The Night of the Generals


2h 28m 1967
The Night of the Generals

Brief Synopsis

A Nazi officer tries to catch a serial killer attacking prostitutes.

Film Details

Also Known As
La nuit des généraux
MPAA Rating
Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Adaptation
Crime
Drama
War
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
New York opening: 2 Feb 1967
Production Company
Filmsonor; Horizon Pictures
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures
Country
France
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Wary Transgressor by James Hadley Chase (London, 1952) and the novel Die Nacht der Generale by Hans Hellmut Kirst (Munich, 1962).

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 28m
Sound
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Synopsis

A prostitute, who is also a German agent, is brutally murdered in Warsaw in 1942, and Major Grau of German Intelligence investigates three top-ranking Nazi generals: Kahlenberge, Seidlitz-Gabler, and Tanz, a ruthless sadist. Major Grau's persistence in bringing to justice one murderer during wartime irritates the High Command, and he is transferred. Two years later, the three generals and Grau are all present in Paris when the pathological Tanz murders a second prostitute. Aware that Grau is still on his trail, Tanz blames the crime on Hartmann, his orderly, who is having an affair with Seidlitz-Gabler's daughter Ulrike. After fleeing from Paris, Tanz uses the failure of the 1944 plot to assassinate Hitler as an excuse for killing Grau and naming him as one of the traitors involved in the plot. Years later, after his imprisonment as a war criminal, Tanz arrives in Hamburg for a neo-Nazi rally. He is confronted by Inspector Morand of the French police who, during the war, helped Grau with his investigation. Morand produces Hartmann, who identifies Tanz as the murderer of the Parisian prostitute. Faced with inevitable disgrace and humiliation Tanz kills himself.

Film Details

Also Known As
La nuit des généraux
MPAA Rating
Genre
Suspense/Mystery
Adaptation
Crime
Drama
War
Release Date
Jan 1967
Premiere Information
New York opening: 2 Feb 1967
Production Company
Filmsonor; Horizon Pictures
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures
Country
France
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Wary Transgressor by James Hadley Chase (London, 1952) and the novel Die Nacht der Generale by Hans Hellmut Kirst (Munich, 1962).

Technical Specs

Duration
2h 28m
Sound
Mono (Westrex Recording System)
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Articles

The Night of the Generals


In the years following his Oscar®-winning and internationally successful epic Lawrence of Arabia (1962), producer Sam Spiegel sought out material that could match and even surpass that personal victory. Often working on several projects simultaneously, the tireless mogul began production on The Chase (1966) starring Marlon Brando while working out the details on his subsequent project, The Night of the Generals (1967). The critical and box office failure of The Chase, however, convinced Spiegel he had not exercised enough control over that production. As a result, he was determined to more closely monitor the making of The Night of the Generals.

Based on a best-selling novel by Hans Hellmut Kirst along with some plot elements taken from James Hadley Chase's book The Wary Transgressor, The Night of the Generals would boast a major international cast, reuniting Peter O'Toole and Omar Sharif from Lawrence of Arabia in the key roles, plus Tom Courtenay, Christopher Plummer, Donald Pleasence, Joanna Pettet, Philippe Noiret and French chanteuse Juliette Greco in a brief cafe scene. The story is set in Warsaw in 1942 and opens with the brutal murder of a prostitute who was also a secret German agent. Heading the investigation, Major Grau (Sharif) of German Intelligence focuses on three prime suspects - General Kahlenberg (Pleasence), General von Seidlitz-Gabler (Charles Gray) and General Tanz (O'Toole). Unfortunately, Grau's persistence on capturing the killer of what seems an insignificant murder victim eventually frustrates the High Command and he is transferred. Two years later, Grau is in Paris when another prostitute is murdered and strangely enough, all three of the original suspects are also in the city. Which one is the killer? But more importantly, are these murders related to a bigger conspiracy such as a plot to assassinate Hitler? The novel which critiques the morality and behavior of the Nazi elite in the guise of a psychological whodunit had a personal connection for Spiegel. He had fled Berlin in 1933 when Hitler came to power and General Tanz represented the mentality that had forced Spiegel to emigrate to the U.S.

