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Un fabricant automobile à la retraite et sa femme prennent des vacances prévues de longue date en Europe pour se rendre compte que finalement ils veulent des choses très différentes dans la ... Tout lireUn fabricant automobile à la retraite et sa femme prennent des vacances prévues de longue date en Europe pour se rendre compte que finalement ils veulent des choses très différentes dans la vie.Un fabricant automobile à la retraite et sa femme prennent des vacances prévues de longue date en Europe pour se rendre compte que finalement ils veulent des choses très différentes dans la vie.
- A remporté 1 oscar
- 3 victoires et 9 nominations au total
Maria Ouspenskaya
- Baroness Von Obersdorf
- (as Mme. Maria Ouspenskaya)
John Payne
- Harry
- (as John Howard Payne)
Bobby Barber
- Italian Taxi Driver
- (uncredited)
John Barclay
- Ship Passenger
- (uncredited)
Wilson Benge
- Steward on Queen Mary
- (uncredited)
Ted Billings
- Man on Railroad Platform
- (uncredited)
Eugene Borden
- Baggage Carrier at Train Station
- (uncredited)
Horace B. Carpenter
- Motor Company Employee
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWilliam Wyler spent a whole afternoon shooting the sequence where Fran (Ruth Chatterton) burns a letter from her husband; he wanted the letter to specifically blow gently along the terrace, stop for a moment, and then continue to flutter as the scene faded to black as a metaphor for Fran and Sam's failing marriage.
- GaffesTubby's glass is fuller when he puts it down when he and Matey leave than when he almost takes a drink.
- Citations
Sam Dodsworth: You'll have to stop getting younger someday.
- Autres versionsThe 1946 re-release, shown on the Turner Classic Movies channel, lists the end credits with a different order: Kathryn Marlowe is listed after Harlan Briggs, and John Payne is listed last, after Marlowe.
- ConnexionsFeatured in AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to William Wyler (1976)
- Bandes originalesAuld Lang Syne
(1788) (uncredited)
Traditional Scottish 17th century music
Arranged by Alfred Newman
Played during the opening scene
Commentaire en vedette
"Dodsworth" is a disarmingly honest and frank depiction of a failed marriage, based on the Sinclair Lewis novel. Its naturalistic acting and its refusal to make its characters anything less than full-bodied human beings make it feel way ahead of its time. It's never mentioned along with other classic films of the period--probably because it doesn't have an epic scope--but it should be.
Walter Huston gives an absolutely flawless performance in the title role. His type is so recognizable, even today: the successful American business man who values the simplest and most traditional of American values, and who comes across as provincial and crass to the rest of the world. Ruth Chatterton meets Huston's performance every step of the way as Dodsworth's wife, glad of the material comfort her husband can provide, but embarrassed by him and aware that he will prevent her from joining the world of high culture to which she wants to belong. It is to the movie's distinct credit that neither of these characters is either hero or villain. Dodsworth is crass and unsophisticated; yet at the same time he's honest and never misleads his wife into thinking he's something that he's not. Mrs. Dodsworth has a right to be bored by the kind of life Dodsworth is content with, but she might have thought of that before so readily accepting his financial success.
I don't really know for sure, but I have a feeling this movie might have made people very uncomfortable in 1936. I doubt married couples were encouraged to turn too critical an eye on their own marriages back then, and I suspect that more people than not decided to stick it out in unhappy marriages rather than violate a sense of social propriety. Before the days when people dated for a few years before getting married, many people probably learned about the kind of person they were marrying only after the wedding day. "Dodsworth" beautifully captures the sad, melancholy feeling of waking up one morning and realizing you're not married to the person you thought you were.
Grade: A
Walter Huston gives an absolutely flawless performance in the title role. His type is so recognizable, even today: the successful American business man who values the simplest and most traditional of American values, and who comes across as provincial and crass to the rest of the world. Ruth Chatterton meets Huston's performance every step of the way as Dodsworth's wife, glad of the material comfort her husband can provide, but embarrassed by him and aware that he will prevent her from joining the world of high culture to which she wants to belong. It is to the movie's distinct credit that neither of these characters is either hero or villain. Dodsworth is crass and unsophisticated; yet at the same time he's honest and never misleads his wife into thinking he's something that he's not. Mrs. Dodsworth has a right to be bored by the kind of life Dodsworth is content with, but she might have thought of that before so readily accepting his financial success.
I don't really know for sure, but I have a feeling this movie might have made people very uncomfortable in 1936. I doubt married couples were encouraged to turn too critical an eye on their own marriages back then, and I suspect that more people than not decided to stick it out in unhappy marriages rather than violate a sense of social propriety. Before the days when people dated for a few years before getting married, many people probably learned about the kind of person they were marrying only after the wedding day. "Dodsworth" beautifully captures the sad, melancholy feeling of waking up one morning and realizing you're not married to the person you thought you were.
Grade: A
- evanston_dad
- 16 nov. 2005
- Lien permanent
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 41 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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