An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge

An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge (1961)

14/12/1961

#Drama#Fantasy

Overview

During the American Civil War, a Southerner is about to be hanged from a bridge for sabotage when something unexpected happens.

Status: Released

Rating: 76%

Original language: FR

Budget: $0

Revenue: $0

Official website:

Details

Production Companies

Les Films du Centaure

Les Films du Centaure

Filmartic

Filmartic

Social Network

IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056300

Wikipedia: https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q2315821

Facebook: No data

Instagram: No data

X: No data

Cast

Reviews (1)

Review by: CinemaSerf

Written by: CinemaSerf on 2025-11-30T15:47:39.155Z

I must admit that when I saw the aforementioned “Owl Creek Bridge” I did wonder if it would support the weight of the character (Roger Jacques) whom the yankees were about to hang, let alone that of any train. Talk about rickety! Anyway, it would seem that this man’s days are numbered as he is made to walk a plank with a noose round his neck. Then something unexpected occurs and that sees the man given an unexpected opportunity to swim a gauntlet of bullets and cannon fire, and perhaps make it to the arms of his darling wife (Anne Cornaly). There’s precious little dialogue, so it’s left to the real-time looking monochrome photography as we follow the man’s strenuous efforts to cheat the hangman. There are several ways this can end, indeed as he ran and stumbled on the path I was almost shouting at the screen telling him to get into the woods in case he gets caught, and it’s that tautly directed ambiguity that builds to something tensely intangible. Initially I thought it a bit too slow to get going, but with hindsight this works really quite well.

Videos

No trailer available

Backdrops

See all...
/6IjbfLVjQDs60Wmm4Ex5MJhANnE.jpg
/idCabXJqc8VR8TSpAet6DBEh9Rc.jpg

Posters

See all...

/sM6HbdKwI5DZGf3UzVbCYgBeN0B.jpg

/4GKfYhSuOOaJKjKOpoaDJKulCA8.jpg

/dM44ww1k8RiO4d6tt5e61AQ0zNg.jpg

/fVQLHCtzhZr6f3dxzWrxjMXrCym.jpg

Recommendations