The direction of The Night of the Generals was entrusted to Anatole Litvak, one of an older generation of European directors still working in Hollywood along with Billy Wilder and William Wyler. Litvak had scored several critical and commercial hits during his career - Mayerling (1936),Sorry, Wrong Number (1948), The Snake Pit (1948) - but it had been more than ten years since he had enjoyed a similar success with Anastasia in 1956. Hollywood insiders were curious as to why Spiegel chose Litvak to helm The Night of the Generals when there were so many dynamic young directors emerging on the scene. But despite the fact that Spiegel and Litvak were old friends, the real reason is that Litvak owned the rights to the book and wouldn't relinquish them unless he was allowed to co-produce and direct.

To adapt the novel for the screen, Spiegel tried out three different screenwriters - Robert Anderson, Paul Dehn, and Gore Vidal - and before he was finished he had added a fourth, novelist Joseph Kessel (Belle de Jour), who along with Dehn, were the only ones to receive a screen credit. The selection of the technical crew equally reflected Spiegel's determination to hire the best in the business - Oscar-winning production designer Alexandre Trauner (The Apartment, 1960), music composer Maurice Jarre (who had scored Lawrence of Arabia and Doctor Zhivago, 1965) and French cinematographer Henri Decae (The 400 Blows, 1959), who shot the movie on locations in Warsaw, Paris and Hamburg, Germany.

Initially Dirk Bogarde had been considered for the role of Major Grau but Spiegel eventually offered it to Omar Sharif who had become an international celebrity after his two epics for David Lean. According to author Natasha Fraser-Cavassoni in her biography Sam Spiegel, Sharif had at first, "resisted the role. His lawyer had written to Horizon Pictures that not only would it be "injurious to his career," but that playing a Nazi officer was going against his "political and moral beliefs." He finally agreed when he heard that O'Toole was part of the cast. However, there was a growing resentment from both men toward Spiegel. They had become major film stars, but were being paid ridiculously low salaries because of the "slave contracts" and the film option agreements that they signed when they made Lawrence of Arabia. As a result, Sharif was officially getting 7,500 pounds ($19,086.75) and O'Toole was getting 15,000 pounds ($38,175). This was in comparison to Donald Pleasence, a well-known character actor, who was playing a lesser role in the film, but was being paid $80,000."

O'Toole was in the process of completing How to Steal a Million (1966) with Audrey Hepburn in Paris at the same time as he was filming The Night of the Generals. Since the two sets were not far apart, logistics were not a problem but some say O'Toole was already so deeply into his character as the sadistic, cold-blooded Tanz that it was affecting his final scenes with Hepburn in the William Wyler romantic comedy. O'Toole's behavior on and off the set also didn't match his reputation as a hellraiser. For the most part, he stayed aloof from everyone except his makeup artist, his stuntman and his assistant. And in one instance, he received permission to leave the production for a bicentenary celebration at the Bristol Old Vic (his alma mater) but was so late in returning to the set that an entire day of shooting was lost, costing Spiegel and Columbia a lot of money. Realizing his mistake, however, he gathered the entire cast and crew together and apologized to them, which was not something a star of his caliber would normally do.

For Omar Sharif, The Night of the Generals proved to be a most unpleasant experience due to the character he was playing. "It was January," he recalled in his autobiography. "We were shooting in the streets of Warsaw. It was bitter cold. Between shots I walked into a little cafe, wearing my costume. I'd just wanted a cup of coffee and hadn't even thought about the uniform. I looked around and what did I see? Panic-stricken faces, people with tears welling up in their eyes." I'm no German!" I yelled quickly. "I'm making an American movie. I'm an American." I even usurped a nationality to help reassure them. Nobody said a word. The barman refused to serve me. I suddenly understood the incongruity of that German uniform in a peaceful neighborhood cafe. I sensed the sadness that it inspired. I went out in dismay....Twenty-two years had elapsed without mitigating the pain and horror. On that day I learned that time can't make people forget."

As for Spiegel, he was micromanaging the film to such a degree that he was alienating everyone. According to Gore Vidal, "Sam was constantly insulting Tola [Anatole Litvak]...'If you can't direct, you should quit, you know.' He would say stuff like that in front of the crew. It was unforgivable. And the way Tola would take it: he had a spray for his asthma and he would spray into his mouth." Gore is also convinced that O'Toole's anger at Spiegel resulted in the actor sabotaging the movie through his performance. "When I saw the film I realized that he had killed it, absolutely, with a shot through the heart...He comes on insane, there's no development; and you know he's the murderer from the first moment you see him...He is so mad in his first scene that he has no place to go except stay insane all the way through the picture, and this was all resentment at Sam."

