Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA young woman falls in love with a dashing officer, but becomes a nun when she believes him to be killed in battle.A young woman falls in love with a dashing officer, but becomes a nun when she believes him to be killed in battle.A young woman falls in love with a dashing officer, but becomes a nun when she believes him to be killed in battle.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados en total
Agostino Borgato
- Patriotic Citizen
- (sin créditos)
Mary Bracken
- Peasant Girl
- (sin créditos)
Nora Cecil
- Preaching Nun at Meal
- (sin créditos)
Gino Corrado
- Enrico - Guido's Chauffeur
- (sin créditos)
Mary Jo Ellis
- German Girl
- (sin créditos)
Harry Forsman
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (sin créditos)
Lumsden Hare
- Commander
- (sin créditos)
Anthony Jowitt
- New Tenant in Angela's Apartment
- (sin créditos)
Greta Meyer
- German Mother
- (sin créditos)
Gene O'Brien
- Little Boy
- (sin créditos)
Sarah Padden
- Nun in Charge of Novitiates
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Uggh! Apart from the wonderful acting of Helen Hayes and Clark Gable, this is a very silly and forgettable romance. Clark plays a young soldier than falls for a princess. They know that their love is doomed due to the difference in their social status, but despite everything their love seems unavoidable. Later, when she thinks Gable dies, she drops everything to become a,....NUN!!! Then, when Gable returns it is too late,...she's married to God and cannot renounce her vows (though exactly WHY I couldn't figure out). If you haven't guessed, the plot just seems really hokey and silly. And, unfortunately, it is just that and nothing more. I only recommend it for fans of Hollywood's Golden Age and Clark Gable. All others, I'm afraid, will see it and be turned off older movies and that would be a shame.
By the way, this is a remake of a silent film which starred Lillian Gish and Ronald Coleman. In many ways, the film was better than this 1933 remake and the old fashioned plot seems more suited for a silent.
By the way, this is a remake of a silent film which starred Lillian Gish and Ronald Coleman. In many ways, the film was better than this 1933 remake and the old fashioned plot seems more suited for a silent.
This is my all-time favorite film. A lovely romantic love story with Helen Hayes & Clark Gable. It is not on video so, your only chance to see it is if you get TCM (Turner Classic Movies). They sometimes air it. If it is on...be sure to catch it!
I guess if you are someone who really gets off on crying at the movies then you'll enjoy this outpouring of sentimental slop. But for the vast legions of the relatively dry (and clear) eyed it's fairly insufferable stuff. Plus, it features one of my all time least favorite actresses in the lead. I realize that Ms. Hayes is considered a brilliant theatre thesp, and maybe she was, but to watch her in sound films is to watch someone who might as well have a bumper sticker on her limo that reads "I'd rather Be Doing Silent Pics". I guess if I had a voice that sounds like Gracie Allen I'd feel the same way. Add complete and utter lack of chem between her and Gable and you can see how this movie quickly descends into boredom and is only briefly lifted out of the ennui pit by some good aerial battle action that, alas, is too little and way too late. C minus.
PS...Hayes, Gable and Lewis Stone are about as Italian as the 4th of July in Indianapolis.
PS...Hayes, Gable and Lewis Stone are about as Italian as the 4th of July in Indianapolis.
This version of The White Sister is the third and final one to date that was brought to the big screen. This old fashioned drama with heavy religious overtones is not a likely candidate for a modern remake.
It's that second version that is the most known. Shot in Italy in 1923 it was the breakout picture for Ronald Colman as he starred with Lillian Gish and a cast of Italian players because the film was shot on location in Italy, a very unusual thing for the time.
In the Citadel Film Series book the Films of Ronald Colman, it was mentioned that Colman had a swarthy complexion and that was why this erudite man of the English speaking language was cast in the film. The same could be said for the casting of Clark Gable as the male lead opposite Helen Hayes in this sound version.
The story was updated from the 19th century and the Italian colonial wars in Libya to World War I. Gable is an air ace in the Italian Air Corps and he meets Helen Hayes who is the daughter of the local nobleman Lewis Stone. He's got an arranged marriage with wealthy Alan Edwards who will help this noble, but impoverished family out of debt. But Helen wants Clark after spending a little time with him.
