ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,7/10
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MA NOTE
Une serveuse de Chicago tombe amoureuse d'un fermier du Minnesota, et décide de vivre à la campagne.Une serveuse de Chicago tombe amoureuse d'un fermier du Minnesota, et décide de vivre à la campagne.Une serveuse de Chicago tombe amoureuse d'un fermier du Minnesota, et décide de vivre à la campagne.
Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
- Reaper
- (as Guinn Williams)
Anne Shirley
- Marie Tustine
- (as Dawn O'Day)
Patrick Rooney
- Butch
- (as Pat Rooney)
Marjorie Beebe
- Waitress
- (uncredited)
Eddie Boland
- Reaper
- (uncredited)
Joe Brown
- Cafe Patron
- (uncredited)
Harry Gripp
- Reaper
- (uncredited)
Mark Hamilton
- Greasy the Reaper
- (uncredited)
Werner Klingler
- Reaper
- (uncredited)
Charles Lane
- Man at Train Station
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDirector F.W. Murnau wanted the title of the film to be "Our Daily Bread", but the studio refused. Murnau's working title was the title used in several European countries' distribution.
- GaffesEach time Lem's father, Kate, and Mac storm out of the farmhouse after Kate bandages Mac's hand, the shadow of the screen door moves across the "sky" backdrop.
- Autres versionsThere is a silent version, shot by F.W. Murnau, and a part-talkie sound version, with music and parts re-shot by two directors hired by the studio, after Murnau's refusal to do so. The sound version is now considered lost. The silent version was restored and edited in DVD and Blu-Ray with an original score added in August 2008.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Murnau, Borzage and Fox (2008)
Commentaire en vedette
Fairly familiar story, but told with real intimacy, restrained acting, and Murnau's always sensitive and virtuoso direction.
Murnau has been compared to Welles, since both directors have cultured, poetic sensibilities, work brilliantly with actors, and constantly experiment, testing and expanding the expressive possibilities of the film medium, but here is the difference:
Welles was an extrovert, a showman, parading his brilliance. Murnau, no less brilliant, is more subtle. His SUNRISE is to the silent era what CITIZEN KANE is to the sound era, but even in that film his innovations are "the art that conceals art".
A casual viewer will see nothing in CITY GIRL but a nice story, well-executed. But the film is full of technical bravura for cinema fans: notice the perfection of the process shots in the opening train sequence. You didn't see this done as well in many major Hollywood films made even in the 1950s. Notice the farmhouse scenes where both the interiors and the brightly sunlit exteriors, visible through windows and doors, are PERFECTLY exposed. Even today, in the 21st century, we see films in which this isn't handled as well as Murnau & Co. do it here in 1928.
I saw the 90 minute silent version, which is the one to seek out -- not the shortened, half-talkie version.
Murnau's combination of technical brilliance, bold experimentation, superb direction of actors, and deep emotional sensitivity is practically unique in film history. He did EVERYTHING well. And if you have a chance to see his much earlier DER BRENNENDE ACKER (THE BURNING EARTH) see how much of this he was already achieving even with the primitive techniques and equipment of 1922. What a tragedy such a genius had to die in a car accident at the youthful age of 42.
Murnau has been compared to Welles, since both directors have cultured, poetic sensibilities, work brilliantly with actors, and constantly experiment, testing and expanding the expressive possibilities of the film medium, but here is the difference:
Welles was an extrovert, a showman, parading his brilliance. Murnau, no less brilliant, is more subtle. His SUNRISE is to the silent era what CITIZEN KANE is to the sound era, but even in that film his innovations are "the art that conceals art".
A casual viewer will see nothing in CITY GIRL but a nice story, well-executed. But the film is full of technical bravura for cinema fans: notice the perfection of the process shots in the opening train sequence. You didn't see this done as well in many major Hollywood films made even in the 1950s. Notice the farmhouse scenes where both the interiors and the brightly sunlit exteriors, visible through windows and doors, are PERFECTLY exposed. Even today, in the 21st century, we see films in which this isn't handled as well as Murnau & Co. do it here in 1928.
I saw the 90 minute silent version, which is the one to seek out -- not the shortened, half-talkie version.
Murnau's combination of technical brilliance, bold experimentation, superb direction of actors, and deep emotional sensitivity is practically unique in film history. He did EVERYTHING well. And if you have a chance to see his much earlier DER BRENNENDE ACKER (THE BURNING EARTH) see how much of this he was already achieving even with the primitive techniques and equipment of 1922. What a tragedy such a genius had to die in a car accident at the youthful age of 42.
- fwmurnau
- 3 avr. 2004
- Lien permanent
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- How long is City Girl?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Our Daily Bread
- Lieux de tournage
- Athena, Oregon, États-Unis(Verified via newspaper article published August 1928- THE ATHENA PRESS)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée2 heures
- Couleur
- Mixage
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