When The Night of the Generals was released, most critics mirrored Gore's opinion of the film. Time magazine called it "a murky mystery story of Nazi Germany...As the villain, Peter O'Toole exhibits the now celebrated twitching upper lip and glazed stare that some viewers have seen once or twice too often..." Judith Crist of the N.Y. World Journal Tribune dismissed it as "a slow-paced and pedestrian film that dissipates its promise early on and carefully sidesteps the issues it raises." And Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote "I wish it were more sophisticated and articulate about the crime of war, not just about the idiosyncrasies of a Nazi general who likes to kill prostitutes." However, there were some positive reviews as well with Hollis Alpert of the Saturday Review proclaiming it "a handsome film...a more logical, understanding, and historically aware example of the thriller genre than we are accustomed to seeing."

Critical reviews aside, The Night of the Generals was not a hit with audiences. In fact, it was a bona fide box office disaster and most of the blame was due to Spiegel whose desire for total control had ruined the collaborative creative process. Vidal later told him, "Sam, you know for all your passion for meddling on the script, if ever there was a time when you as a producer were needed, it was during the shooting to watch the rushes. You should have done that every day and kept track of Tola."

Spiegel's glory days were truly behind him now. After Lawrence of Arabia in 1962, he produced a string of box office failures - The Chase, The Night of the Generals, The Happening (1967). Even his comeback film, the historical epic Nicholas and Alexandra (1971) was a disappointment in relation to its costs. He finished out his career with another box office bomb The Last Tycoon (1976) and his final film Betrayal (1983), a critically acclaimed film version of a Harold Pinter play that was small in scale and a modest art house success. It was the exact opposite of the type of high profile film Spiegel had built his career on.

Producer: Anatole Litvak, Sam Spiegel
Director: Anatole Litvak
Screenplay: Paul Dehn, John Kessel, Hans Hellmut Kirst (novel)
Cinematography: Henri Decae
Film Editing: Alan Osbiston
Art Direction: Auguste Capelier
Production Design: Alexandre Trauner
Music: Maurice Jarre
Cast: Peter O'Toole (General Tanz), Omar Sharif (Major Grau), Tom Courtenay (Lance Cpl. Kurt Hartmann), Donald Pleasence (Maj. Gen. Kahlenberg), Joanna Pettet (Ulrike von Seydlitz-Gabler), Philippe Noiret (Insp. Morand).
C-148m. Letterboxed.


by Jeff Stafford

SOURCES:
Peter O'Toole by Michael Freedland
The Eternal Male by Omar Sharif
Sam Spiegel by Natasha Fraser-Cavassoni
Spiegel: The Man Behind the Picture by Andrew Sinclair
Filmfacts
The Night Of The Generals