But fates just keep them apart, especially after Lewis Stone is killed in an automobile crash and Gable goes off to World War I. Other than the updating of the time of the story and the elimination of a sister for Hayes, if you've seen the Colman-Gish silent version you know what happens here.
Someone like Tyrone Power who was a few years away from breaking into stardom at another studio would have been far better at handling the mushy romantic dialog. Certainly Ronald Colman might have done well with it even though he was British to the core. Gable is too American for the part though he does his best with it. The female lead is very suitable to Helen Hayes, especially with her Catholic background.
Fans of Clark Gable will still like The White Sister, but it will never be rated among his better films.
It's that second version that is the most known. Shot in Italy in 1923 it was the breakout picture for Ronald Colman as he starred with Lillian Gish and a cast of Italian players because the film was shot on location in Italy, a very unusual thing for the time.
In the Citadel Film Series book the Films of Ronald Colman, it was mentioned that Colman had a swarthy complexion and that was why this erudite man of the English speaking language was cast in the film. The same could be said for the casting of Clark Gable as the male lead opposite Helen Hayes in this sound version.
The story was updated from the 19th century and the Italian colonial wars in Libya to World War I. Gable is an air ace in the Italian Air Corps and he meets Helen Hayes who is the daughter of the local nobleman Lewis Stone. He's got an arranged marriage with wealthy Alan Edwards who will help this noble, but impoverished family out of debt. But Helen wants Clark after spending a little time with him.
But fates just keep them apart, especially after Lewis Stone is killed in an automobile crash and Gable goes off to World War I. Other than the updating of the time of the story and the elimination of a sister for Hayes, if you've seen the Colman-Gish silent version you know what happens here.
Someone like Tyrone Power who was a few years away from breaking into stardom at another studio would have been far better at handling the mushy romantic dialog. Certainly Ronald Colman might have done well with it even though he was British to the core. Gable is too American for the part though he does his best with it. The female lead is very suitable to Helen Hayes, especially with her Catholic background.
Fans of Clark Gable will still like The White Sister, but it will never be rated among his better films.
THE WHITE SISTER (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1933), directed by Victor Fleming, stars Helen Hayes and Clark Gable for the first and only time (not counting separate scenes for the same movie titled NIGHT FLIGHT (1933) starring John and Lionel Barrymore). Based on the 1909 novel by F. Marion Crawford and dramatized by Walter Hackett, THE WHITE SISTER was used as the basis of two earlier silent screen treatments (Essanay, 1915) with Viola Allen and Richard Travers; and more famously (Metro, 1923) starring Lillian Gish and Ronald Colman. This 105 minute adaptation for the screen by Donald Ogden Stewart updates the story to the World War but remains true to form with material from which it is based.
Set in Italy, Angela Chiarmonte (Helen Hayes) is introduced as a religious woman whose closest friend is her parish priest, Father Saracinesca (Edward Arnold). Her father is Prince Guido (Lewis Stone). She is engaged to Ernesto Traversi (Alan Edwards), a man of her father's choosing. During the church festival, Angela's limousine is rear-ended by a car full of soldiers driven by Giovanni Severi (Clark Gable), who takes an immediate interest in her. After meeting him again at the carnival, Angela goes againstthe wishes of her her caretaker/companion, Mina (Louise Closser Hale) by spending time with this young soldier. After his visit to her home, and six days before her marriage to Ernesto, Angela and Giovanni are caught kissing by her father. With Giovanni forced to leave, Angela argues the fact she loves this soldier and refuses to marry a man she does not love. Not wanting Angela to suffer the same fate as his late wife, Guido follows Angela to the officer's club where she is to meet Giovanni, only to be killed in a car accident which leaves Angela in a state of shock. Only after Angela resumes her love with Giovanni, he is called off to war with hope of marriage upon his return. Receiving word of Giovanni killed in action, Angela chooses a new life by becoming a nun. With Giovanni having survived injuries and three years in prison camp, he makes his escape, searching for Angela, unaware she has already taken her final vows. Featuring May Robson (The Mother Superior); Nat Pendleton, Inez Palage and Gino Corrado in smaller roles.
