Poster

The Crucible ()

Les sorcières de Salem (original title)
Reference View | Change View


Salem 1692. The young Abigail, seduced and abandoned by John Proctor, accuses John's wife of being a witch in revenge. It will be the beginning of a series of witchcraft trials and a dark moment in American history.

Director:
Awards:
  • Won 1 BAFTA Film Award. Another 2 wins & 2 nominations.
  • See more »
Reviews:

Photos and Videos

Cast

Edit
...
Elisabeth Proctor
...
John Proctor
...
Reverend Parris
...
Thomas Putnam
...
Francis Nurse
...
Abigail Williams
...
Peter Corey
...
Martha Corey
...
Jane Putnam
Coutan-Lambert ...
Rebecca Nurse
...
Gilles Corey (as A. Grimmer)
...
Mary Warren
Yves Brainville ...
Hale
...
James Putnam
...
Willard
Gerd Michael Henneberg ...
Herrick (as Henneberg)
Jean Riveyre ...
Gilchrist
François Joux ...
Hathorne
...
Cheever
...
Tituba
Véronique Nordey ...
Mercy
Christian Lude ...
Barnsteaple
Lucien Guervil ...
Corbett (as Guervil)
François Darbon ...
Nathan (as J.F. Darbon)
...
Field
Jean Amadou ...
Charlie Corey
...
Sarah Good
...
Fancy Proctor
...
Betty Parris
Maritza Tchapanian ...
Ann Putnam
Werner Segtrop ...
Le tambourinaire (as Segtrob)
...
Kitty
Ursula Körbs ...
Wolitt
Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Brigitte Barbier ...
(uncredited)
Vinnette Carroll ...
(uncredited)
...
Governor Danforth (uncredited)
Günter Voigt ...
(uncredited)

Directed by

Edit
Raymond Rouleau

Written by

Edit
Arthur Miller ... (play "The Crucible")
 
Jean-Paul Sartre ... (written by)
 
Marcel Aymé ... (translation) (uncredited)

Produced by

Edit
René Bezard ... executive producer
Raymond Borderie ... producer
Pierre Cabaud ... executive producer

Music by

Edit
Hanns Eisler
Georges Auric ... (uncredited)

Cinematography by

Edit
Claude Renoir

Editing by

Edit
Marguerite Renoir

Editorial Department

Edit
Charlotte Fournier ... assistant editor

Production Design by

Edit
Artur Günther
René Moulaert

Costume Design by

Edit
Lila De Nobili
Lydia Fiege

Makeup Department

Edit
Alex Archambault ... hair stylist
Monique Archambault ... makeup artist

Production Management

Edit
Charles Borderie ... production manager
Robert Bossis ... assistant production manager
André Rameau ... unit manager

Second Unit Director or Assistant Director

Edit
Paul Nuyttens ... assistant director
Gerard Renateau ... assistant director

Art Department

Edit
René Albouze ... props
Jacques Mawart ... assistant art director
Yves Olivier ... assistant art director
Albert Volper ... set designer

Sound Department

Edit
Gérard Brisseau ... boom operator
Max Olivier ... recording
Antoine Petitjean ... sound
Arthur Van der Meeren ... boom operator (as Van der Meeren)

Camera and Electrical Department

Edit
Jacques Chotel ... assistant camera (as J. Chotel)
Roger Corbeau ... still photographer
Maurice Kaminsky ... assistant camera
Louis Stein ... camera operator

Costume and Wardrobe Department

Edit
Ferdinand Junker ... costume supervisor
Ginette Manzon ... costumer

Music Department

Edit
Georges Delerue ... conductor

Script and Continuity Department

Edit
Ginette Doynel ... script supervisor (as Ginette Courtois-Doynel)