The Night of the Generals

In the years following his Oscar®-winning and internationally successful epic Lawrence of Arabia (1962), producer Sam Spiegel sought out material that could match and even surpass that personal victory. Often working on several projects simultaneously, the tireless mogul began production on The Chase (1966) starring Marlon Brando while working out the details on his subsequent project, The Night of the Generals (1967). The critical and box office failure of The Chase, however, convinced Spiegel he had not exercised enough control over that production. As a result, he was determined to more closely monitor the making of The Night of the Generals. Based on a best-selling novel by Hans Hellmut Kirst along with some plot elements taken from James Hadley Chase's book The Wary Transgressor, The Night of the Generals would boast a major international cast, reuniting Peter O'Toole and Omar Sharif from Lawrence of Arabia in the key roles, plus Tom Courtenay, Christopher Plummer, Donald Pleasence, Joanna Pettet, Philippe Noiret and French chanteuse Juliette Greco in a brief cafe scene. The story is set in Warsaw in 1942 and opens with the brutal murder of a prostitute who was also a secret German agent. Heading the investigation, Major Grau (Sharif) of German Intelligence focuses on three prime suspects - General Kahlenberg (Pleasence), General von Seidlitz-Gabler (Charles Gray) and General Tanz (O'Toole). Unfortunately, Grau's persistence on capturing the killer of what seems an insignificant murder victim eventually frustrates the High Command and he is transferred. Two years later, Grau is in Paris when another prostitute is murdered and strangely enough, all three of the original suspects are also in the city. Which one is the killer? But more importantly, are these murders related to a bigger conspiracy such as a plot to assassinate Hitler? The novel which critiques the morality and behavior of the Nazi elite in the guise of a psychological whodunit had a personal connection for Spiegel. He had fled Berlin in 1933 when Hitler came to power and General Tanz represented the mentality that had forced Spiegel to emigrate to the U.S. The direction of The Night of the Generals was entrusted to Anatole Litvak, one of an older generation of European directors still working in Hollywood along with Billy Wilder and William Wyler. Litvak had scored several critical and commercial hits during his career - Mayerling (1936),Sorry, Wrong Number (1948), The Snake Pit (1948) - but it had been more than ten years since he had enjoyed a similar success with Anastasia in 1956. Hollywood insiders were curious as to why Spiegel chose Litvak to helm The Night of the Generals when there were so many dynamic young directors emerging on the scene. But despite the fact that Spiegel and Litvak were old friends, the real reason is that Litvak owned the rights to the book and wouldn't relinquish them unless he was allowed to co-produce and direct. To adapt the novel for the screen, Spiegel tried out three different screenwriters - Robert Anderson, Paul Dehn, and Gore Vidal - and before he was finished he had added a fourth, novelist Joseph Kessel (Belle de Jour), who along with Dehn, were the only ones to receive a screen credit. The selection of the technical crew equally reflected Spiegel's determination to hire the best in the business - Oscar-winning production designer Alexandre Trauner (The Apartment, 1960), music composer Maurice Jarre (who had scored Lawrence of Arabia and Doctor Zhivago, 1965) and French cinematographer Henri Decae (The 400 Blows, 1959), who shot the movie on locations in Warsaw, Paris and Hamburg, Germany. Initially Dirk Bogarde had been considered for the role of Major Grau but Spiegel eventually offered it to Omar Sharif who had become an international celebrity after his two epics for David Lean. According to author Natasha Fraser-Cavassoni in her biography Sam Spiegel, Sharif had at first, "resisted the role. His lawyer had written to Horizon Pictures that not only would it be "injurious to his career," but that playing a Nazi officer was going against his "political and moral beliefs." He finally agreed when he heard that O'Toole was part of the cast. However, there was a growing resentment from both men toward Spiegel. They had become major film stars, but were being paid ridiculously low salaries because of the "slave contracts" and the film option agreements that they signed when they made Lawrence of Arabia. As a result, Sharif was officially getting 7,500 pounds ($19,086.75) and O'Toole was getting 15,000 pounds ($38,175). This was in comparison to Donald Pleasence, a well-known character actor, who was playing a lesser role in the film, but was being paid $80,000." O'Toole was in the process of completing How to Steal a Million (1966) with Audrey Hepburn in Paris at the same time as he was filming The Night of the Generals. Since the two sets were not far apart, logistics were not a problem but some say O'Toole was already so deeply into his character as the sadistic, cold-blooded Tanz that it was affecting his final scenes with Hepburn in the William Wyler romantic comedy. O'Toole's behavior on and off the set also didn't match his reputation as a hellraiser. For the most part, he stayed aloof from everyone except his makeup artist, his stuntman and his assistant. And in one instance, he received permission to leave the production for a bicentenary celebration at the Bristol Old Vic (his alma