Poster

Uncertain Glory ()


Reference View | Change View


After a career criminal is recaptured and knows he faces the guillotine, he offers to exchange his life for 100 hostages slated for execution by the Germans.

Director:
Reviews:

Photos and Videos

Cast verified as complete

Edit
...
Jean Picard
...
Inspector Marcel Bonet
...
Mme. Maret
...
Louise
...
Captain of Mobile Guard
...
Police Commissioner LaFarge (as Douglas Dumbrille)
...
Father Le Clerc
...
Henrí Duval
...
Mme. Bonet
...
Father La Borde
...
Marianne
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
...
(uncredited)
Felix Basch ...
Gestapo Major (uncredited)
Frederic Brunn ...
German Soldier Reporting to Major (uncredited)
Nora Bush ...
Townswoman (uncredited)
James Carlisle ...
Townsman (uncredited)
...
Razeau (uncredited)
...
Executioner (uncredited)
Fred Cordova ...
Execution Guard (uncredited)
Armand Cortes ...
Detective with Commissioner (uncredited)
Paul Cristo ...
Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
...
Prison Turnkey (uncredited)
...
Middle-Aged Woman at Meeting (uncredited)
...
Station Master (uncredited)
Joel Friedkin ...
Brenoir (uncredited)
Michael Gaddis ...
Prison Barber (uncredited)
...
Prison Secretary (uncredited)
...
Innkeeper (uncredited)
Oscar 'Dutch' Hendrian ...
Villager (uncredited)
...
Execution Guard (uncredited)
...
Train Conductor (uncredited)
...
Latour (uncredited)
...
Member of Mobile Guard (uncredited)
Connie Leon ...
Bonet's Maid (uncredited)
...
Execution Guard (uncredited)
George Meader ...
French Doctor (uncredited)
Harry Hays Morgan ...
German Officer with Major (uncredited)
Alfred Paix ...
French Waiter (uncredited)
...
Train Guard (uncredited)
...
Drover (uncredited)
...
Gestapo Agent (uncredited)
...
Drover's Wife (uncredited)
...
Warden (uncredited)
Zina Torchina ...
Peasant Girl Getting Innkeeper (uncredited)
...
Saboteur (uncredited)
Joyce Tucker ...
Michele Bonet (uncredited)
Albert Van Antwerp ...
Vitrac (uncredited)
Bobby Walberg ...
Gaston Bonet (uncredited)

Directed by

Edit
Raoul Walsh

Written by

Edit
László Vadnay ... (screenplay) (as Laszlo Vadnay) and
Max Brand ... (screenplay)
 
Joe May ... (original story) and
László Vadnay ... (original story) (as Laszlo Vadnay)

Produced by

Edit
Robert Buckner ... producer
Errol Flynn ... associate producer (uncredited)
Jack L. Warner ... executive producer

Music by

Edit
Adolph Deutsch

Cinematography by

Edit
Sidney Hickox ... director of photography (as Sid Hickox)

Editing by

Edit
George Amy

Art Direction by

Edit
Robert M. Haas ... (as Robert Haas)

Set Decoration by

Edit
Walter F. Tilford ... (as Walter Tilford)

Makeup Department

Edit
Perc Westmore ... makeup artist

Production Management

Edit
Frank Mattison ... unit manager (uncredited)

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

Edit
James McMahon ... assistant director (uncredited)

Sound Department

Edit
Oliver S. Garretson ... sound

Special Effects by

Edit
Roy Davidson ... special effects

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Edit
Eugene Joseff ... costume jeweller (uncredited)

Music Department

Edit
Leo F. Forbstein ... musical director
Jerome Moross ... orchestral arrangements
Max Steiner ... composer: stock music (uncredited)

Additional Crew

Edit
Paul Coze ... technical advisor
James Vincent ... dialogue director
Jack L. Warner ... presenter
Bob Fender ... unit publicist (uncredited)
Crew verified as complete

Production Companies

Edit

Distributors

Edit

Special Effects

Edit

Other Companies

Edit
  • RCA (sound system)

Storyline

Edit
Plot Summary

During WWII, in France, Jean Picard is a criminal who is about to be executed via the guillotine, but an air raid interrupts it and allows him to escape. Inspector Bonet tracks him down and brings him back. But along the way, they hear that a railway bridge vital to the Germans has been destroyed, supposedly by allied agents. The Germans take 100 Frenchmen and are threatening to execute them unless the saboteurs come forward. Picard who would rather die at the hands of the firing squad as opposed to the guillotine, offers to go to the Germans and say that he is the saboteur. Bonet accepts and so they go the village near where the bridge was to learn all that they can so that Picard can convince the Germans that he is the saboteur. While there Picard, a womanizer, meets a young woman and falls in love with her. Written by rcs0411@yahoo.com

Plot Keywords
Taglines Not Before TODAY Could This Story Be Revealed...A Nameless Outcast Whose Crime Was Not a Crime...But an Act of Matchless Courage! See more »
Genres
Parents Guide View content advisory »
Certification

Additional Details

Edit
Also Known As
  • Saboteur sans gloire (France)
  • Gloria incierta (Spain)
  • Três Dias de Vida (Portugal)
  • Tres días de vida (Argentina)
  • Şüpheli Zafer (Turkey, Turkish title)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 102 min
Country
Language
Color
Aspect Ratio
Sound Mix
Filming Locations

Did You Know?

Edit
Trivia Errol Flynn was criticized for playing heroes in World War II movies. Tony Thomas in his book 'Errol Flynn: The Spy Who Never Was' states that Flynn had tried to enlist in every branch of any armed services he could but was rejected as unfit for service on the grounds of his health. He had a heart condition, tuberculosis, malaria and a back problem. Flynn felt he could contribute to America's war effort by appearing in such films as Edge of Darkness (1943); Northern Pursuit (1943); Dive Bomber (1941), Objective, Burma! (1945) and Uncertain Glory (1944). Reportedly, Flynn was at his most professional and co-operative he ever was whilst working on Second World War movies. The studios apparently did not diffuse the criticism of Flynn's state-of-health as they wished to keep it quiet for fear of his box-office draw waning. See more »
Goofs About 1:20 into the film, there is a scene where the French police are coming into the town at night. One, on a motorcycle, rounding a corner, seemingly slips on the wet cobblestones and crashes in front of the camera - the shadow of his head flashes across the bottom of the screen and the sound of his presumed crash can be heard. See more »
Movie Connections Featured in The Adventures of Errol Flynn (2005). See more »
Soundtracks La Marseillaise See more »
Quotes Jean Picard: [indignantly to the barber just before he is to be sent to face the guillotine] My head comes off as it is!
See more »

Contribute to This Page


Recently Viewed