Having first seen THE WHITE SISTER on New York City's WNEW, Channel 5 in 1970, aside from getting to see a much younger Helen Hayes, whose performance in AIRPORT (Universal, 1970) stole the show from it's all-star cast (winning an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actress), I was unaware this premise had been done twice before, making this one of the many sound remakes of material done during the silent film era. Regardless of American actors playing Italian characters, Helen Hayes and Clark Gable (with mustache) are believable enough to overlook these obstacles which thankfully did not have them attempt Italian accents. Memorable moments include behind the scenes in the nunnery with Angela taking vows to the supreme sacrifice for her love to the church and God. Though not strictly a religious movie, it's a love story bearing a religious theme. Tastefully done, well directed and acted by its principal players make this worth seeing.
Reportedly a success in 1933, THE WHITE SISTER never got home video distribution, but did become available on DVD with second disc being the 143 minute Lillian Gish edition, as well as occasional broadcasts on Turner Classic Movies cable channel. (***)
Set in Italy, Angela Chiarmonte (Helen Hayes) is introduced as a religious woman whose closest friend is her parish priest, Father Saracinesca (Edward Arnold). Her father is Prince Guido (Lewis Stone). She is engaged to Ernesto Traversi (Alan Edwards), a man of her father's choosing. During the church festival, Angela's limousine is rear-ended by a car full of soldiers driven by Giovanni Severi (Clark Gable), who takes an immediate interest in her. After meeting him again at the carnival, Angela goes againstthe wishes of her her caretaker/companion, Mina (Louise Closser Hale) by spending time with this young soldier. After his visit to her home, and six days before her marriage to Ernesto, Angela and Giovanni are caught kissing by her father. With Giovanni forced to leave, Angela argues the fact she loves this soldier and refuses to marry a man she does not love. Not wanting Angela to suffer the same fate as his late wife, Guido follows Angela to the officer's club where she is to meet Giovanni, only to be killed in a car accident which leaves Angela in a state of shock. Only after Angela resumes her love with Giovanni, he is called off to war with hope of marriage upon his return. Receiving word of Giovanni killed in action, Angela chooses a new life by becoming a nun. With Giovanni having survived injuries and three years in prison camp, he makes his escape, searching for Angela, unaware she has already taken her final vows. Featuring May Robson (The Mother Superior); Nat Pendleton, Inez Palage and Gino Corrado in smaller roles.
Having first seen THE WHITE SISTER on New York City's WNEW, Channel 5 in 1970, aside from getting to see a much younger Helen Hayes, whose performance in AIRPORT (Universal, 1970) stole the show from it's all-star cast (winning an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actress), I was unaware this premise had been done twice before, making this one of the many sound remakes of material done during the silent film era. Regardless of American actors playing Italian characters, Helen Hayes and Clark Gable (with mustache) are believable enough to overlook these obstacles which thankfully did not have them attempt Italian accents. Memorable moments include behind the scenes in the nunnery with Angela taking vows to the supreme sacrifice for her love to the church and God. Though not strictly a religious movie, it's a love story bearing a religious theme. Tastefully done, well directed and acted by its principal players make this worth seeing.
Reportedly a success in 1933, THE WHITE SISTER never got home video distribution, but did become available on DVD with second disc being the 143 minute Lillian Gish edition, as well as occasional broadcasts on Turner Classic Movies cable channel. (***)
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn December 1932, Hollywood Reporter announced that Clark Gable had won the role of "Giovanni" from Douglas Fairbanks Jr. According to modern sources, Gable wore a mustache for the first time in this picture.
- ErroresThis adaptation of the book placed the scenes in Germany and Italy. Helen Hayes and Clark Gable made no effort to speak or imitate an Italian Accent.
She being the daughter of an Italian Prince and he born with the name Giovani Severini, Captain in the Italian Air Corp, it was a big deal.
- ConexionesEdited from Ángeles infernales (1930)
- Bandas sonorasO Sole Mio
(1898) (uncredited)
Music by Eduardo Di Capua and Alfredo Mazzucchi
Lyrics by Giovanni Capurro
Played by the band at the carnival
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- How long is The White Sister?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- También se conoce como
- Bela sestra
- Locaciones de filmación
- Reno, Nevada, Estados Unidos(aerial and fighter base scenes)
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 625,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 45 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The White Sister (1933) officially released in Canada in English?
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