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Stairway to Light

John Nesbitt's Passing Parade
1945 | 10m | English

(304 votes)

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Popularity: 0.3 (history)

Details

This John Nesbitt's Passing Parade short tells the story of 18th Century French physician Dr. Philippe Pinel, who initiated enlightened, humane treatment of the mentally ill.
Release Date: Nov 03, 1945
Director: Sammy Lee
Writer: John Nesbitt, Rosemary Foster
Genres: Drama, History
Keywords insane asylum, mental patient, compassion, mental health
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 02, 2026
Entered: May 04, 2024
Starring

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Full Credits

Name Character
John Nesbitt Narrator (voice)
Dewey Robinson Head Keeper (uncredited)
Gene Roth Hector Chevigny (uncredited)
Harry Wilson Keeper Hosing Down Patient (uncredited)
Wolfgang Zilzer Dr. Philippe Pinel (uncredited)
Name Job
John Nesbitt Story
Sammy Lee Director
Rosemary Foster Screenplay
Max Terr Music
Charles Salerno Jr. Director of Photography
Harry Komer Editor
Richard Duce Art Direction
Albert Glasser Orchestrator
Name Title
Herbert Moulton Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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2024 4 1 1 1
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2024 9 2 4 1
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2024 12 1 1 1
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2025 7 0 0 0
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2025 11 2 3 1
2025 12 1 1 0
2026 1 1 5 0
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Reviews

Geronimo1967
7.0

The unassuming Philippe Pinel (Wolfgang Zilzer) takes up a position in charge of a prison for the mentally ill in Paris and is horrified by what he discovers. There are people, unkempt and uncared for, who have been kept in the dark, chained to walls and fed a diet of gruel, bread and water - and th ... ey have been there for decades. Rather courageously, he concludes that chains and pain have never “cured” anyone so he determines to release some of these people back into society. Now there is an understandable scepticism from the public at large as none of those freed are tracked or monitored and so could easily revert to their violent ways, so they turn on this man as he walks to work. It’s going to take a somewhat miraculous intervention if he is to survive to prove the merits of his strategy. It’s far too short a feature to really develop the story of this visionary fellow here, but the monochrome and menacingly scored photography does raise heckles as we come to terms with the out of sight out of mind attitude that prevailed across so-called civilised society as late as the 18th century.

Jul 06, 2025