Genre:
Mystery
Release Date: 09/16/2008
Flags: Suitable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Kino
Though hampered by a small budget that shrank with each shooting day, director
Burgess Meredith fashioned a serviceable film version of
Georges Simenon's
A Battle of Nerves. Retitled
The Man on the Eiffel Tower, the film pits
Simenon's analytical
Inspector Maigret (
Charles Laughton) against a wily murderer. We know virtually from the outset that the guilty party is
Radek (
Franchot Tone), a psychotic with delusions of grandeur who has been seduced into killing the wealthy aunt of slatternly
Edna Wallace (
Jean Wallace).
Maigret suspects
Radek , but without solid proof he must suffer the taunting and baiting of the beyond-the-law killer. Eventually
Maigret wins the psychological battle, forcing
Radek to seek refuge on the titular tower. And if you're waiting for that final fatal fall, this isn't that kind of movie.
Burgess Meredith also appears in the film as the sort of obvious suspect that is automatically disregarded by any true detective-story buff, despite the most damning evidence. Originally released in eye-pleasing Anscocolor,
Man on the Eiffel Tower is generally available nowadays in washed-out public-domain prints.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide