I Confess Movie Review
I Confess Review
"I Confess" Overview

Rating: NR
1953
Cast and Crew
Director : Alfred HitchcockProducer : Alfred Hitchcock
Screenwiter : George Tabori,William Archibald
Starring : Montgomery Clift,Anne Baxter,Karl Malden,Brian Aherne,Roger Dann,Dolly Haa
Montgomery Clift's staid performance is arguably the best thing about I
Confess, a minor work in Hitchcock's canon, and that isn't saying much. Here
Clift plays a quiet priest with a dilemma: He's been the recipient of a
murderer's confession, and now he himself is suspected of the crime.
Does Clift confess or does he maintain his vow of silence with respect to
confessions of his parishioners? This issue has been studied at length in the
Law & Orders of the world, and they all end the same:
Priest/lawyer/psychiatrist keeps the vow of silence until the very end, when
the accused either comes forward and confesses or is convicted by some other
means at the very last second.
I Confess isn't much different. Hitchcock wants to analyze where secular law
and legislative law collide -- but even he can't take it all the way, ending
the film one of the only ways these movies can end (hint: not with the
execution of an innocent priest). I do give Hitch credit for a gutsier ending
than a sobbing felon bursting into the courtroom to confess, but still it's on
the droll side.
Hitch fills time with flashbacks and inquisitions, talky moments that add
little to the story aside from a glimpse of a pre-priesthood Clift. But the
cold Clift can't even carry off this portion of the film, ostensibly a love
story with the lovely Anne Baxter.
Now on DVD, the disc includes a making-of documentary and a newsreel shot at
the movie's premiere.
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Review by Christopher Null
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