Additional Crew

Edit
De Guertzigue ... technical agent
Roger Morand ... administrative staff
Georges Aminel ... french voice dubbing: Aribert Grimmer (uncredited)
Günther Ballier ... east german voice dubbing: Lucien Guervil (uncredited)
Fritz Bohnstedt ... east german voice dubbing: Christian Lude (uncredited)
Rosetta Calavetta ... italian voice dubbing: Mylène Demongeot (uncredited)
Emilio Cigoli ... italian voice dubbing: Yves Montand (uncredited)
Renate Danz ... west german voice dubbing: Pascale Petit (uncredited)
Uwe Döring ... east german voice dubbing: Michel Piccoli (uncredited)
Wolfgang Eichberger ... west german voice dubbing: Alfred Adam (uncredited)
Hans Fiebrandt ... east german voice dubbing: Alfred Adam (uncredited)
Isabell Franke ... east german voice dubbing: Pascale Petit (uncredited)
Hellmut Grube ... west german voice dubbing: François Joux (uncredited)
Helga Göring ... east german voice dubbing: Simone Signoret (uncredited)
Alfred Haase ... east german voice dubbing: Jean Debucourt (uncredited)
Hannjo Hasse ... east german voice dubbing: Yves Brainville (uncredited)
Renate Hinzelmann ... east german voice dubbing: Véronique Nordey (uncredited)
Benno Hoffmann ... west german voice dubbing: Wenrer Segtrop (uncredited)
Barbara Honigmann ... east german voice dubbing: Chantal Gozzi (uncredited)
Ursula Krieg ... west german voice dubbing: Jeanne Fusier-Gir & Marguerite Coutan-Lambert (uncredited)
Otto Krone ... east german voice dubbing: François Joux (uncredited)
Bum Krüger ... west german voice dubbing: Jean Debucourt (uncredited)
Maximilian Larsen ... east german voice dubbing: Alexandre Rignault (uncredited)
Tilly Lauenstein ... west german voice dubbing: Simone Signoret (uncredited)
Hans Ulrich Laufer ... east german voice dubbing: François Darbon (uncredited)
Margot Leonard ... west german voice dubbing: Mylène Demongeot (uncredited)
Arnold Marquis ... west german voice dubbing: Yve Montand (uncredited)
Wolf Martini ... east german voice dubbing: Raymond Rouleau (uncredited)
Ursula Mundt ... east german voice dubbing: Darling Légitimus (uncredited)
Elisabeth Mühlen ... east german voice dubbing: Françoise Lugagne (uncredited)
Willi Neuenhahn ... east german voice dubbing: Jean Gaven (uncredited)
Kurt Oligmüller ... east german voice dubbing: Gérard Darrieu (uncredited)
Andreina Pagnani ... italian voice dubbing: Simone Signoret (uncredited)
Heidi Pfanne ... east german voice dubbing: Christiane Ferez (uncredited)
Ernst Riebold ... east german voice dubbing: Pierre Larquey (uncredited)
Lili Schoenborn-Anspach ... east german voice dubbing: Marguerite Coutan-Lambert (uncredited)
Johannes Siegert ... east german voice dubbing: Jean Riveyre (uncredited)
Otto Stoeckel ... west german voice dubbing: Pierre Larquey (uncredited)
Robert Trösch ... east german voice dubbing: Yves Montand (uncredited)
Karin von Faber ... east german voice dubbing: Mylène Demongeot (uncredited)
Ernst von Klipstein ... west german voice dubbing: Michel Piccoli & Yves Brainville (uncredited)
Bella Waldritter ... east german voice dubbing: Pâquerette (uncredited)
Eduard Wandrey ... west german voice dubbing: Aribert Grimmer (uncredited)
Margarete Wellhoener ... east german voice dubbing: Jeanne Fusier-Gir (uncredited)
Ute Wisznawitzki ... east german voice dubbing: Maritza Tchapanian (uncredited)
Harry Wüstenhagen ... west german voice dubbing: François Darbon (uncredited)

Production Companies

Edit

Distributors

Edit

Special Effects

Edit

Other Companies

Edit

Storyline

Edit
Plot Summary

Salem, 1692. Industrious farmer, John Proctor, has twice made love to 17-year-old Abigail, a youth he and his wife have taken in. (His wife Elisabeth has rebuffed him for seven months; she is puritanical and cold.) When she finds John and Abigail embracing, she sends the lass from her home and John, feeling damned, agrees. Abigail vows revenge. Her chance comes when she accuses Elisabeth of witchcraft and manipulates younger girls to support her claims of seeing spirits. The town's minister and politicians want a cause: ridding the town of witchcraft is the ideal repression. John too, is accused; Abigail offers him a way to avoid hanging. Elisabeth has her own confession. Written by

Plot Keywords
Taglines The American Premiere of a Major Triumph of the French Cinema! See more »
Genres
Parents Guide Add content advisory for parents »
Certification

Additional Details

Edit
Also Known As
  • Die Hexen von Salem (East Germany)
  • The Crucible (United States)
  • Die Hexen von Salem (Germany)
  • As Virgens de Salem (Brazil)
  • Czarownice z Salem (Poland)
  • See more »
Runtime
  • 145 min
Country
Language
Color
Aspect Ratio
Sound Mix
Filming Locations

Did You Know?

Edit
Trivia The film was almost impossible to find for nearly sixty years due to Arthur Miller blocking the film from being screened or released in any way. This was, according to different accounts, either so that the film didn't steal the spotlight from an English-language adaptation of his play he was working on, and which eventually came out as The Crucible (1996), or as an act of revenge on star Yves Montand, who had an affair with his wife Marilyn Monroe. Actress Mylène Demongeot begged Miller on several occasions to allow the film to be shown again, both before and after the newer adaptation came out and bombed at the box office, but in vain. French company Pathé finally acquired the rights and restored the film in 2016 and released it on Blu-ray and DVD on March 29th 2017, twelve years after Miller's death. See more »
Movie Connections Featured in Mémoires pour Simone (1986). See more »

Contribute to This Page


Recently Viewed