mater) but was so late in returning to the set that an entire day of shooting was lost, costing Spiegel and Columbia a lot of money. Realizing his mistake, however, he gathered the entire cast and crew together and apologized to them, which was not something a star of his caliber would normally do. For Omar Sharif, The Night of the Generals proved to be a most unpleasant experience due to the character he was playing. "It was January," he recalled in his autobiography. "We were shooting in the streets of Warsaw. It was bitter cold. Between shots I walked into a little cafe, wearing my costume. I'd just wanted a cup of coffee and hadn't even thought about the uniform. I looked around and what did I see? Panic-stricken faces, people with tears welling up in their eyes." I'm no German!" I yelled quickly. "I'm making an American movie. I'm an American." I even usurped a nationality to help reassure them. Nobody said a word. The barman refused to serve me. I suddenly understood the incongruity of that German uniform in a peaceful neighborhood cafe. I sensed the sadness that it inspired. I went out in dismay....Twenty-two years had elapsed without mitigating the pain and horror. On that day I learned that time can't make people forget." As for Spiegel, he was micromanaging the film to such a degree that he was alienating everyone. According to Gore Vidal, "Sam was constantly insulting Tola [Anatole Litvak]...'If you can't direct, you should quit, you know.' He would say stuff like that in front of the crew. It was unforgivable. And the way Tola would take it: he had a spray for his asthma and he would spray into his mouth." Gore is also convinced that O'Toole's anger at Spiegel resulted in the actor sabotaging the movie through his performance. "When I saw the film I realized that he had killed it, absolutely, with a shot through the heart...He comes on insane, there's no development; and you know he's the murderer from the first moment you see him...He is so mad in his first scene that he has no place to go except stay insane all the way through the picture, and this was all resentment at Sam." When The Night of the Generals was released, most critics mirrored Gore's opinion of the film. Time magazine called it "a murky mystery story of Nazi Germany...As the villain, Peter O'Toole exhibits the now celebrated twitching upper lip and glazed stare that some viewers have seen once or twice too often..." Judith Crist of the N.Y. World Journal Tribune dismissed it as "a slow-paced and pedestrian film that dissipates its promise early on and carefully sidesteps the issues it raises." And Bosley Crowther of The New York Times wrote "I wish it were more sophisticated and articulate about the crime of war, not just about the idiosyncrasies of a Nazi general who likes to kill prostitutes." However, there were some positive reviews as well with Hollis Alpert of the Saturday Review proclaiming it "a handsome film...a more logical, understanding, and historically aware example of the thriller genre than we are accustomed to seeing." Critical reviews aside, The Night of the Generals was not a hit with audiences. In fact, it was a bona fide box office disaster and most of the blame was due to Spiegel whose desire for total control had ruined the collaborative creative process. Vidal later told him, "Sam, you know for all your passion for meddling on the script, if ever there was a time when you as a producer were needed, it was during the shooting to watch the rushes. You should have done that every day and kept track of Tola." Spiegel's glory days were truly behind him now. After Lawrence of Arabia in 1962, he produced a string of box office failures - The Chase, The Night of the Generals, The Happening (1967). Even his comeback film, the historical epic Nicholas and Alexandra (1971) was a disappointment in relation to its costs. He finished out his career with another box office bomb The Last Tycoon (1976) and his final film Betrayal (1983), a critically acclaimed film version of a Harold Pinter play that was small in scale and a modest art house success. It was the exact opposite of the type of high profile film Spiegel had built his career on. Producer: Anatole Litvak, Sam Spiegel Director: Anatole Litvak Screenplay: Paul Dehn, John Kessel, Hans Hellmut Kirst (novel) Cinematography: Henri Decae Film Editing: Alan Osbiston Art Direction: Auguste Capelier Production Design: Alexandre Trauner Music: Maurice Jarre Cast: Peter O'Toole (General Tanz), Omar Sharif (Major Grau), Tom Courtenay (Lance Cpl. Kurt Hartmann), Donald Pleasence (Maj. Gen. Kahlenberg), Joanna Pettet (Ulrike von Seydlitz-Gabler), Philippe Noiret (Insp. Morand). C-148m. Letterboxed. by Jeff Stafford SOURCES: Peter O'Toole by Michael Freedland The Eternal Male by Omar Sharif Sam Spiegel by Natasha Fraser-Cavassoni Spiegel: The Man Behind the Picture by Andrew Sinclair Filmfacts

Quotes

But, murder is the occupation of Generals.
- Inspector Morand
Then let us say what is admirable on the large scale is monstrous on the small. Since we must give medals to mass murderers, why not give justice to the small... entrepreneur.
- Major Grau
It's like the natural functions. Revolting, but inevitable.
- General Tanz

Trivia

Notes

Location scenes filmed in Warsaw and Paris. Released in Great Britain in 1967; in France in April 1967 as La nuit des généraux; running time: 140 min.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1967

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1967