paris, 1960).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 41m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (DeLuxe)

Articles

Jules Dassin (1911-2008) - TCM Schedule Change for Director Jules Dassin Memorial Tribute on Friday, April 20th


In Tribute to director Jules Dassin, who died Monday, March 31st, at age 96, TCM is changing its evening programming on Sunday, April 20th to honor the actor with a double-feature salute.

Sunday, April 20th
8:00 PM Naked City
9:45 PM Topkapi


TCM REMEMBERS JULES DASSIN (1911-2008)

Jules Dassin gained experience in theater and radio in New York before going to work in Hollywood in 1940, first with RKO (as assistant director) and then with MGM. Dassin hit his stride in the late 1940s with such dynamic (and still well-regarded) film noir melodramas as "Brute Force" (1947), "The Naked City" (1948), "Thieves' Highway" (1949) and "Night and the City" (1950), starring Richard Widmark who died this past Monday, March 24th.

After being blacklisted he moved to Europe, where he scored his greatest international successes with the French-produced "Rififi" (1955) and the then-scandalous "Never on Sunday" (1959), starring his second wife Melina Mercouri. For the most part, his later films--such as "Up Tight" (1968), an ill-conceived black remake of John Ford's 1935 classic "The Informer"--have been disappointing and inconclusive. Dassin, however, maintained that among his own films, his personal preference was "He Who Must Die" (1958), starring his wife Melina Mercouri. It is one of his least known films and is rarely screened today but here is a description of it: "Greece, in the 1920's, is occupied by the Turks. The country is in turmoil with entire villages uprooted. The site of the movie is a Greek village that conducts a passion play each year. The leading citizens of the town, under the auspices of the Patriarch, choose those that will play the parts in the Passion. A stuttering shepherd is chosen to play Jesus. The town butcher (who wanted to be Jesus) is chosen as Judas. The town prostitute is chosen as Mary Magdalene. The rest of the disciples are also chosen. As the movie unfolds, the Passion Play becomes a reality. A group of villagers, uprooted by the war and impoverished, arrive at the village led by their priest. The wealthier citizens of the town want nothing with these people and manipulate a massacre. In the context of the 1920's each of the characters plays out their biblical role in actuality."

Family

DAUGHTER: Julie Dassin. Actor. Mother, Beatrice Launer.
SON: Joey Dassin. Mother, Beatrice Launer.
SON: Rickey Dassin. Mother, Beatrice Launer.

Companion
WIFE: Beatrice Launer. Former concert violinist. Married in 1933; divorced in 1962.
WIFE: Melina Mercouri. Actor, politician. Born c. 1923; Greek; together from 1959; married from 1966 until her death on March 6, 1994.

Milestone

1936: First role on New York stage (Yiddish Theater)

1940: First film as assistant director Directed first stage play, "The Medicine Show 1941: Directed first short film, "The Tell-Tale Heart"

1942: Feature directing debut, "Nazi Agent/Salute to Courage"

Jules Dassin (1911-2008) - Tcm Schedule Change For Director Jules Dassin Memorial Tribute On Friday, April 20Th

Jules Dassin (1911-2008) - TCM Schedule Change for Director Jules Dassin Memorial Tribute on Friday, April 20th

In Tribute to director Jules Dassin, who died Monday, March 31st, at age 96, TCM is changing its evening programming on Sunday, April 20th to honor the actor with a double-feature salute. Sunday, April 20th 8:00 PM Naked City 9:45 PM Topkapi TCM REMEMBERS JULES DASSIN (1911-2008) Jules Dassin gained experience in theater and radio in New York before going to work in Hollywood in 1940, first with RKO (as assistant director) and then with MGM. Dassin hit his stride in the late 1940s with such dynamic (and still well-regarded) film noir melodramas as "Brute Force" (1947), "The Naked City" (1948), "Thieves' Highway" (1949) and "Night and the City" (1950), starring Richard Widmark who died this past Monday, March 24th. After being blacklisted he moved to Europe, where he scored his greatest international successes with the French-produced "Rififi" (1955) and the then-scandalous "Never on Sunday" (1959), starring his second wife Melina Mercouri. For the most part, his later films--such as "Up Tight" (1968), an ill-conceived black remake of John Ford's 1935 classic "The Informer"--have been disappointing and inconclusive. Dassin, however, maintained that among his own films, his personal preference was "He Who Must Die" (1958), starring his wife Melina Mercouri. It is one of his least known films and is rarely screened today but here is a description of it: "Greece, in the 1920's, is occupied by the Turks. The country is in turmoil with entire villages uprooted. The site of the movie is a Greek village that conducts a passion play each year. The leading citizens of the town, under the auspices of the Patriarch, choose those that will play the parts in the Passion. A stuttering shepherd is chosen to play Jesus. The town butcher (who wanted to be Jesus) is chosen as Judas. The town prostitute is chosen as Mary Magdalene. The rest of the disciples are also chosen. As the movie unfolds, the Passion Play becomes a reality. A group of villagers, uprooted by the war and impoverished, arrive at the village led by their priest. The wealthier citizens of the town want nothing with these people and manipulate a massacre. In the context of the 1920's each of the characters plays out their biblical role in actuality." Family DAUGHTER: Julie Dassin. Actor. Mother, Beatrice Launer. SON: Joey Dassin. Mother, Beatrice Launer. SON: Rickey Dassin. Mother, Beatrice Launer. Companion WIFE: Beatrice Launer. Former concert violinist. Married in 1933; divorced in 1962. WIFE: Melina Mercouri. Actor, politician. Born c. 1923; Greek; together from 1959; married from 1966 until her death on March 6, 1994. Milestone 1936: First role on New York stage (Yiddish Theater) 1940: First film as assistant director Directed first stage play, "The Medicine Show 1941: Directed first short film, "The Tell-Tale Heart" 1942: Feature directing debut, "Nazi Agent/Salute to Courage"

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Location scenes were filmed in Nice, Paris, and the U.S.S.R. The film opened in Paris in November 1970 as La promesse de l'aube. Perlo Vita is a pseudonym for Jules Dassin.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States 1970

Released in United States 1970