Video&Audio Camera&Photo DVD Movies
The Fallen Idol - Criterion Collection dvd movie.
Home » DVD Movies » Actors/Actresses » D » Other » Denis Odea

Other • Domini Blythe
Other • Dhobi Oparei
Other • Dan Seymour
Other • Dennis Okeefe
Other • Daria Nicolodi
Other • Don Calfa
Other • Don Brodie
Other • Daniel Oshea
Other • Doug Kruse
Other • David Keith
Other • Dick Smothers
Other • Darrow Igus

The Fallen Idol - Criterion Collection
buy bestselling dvd movies, videos find reviews, ratings, prices
The Fallen Idol - Criterion Collection List Price: $29.95
Our Price: $26.99
You Save: $2.96

Features
 Black & White
 Dolby
 DVD-Video
 Full Screen
 NTSC

In Theaters : 07 November, 2006
DVD Release : 07 November, 2006
[ + Zoom ]   [ Buy Now ] DVD : Usually ships in 24 hours
The Fallen Idol - Criterion Collection description
In the impressive filmography of British director Carol Reed, The Fallen Idol is sandwiched between Odd Man Out and The Third Man--the second of three consecutive masterpieces (adapted by Graham Greene from his short story "The Basement Room") by a filmmaker at the peak of his artistic powers. Of those three, The Fallen Idol is the most delicately subdued, but it's a flawlessly plotted thriller that achieves considerable tension through the psychology of its characters. By telling the story through the eyes of a child, the plot gains even greater urgency as a variation on the theme of "the boy who cried wolf," as young Phillipe (Bobby Henrey)--the 8-year-old son of the French ambassador to England--struggles to clear his beloved embassy butler Baines (Ralph Richardson) from being wrongfully accused of murder.

Baines is burdened with a shrewish, overbearing wife (Sonia Dresdel) whose rigid, disciplinarian control of Phillipe sets the stage for suspense; when Mrs. Baines dies in a terrible fall on the embassy staircase, her husband (who has been having a secret affair with an embassy typist) is the prime suspect. Phillipe, caught between his love for Baines and his suspicion of the butler's guilt, tries to convince investigators of Baines's innocence. But the boy's pleas are ignored, and The Fallen Idol expertly plays on the child's good but woefully misguided intentions. In Reed's visual strategy, a simple paper airplane can become the focus of almost unbearable suspense, and as incriminating evidence builds a strong case against Baines, Reed maintains that suspense to the final moments of the film. Low-key and yet still highly effective, the film received Oscar nominations for Reed's direction and Greene's adapted screenplay. --Jeff Shannon

The Fallen Idol - Criterion Collection Customer Reviews
  1     2     3  
♥♥♥♥ Mildly Charming British Noir
"The Fallen Idol" is a nice little film but anybody expecting director Carol Reed to reach the heights achieved with his masterwork, "The Third Man", may be mildly disappointed. The film is certainly well mounted evoking a noirish feel to it. Ralph Richardson is first rate as Baines, the embassy butler who spins tall tales to impress his young charge, Philipe(Bobby Henrey). Henrey gives a natural performance as the boy who idol worships Baines. The story is a good one. The theme is essentially that we should be careful in telling impressionable children secrets or lies because it may come back to bite you. The film is based on a short story by Graham Greene. The problem I had is that the story may have been stretched a little thin. Even at an economical 95 minutes I felt that the theme was beaten into the ground. This probably could have made a better radio play or maybe as a one hour teleplay. I know this was made in 1948 and television was in it's infancy but you get my point. I recommend "The Fallen Idol" but beware of tedium.
  1     2     3