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5,5/10
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Un médium spiritualiste tient une séance pour un écrivain souffrant du blocage de l'écrivain mais convoque accidentellement l'esprit de sa première épouse décédée, ce qui conduit à un triang... Tout lireUn médium spiritualiste tient une séance pour un écrivain souffrant du blocage de l'écrivain mais convoque accidentellement l'esprit de sa première épouse décédée, ce qui conduit à un triangle amoureux complexe avec sa femme actuelle.Un médium spiritualiste tient une séance pour un écrivain souffrant du blocage de l'écrivain mais convoque accidentellement l'esprit de sa première épouse décédée, ce qui conduit à un triangle amoureux complexe avec sa femme actuelle.
- Prix
- 1 victoire au total
Michele Dotrice
- Edna
- (as Michelle Dotrice)
Peter A Rogers
- Alfred Hitchcock
- (as Peter Rogers)
Avis en vedette
I find this comedy funny and delightful. The characters are fun and lovely. The colours are vibrant, and the tone is light. I really enjoyed it.
Blithe Spirit, loosely based on Noel Coward's classic farce. We have Dan Stevens as a writer who's trying to turn his novel into a screenplay. He has an empty-headed wife (Isla Fsher) who swans about the estate. With friends, they go to see a show Madame Arcati (Judi Dench) is putting on, but her act goes wrong and she's exposed as a phony. Because Stevens is thinking a lot about his dead first wife (Leslie Mann) he gets Arcati to come to the house (a sprawling art deco thing) for a seance. Of course she summons the dead wife who, although it's 1937, has a #metoo sensibility.
Things turn slapsticky, and although the stars try hard, it doesn't work. One moment the ghosty wife can't slap Stevens because she's only ectoplasm but the next minute she can play a piano. Worst of all is the version of Arcati. Dench plays her as an aggrieved victim who's sham has been discovered and she's resentful. Bleh. The various Arcati's of film, TV, and stage, have generally played her as a swooping eccentric who's on the dotty side: Margaret Rutherford, Mildred Natwick, Ruth Gordon, Angela Lansbury, Penelope Keith.
This version plays like a sitcom, with the three main characters as madcaps and Dench's shuffling dud of a medium as an unfunny subplot.
Things turn slapsticky, and although the stars try hard, it doesn't work. One moment the ghosty wife can't slap Stevens because she's only ectoplasm but the next minute she can play a piano. Worst of all is the version of Arcati. Dench plays her as an aggrieved victim who's sham has been discovered and she's resentful. Bleh. The various Arcati's of film, TV, and stage, have generally played her as a swooping eccentric who's on the dotty side: Margaret Rutherford, Mildred Natwick, Ruth Gordon, Angela Lansbury, Penelope Keith.
This version plays like a sitcom, with the three main characters as madcaps and Dench's shuffling dud of a medium as an unfunny subplot.
If you liked the stage play then I would imagine you would have a few issues with this film, however if you are not aware of the play or the 1945 film based upon the play then you will probably like this version. I never really liked the original film so not that emotional about comparing the two but many prefer the first attempt.
Does this capture Noel Cowards wit, not really but that maybe no bad thing.
Enjoy it for what it is, a simple story with a lacklustre ending to while away some time.
Does this capture Noel Cowards wit, not really but that maybe no bad thing.
Enjoy it for what it is, a simple story with a lacklustre ending to while away some time.
So much more could have been done with this. Some characters were poorly cast. It was underwhelming. The concept is good but it missed the mark in my opinion.
Any time we see a movie, we have to suspend disbelief in order to get into the fictional world of a film (that's not a documentary). The huge problem with Blithe Spirit is that much of it was so unbelievable as to make it almost impossible to suspend disbelief and therefore impossible to watch.
Basically, the main theme of this version of Noel Coward's play, is that after the main male character's deceased ex-wife is summoned forth from a medium who's supposed to be a fraud (Judi Dench), said deceased ex-wife sets out to get between her former husband and his now (living) wife. For me, the big problem here was that the husband, a crime-writer, acts in such a stupid and irrational way that the whole film just seems ridiculous. Plus, the former wife, played to the hilt by Leslie Mann, was a stereotype of the vengeful scorned wife, even though anyone who is rational would recognize that that's not what she really was.
Specifically, once he has "seen" the ghost of his former wife and realizes others don't see her, he should have altered his behavior accordingly. Instead he keeps repeating the same moronic behavior over and over which just served to make me angry. Did the director and/or scriptwriter really think an audience would go for this?
Despite this major flaw, the film was visually engaging and busy enough to keep me watching despite my annoyance.
Basically, the main theme of this version of Noel Coward's play, is that after the main male character's deceased ex-wife is summoned forth from a medium who's supposed to be a fraud (Judi Dench), said deceased ex-wife sets out to get between her former husband and his now (living) wife. For me, the big problem here was that the husband, a crime-writer, acts in such a stupid and irrational way that the whole film just seems ridiculous. Plus, the former wife, played to the hilt by Leslie Mann, was a stereotype of the vengeful scorned wife, even though anyone who is rational would recognize that that's not what she really was.
Specifically, once he has "seen" the ghost of his former wife and realizes others don't see her, he should have altered his behavior accordingly. Instead he keeps repeating the same moronic behavior over and over which just served to make me angry. Did the director and/or scriptwriter really think an audience would go for this?
Despite this major flaw, the film was visually engaging and busy enough to keep me watching despite my annoyance.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThere have been many filmed adaptations of Noël Coward's play, including Blithe Spirit (1956) in which writer Noël Coward himself plays the lead role alongside Claudette Colbert and Lauren Bacall, but the most popular version is Blithe Spirit (1945) starring Rex Harrison, Constance Cummings, Margaret Rutherford and Kay Hammond and directed by David Lean.
- GaffesEarly on, Condomine puts a record on an acoustic gramophone and puts the needle down to the left of the spindle, where it would dig into the record if it would play at all. (The image has not been reversed because the record is still turning clockwise.)
- Citations
Charles Condomine: Two's company--three's a nightmare
- ConnexionsReferences Mata Hari (1931)
- Bandes originalesLeaning on a Rainbow
Performed by Michael Ball
Written by Ian Brown (as Ian W. Brown), Jake Field, Simon Johnson
Courtesy of Mighty Village/EMI Music Publishing Ltd
Courtesy of Decca Records
Under license from Universal Music Operations Limited
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Колишня з того світу
- Lieux de tournage
- Joldwynds, Holmbury St Mary, Dorking, Surrey, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Condomines' house)
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 282 500 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 88 559 $ US
- 21 févr. 2021
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 964 832 $ US
- Durée
- 1h 39m(99 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39:1
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