‘The Murderer lives at Number 21’ centres on detective Wens, played by the legendary Pierre Fresnay, who has a mysterious case to solve. Murders are being committed in Paris, all signed by a mysterious Monsieur Durand. Commissioner Wens, who has set out to track down the murderer, arrives at the Mimosas guesthouse at 21 Avenue Junot, in Montmartre, disguised as a pastor. Here, among the varied fauna of the tenants, the phantom murderer is hiding. The first feature film by Henri-Georges Clouzot, then 34, one of the great masters of French cinema, features a brilliant cast of actors and supporting players, but behind the police investigation lies a clear allusion to the anti-Nazi struggle in France. Clouzot also wrote the screenplay, along with the author of the original novel, Belgian Stanislas-André Steeman. The film’s original poster appears, as a homage to cinephile Quentin Tarantino, in his film ‘Inglourious Basterds’.
subject: S.A. Steemann (Stanislas-André Steeman) - novel
script: Henri-Georges Clouzot - (also dialogues), S.A. Steemann (Stanislas-André Steeman)
photography: Armand Thirard
music by: Maurice Yvain
mounting: Christian Gaudin - (uncredited)
color: Bianco & Nero
taken from: novel by Stanislas-André Steeman
production company: CONTINENTAL FILMS, LIOTE
scenography: André Andrejew
other titles: L'ASSASSIN HABITE... AU 21, THE MURDERER LIVES AT NUMBER 21, L'ASSASSINO ABITA AL 21
Su gentile concessione dell'Ente dello Spettacolo