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The Wages of Fear

Le Salaire de la peur

France

1953

147 Min
French
  • Currently 4.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Henri-Georges Clouzot

PROD Louis Wipf

SCR Henri-Georges Clouzot, Jérôme Géronimi

DP Armand Thirard

CAST Yves Montand, Charles Vanel, Peter Van Eyck, William Tubbs, Véra Clouzot, Folco Lulli

ED Henri Rust, Madeleine Gug

MUSIC Georges Auric

SOUND William Robert Sivel

Cannes, Berlinale, Berlinale (Retrospective)

Synopsis

In a squalid South American oil town, four desperate men sign on for a suicide mission to drive trucks loaded with nitroglycerin over a treacherous mountain route. As they ferry their explosive cargo to a faraway oil fire, each bump and jolt tests their courage, their friendship, and their nerves. The result is one of the greatest thrillers ever committed to celluloid, a white-knuckle ride from France’s legendary master of suspense, Henri-Georges Clouzot. —The Criterion Collection

Director

Henri-georges_clouzot

Henri-Georges Clouzot

Acclaimed in particular for his thrillers, Clouzot was one of the genuine rivals to Alfred Hitchcock and, at his peak, seemed to anticipate the moves of the better-known English director. Born in 1907 in Niort, Clouzot intended upon a career in the French navy but was barred from that opportunity by poor eyesight and chronic ill health. He studied political science with the intention of joining the diplomatic service and he served on the staff of a Rightist political figure after graduation from college, but in the late ‘20s, Clouzot moved into writing, first as a journalist and, starting in the early ’30s, as a screenwriter and playwright. He co-authored numerous scripts between 1931 and 1933, in addition to making the short thriller La Terreur des Batignolles and serving as an assistant to several directors, including Anatole Litvak, E.A. Dupont, and Karl Hartl, on various projects. Clouzot’s initial start in films was interrupted in the mid-‘30s when his declining health forced him… read more

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rolandogilead

19Jan10

Wow...i enjoyed it. And i realize that in the french cinema of the '50s men didn't had a choice and all the endings are much the same. The death or the end of the road dor the protagonist.  
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Jay Olie Espy

8Jan10

I showed Wages of Fear to my father-in-law thinking he's never seen it. It turned out that he had when he was about 5 or 6 in Mexico City. The first few images jogged this forgotten memory. I wanted to prod him about how people reacted to the film, but then again, he was only 5 or 6!  
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David M.K.

11Oct09

Tension? Suspense? *yawn*  
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Giovanni Colantonio

3Jul09

Though it takes quite a while to pick up, the film builds up to one of the most tense experiences ever filmed. Every moment, I was expecting the worst for the situations. I was truly on the edge of my seat, waiting to see how these characters could overcome such massive and seemingly impossible odds.   

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Fans

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.
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Now Playing on The Auteurs: "Death in the Garden" (Luis Buñuel, Mexico/France)

By David Cairns on November 24, 2009
Death in the Garden (Luis Buñuel, Mexico/France, 1956) is now playing on The Auteurs in the US for free. *** Above: Don't forget your lipstick. Luis Buñuel's reputation has been unvaryingly high for
read article
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The Forgotten: Chains of Love

By David Cairns on November 12, 2009
With the fragments of Henri-Georges Clouzot's never-completed L'enfer (1964) finally gathered together and released as part of the making-of/unmaking-of documentary Inferno (2009), now seems a good time
read article
Spot

Capital, it fails us now: "The Wages Of Fear" in the post-imperial age

By Glenn Kenny on June 10, 2009
Out of town; my work takes me out of town. I empty villages. I burn their houses down. I set up factories. Lay out plantations And bring prosperity to the poorer nations. —Art Bears, "The Song
read article

Lists

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Reviews

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By Craig Phillip​s on November 11, 2009

Yawn? You have to be kidding me. The first act does start slow, more noticeable to me the first time I saw it, but after rewatching it I appreciate that aspect more, and the last two-thirds is unforgettably…  read review

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By Gåry on October 18, 2009

I prefer Sorceror.

In it’s day, I can easily see how this film would’ve been heralded as a dramatic masterpiece of tension and suspense, but – in the face of 56 more years of cinema where realism…  read review

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By Jack Falvey IV on August 18, 2009

This film is the very definition of tension. The first hour of the film meticulously creates the grungy feeling that encapsulates the entire film, opening on a shot of a child torturing some cockroaches…  read review

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By Pierlui​gi Puccini on May 5, 2009

I don’t recall when was the last time I felt so enervated and powerless for the fate of characters in a film. The perfect drawing given to them by the cast and director, plus the existential tone and…  read review

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DVD

Buy the DVD from The Criterion Collection.