The Comedians

The Comedians

Year: 1967

Runtime: 152 mins

Language: English

Director: Peter Glenville

DramaPolitics and human rightsIntense political and terrorist thrillersShow All…

They lie, they cheat, they destroy… they even try to love American and British tourists get caught up in political unrest in Haiti.

Warning: spoilers below!

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The Comedians (1967) – Full Plot Summary & Ending Explained

Read the complete plot breakdown of The Comedians (1967), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.

In Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Brown runs a hotel he inherited from his mother, a quiet hub in a volatile city. Returning from New York, where he had pressed on with the idea of selling the faltering business, he finds a few unexpected guests lingering among the rooms: the hard-edged Major Jones, a brash Englishman with a taste for trouble, and the American couple, the Mr. Smith and the Mrs. Smith. The regime around them is brittle and dangerous, a place where survival depends on reading every smile, every glance, and every whispered hint of danger.

Jones has come with a purpose: to broker an arms deal with the government of François “Papa Doc” Duvalier. But his contact has fallen from favor, and soon he is arrested, beaten, and jailed by the hard-edged Captain Concasseur. The Smiths, meanwhile, have arrived to preach vegetarianism, yet their connection to the Minister of Public Welfare proves perilous when the minister, already entangled in the regime’s cruelty, dies by his own hand at Brown’s hotel to avoid torture by the Tontons Macoute—the feared secret police that haunt the island. The hotel becomes a crossroads where politics, charity, and private longing intersect, and where the lines between ally and liability keep shifting with every shock of violence.

At the center of the story is Brown’s ongoing affair with Martha Pineda, the wife of a South American ambassador, Ambassador Manuel Pineda. Brown tries to steer his guests through the treacherous politics that swirl around them, and he introduces the Smiths to the new minister, who grows curious after learning how much money they’re willing to invest. Yet the Smiths’ optimism is crushed when they witness the regime’s atrocities and decide to leave Haiti, disheartened by what they’ve seen and perhaps by what they’ve learned about those who profit from it.

Jones, with his rugged charm and calculated bravado, manages to attract the government’s attention with his arms deal, and his release from jail seems only the first step in a game played by people with far more power than Brown can imagine. When promises fail to materialize, Jones slips into hiding, and Brown steps in to help, smuggling him into the Pinedas’ embassy for asylum. Over weeks, Jones becomes a charismatic, irritating houseguest whose presence gnaws at Brown’s nerves and stirs jealousy in the hotel owner, who suspects a clandestine affair between Jones and Martha.

Captain Concasseur returns to press Brown for a deal: drive Jones to the airport under safe conduct, and the Pinedas’ position could be compromised, possibly leading to expulsion. But Brown, aware of the risks and his own entanglement with Martha, refuses to betray either his guest or the people under his care. Brown’s connections reach into the inner circle of Haiti’s potential revolutionaries. He knows Henri Philipot, the nephew of the suicide minister, who harbors a tiny but determined force, and Dr. Magiot, who envisions training a rebel contingent. As the Smiths witness the brutality of the Tontons Macoute, Martha becomes an active participant in aiding the escape of Jones, aiding a fragile plan to smuggle him out of the embassy.

When Magiot is killed by the Tontons, the revolt’s momentum lands squarely on Brown’s shoulders. He drives Jones into the mountains to meet up with the rebels, hoping to keep him alive long enough to contribute to the cause. Along the way, Jones’s bravado slips away, replaced by a sobering confession: his boasts about Martha and his military credentials were lies. The revelation strains the fragile trust between Brown and the people around him, and the tension reaches a breaking point when Concasseur arrives and kills Jones. Brown is about to be shot, but a timely intervention from Philipot saves him. With the weight of the moment pressing down, Philipot convinces Brown to take Jones’s place among the rebels, becoming a symbol of defiance and leadership for those who fight to overthrow the regime.

The immediate consequence is swift and personal: because they helped Jones, the Pinedas are compelled to leave Haiti. As the air clears, the mood grows heavier with uncertainty. Martha, flying home with her husband, cannot be sure whether Brown has survived the latest confrontation or if the story they’ve told themselves to justify their presence in this perilous country has any chance of ending well. The film closes on a note of quiet endurance, a reminder that in a place ruled by fear, acts of courage—and the costs they exact—often come at a steep price.

Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 11:27

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