Después de casarse con una teniente estadounidense con la que trabajó en la Alemania de posguerra, un capitán francés busca una manera de reunirse con ella en EE.UU. bajo la Ley de Esposas d... Leer todoDespués de casarse con una teniente estadounidense con la que trabajó en la Alemania de posguerra, un capitán francés busca una manera de reunirse con ella en EE.UU. bajo la Ley de Esposas de Guerra.Después de casarse con una teniente estadounidense con la que trabajó en la Alemania de posguerra, un capitán francés busca una manera de reunirse con ella en EE.UU. bajo la Ley de Esposas de Guerra.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 2 premios ganados y 3 nominaciones en total
- Capt. Jack Ramsey
- (as William Neff)
- Undetermined Role
- (escenas eliminadas)
- Lt. Kelly
- (escenas eliminadas)
- Lieutenant
- (escenas eliminadas)
- (as Robert Stevenson)
- Undetermined Role
- (escenas eliminadas)
- Col. Bliven
- (sin créditos)
- Mail Clerk
- (sin créditos)
- Barracks Private
- (sin créditos)
- Male Billet Sergeant
- (sin créditos)
- Soldier
- (sin créditos)
- WAC Announcer Officer
- (sin créditos)
- French Minister
- (sin créditos)
- Chaplain Willis
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Grant plays the patient and suffering spouse, who must endlessly explain that he is married to an American soldier and entitled to shelter and transportation in a system that does not recognize his gender as compatible with his situation. Throughout, Grant's face and body language speak volumes about the frustration of dealing with bureaucracy and filling in forms in triplicate. Although at times Sheridan seems oblivious to the depth of Grant's problems, her performance is fine, and she convincingly captures the transition from an initial loathing of to an eventual attraction to Rochard. Shot on location in post-war Germany, the black-and-white photography captures the beauty of the countryside and the devastation of the cities with documentary like precision. Hawks keeps the proceedings well paced, and, while rarely laugh-out-loud funny, "I Was a Male War Bride" and its megawatt stars provide excellent entertainment.
For me, the funniest scene took place while Grant is waiting for the bus with all the brides. Over a loudspeaker, a female officer informs the women about the new styles in the states and the way hair is worn. Grant's face is priceless while she's talking.
The movie is cute and notable for Grant dressing like a woman and looking very homely. Ann Sheridan is very good. The film is a little slow, but if you love Cary Grant, you should enjoy it.
I Was a Male War Bride is not even close to being a poor film, it has many moments of hilarity and contains a last twenty minutes to savour, it is however un-fulfilling as a comedy whole and sags on far too many occasions. How much of this is down to the chemistry of the leads and off camera illness problems is open for debate, for both Cary Grant {Rochard} and Ann Sheridan {Gates} both suffered ill health during the shoot, while director Howard Hawks himself was to succumb to being unwell at an inappropriate juncture. Tho Ava Gardner was originally wanted for the role of Gates {something i feel would have been excellent, if still wishing for a more comedic actress}, Hawks went for the more brisk acting of Sheridan, tho a fine actress, she seems wrong here, not quite coping with the comedy interplay with her leading man, almost missing the comedic beat as it were. Grant himself was said to have praised the picture quite often, but he does look weary and often appearing to be on auto pilot during the more laborious sequences.
The film has many supporters, but i can't in my wildest dreams term this as a screwball comedy, perhaps i expect better from Grant and Hawks?, i mean after His Girl Friday, Bringing Up Baby and to a lesser extent, Monkey Business, my expectation for this one was always likely to be high, and of course viewing Sheridan as a great dramatic actress was meaning i viewed this one with suspicion from the off. I honestly feel the last twenty minutes saves the picture from being very average, the script perks up, and naturally a bit of gender confusion always raises a titter, tho the sight of Grant in drag looks more akin to Frankenstein's monster than the boys from Some Like It Hot!. It's more than worth a watch and it has guaranteed laughs dotted throughout, it just falls some way short of being a comedy classic in this viewers humble opinion. 6/10
This should make it pretty obvious what the best thing about this otherwise average film was. The chemistry between Grant and Sheridan is amusing but not engaging (not the way his verbal sparring with other co-stars like Katharine Hepburn and Rosalind Russell just sparkle right off the screen); the plot is contrived and the romance between the two main characters--Henri and Catherine--isn't particularly believable. (Grant and Sheridan fail at what Gable and Colbert did so well in 'It Happened One Night': making it believable and real and sympathetic that two characters at absolute loggerheads *could* fall helplessly in love.)
This doesn't mean that the film is *bad*. The first half of the movie is mildly amusing, with the bickering between the two main characters as they take a motorcycle trip to their destination. But the best part of it probably comes when Henri and Catherine get married (three times!), with all its attendant problems. It is Grant's perfect comic timing and adorable mien that makes the blatantly "please laugh now" moments genuinely funny. The look of resignation, anger, or suppressed annoyance on Henri's face as he repeatedly asserts that he is "an alien spouse" under the Congressional War Brides Act must be seen to be believed. And I dare anyone *not* to laugh when Grant cross-dresses. That is probably the best part of the film.
An average film without Cary Grant, a better one for having him in it, but definitely an average (if not poor) Grant film. If you want to introduce a friend to the charms of Cary Grant or to screwball comedy, you're better off with Bringing Up Baby or His Girl Friday. This one's probably for true Grant aficionados only.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaHoward Hawks's first film to be shot in Europe, it was beset with problems. The German winter was unbearably cold, and most of the cast and crew fell ill after filming three months in Germany, and reached the Shepperton Studios in London, England. Ann Sheridan caught pleurisy (which developed into pneumonia); Randy Stuart was stricken with jaundice; Cary Grant contracted hepatitis with jaundice; and Hawks broke out in unexplained hives. Production was shut down for three months while Grant convalesced; it resumed only after he was able to regain around 37 pounds. Hawks best summed up the lapse in production: "Cary ran into a haystack on a motorcycle and came out weighing twenty pounds less."
- ErroresWith Catherine gone briefly, Henri is waiting and sleeping in the sidecar when some children put the motorcycle in gear. With no driver, the motorcycle increases in speed and shifts gears.
- Citas
Capt. Henri Rochard: My name is Rochard. You'll think I'm a bride but actually I'm a husband. There'll be a moment or two of confusion but, if we all keep our heads, everything will be fine.
- ConexionesFeatured in Mirror for Our Dreams: Story and Character (1968)
Selecciones populares
- How long is I Was a Male War Bride?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- USD 2,000,000 (estimado)
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 45 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1