Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn orphan girl escapes her caregivers to be with a young man raised at the zoo whose only previous friends are the animals.An orphan girl escapes her caregivers to be with a young man raised at the zoo whose only previous friends are the animals.An orphan girl escapes her caregivers to be with a young man raised at the zoo whose only previous friends are the animals.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
Joseph E. Bernard
- Doctor Attending Chimpanzee
- (non crédité)
James P. Burtis
- Kretz
- (non crédité)
Elspeth Dudgeon
- Woman Whose Skunk Was Stolen
- (non crédité)
Margaret Hamilton
- Assistant Matron for orphans
- (non crédité)
Catherine Hayes
- Woman
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
This rare film is one of the best of the 1930's. The story is very original and the way the director did it is simply amazing! Beautiful and creative piece of work. It's absolutely very unique!
I have always wanted to see this: A friend's mother told me many years ago it was her favorite movie as a child.
It's a lovely creation. Gene Raymond, in surely his most appealing screen role, plays a Dr. Doolittle type who works at the zoo. Raymond wears a cap throughout, covering his marcelled blond hair. His character was decades ahead of PETA: When wealthy women come in wearing furs, he steals and burns them. And he has a very believable way with the animals.
The animals and birds are filmed gorgeously by Lee Garmes. In a later, better movie animals watch over the goings on of the human characters in a similar way: "The Night of the Hunter." But this is lovely itself.
Loretta Young, one of the screen's great beauties, looks ravishing as an orphan who slips away from the other girls and the evil matrons on their outing at the zoo. A child who does the same is thrown in, to little effect. Adorable children were in vogue at the time but his character is unnecessary and not especially appealing.
O.P. Heggie is likable and handsomely photographed as the sympathetic veterinary doctor. And Paul Fix is an effective villain.
Anyone who likes animals will be touched by this. Yes, opinion toward zoos has changed since the early 1930s. But we see them treated with nothing but love and understanding, other than by the villain. It is sure to win you over.
It's a lovely creation. Gene Raymond, in surely his most appealing screen role, plays a Dr. Doolittle type who works at the zoo. Raymond wears a cap throughout, covering his marcelled blond hair. His character was decades ahead of PETA: When wealthy women come in wearing furs, he steals and burns them. And he has a very believable way with the animals.
The animals and birds are filmed gorgeously by Lee Garmes. In a later, better movie animals watch over the goings on of the human characters in a similar way: "The Night of the Hunter." But this is lovely itself.
Loretta Young, one of the screen's great beauties, looks ravishing as an orphan who slips away from the other girls and the evil matrons on their outing at the zoo. A child who does the same is thrown in, to little effect. Adorable children were in vogue at the time but his character is unnecessary and not especially appealing.
O.P. Heggie is likable and handsomely photographed as the sympathetic veterinary doctor. And Paul Fix is an effective villain.
Anyone who likes animals will be touched by this. Yes, opinion toward zoos has changed since the early 1930s. But we see them treated with nothing but love and understanding, other than by the villain. It is sure to win you over.
How I loved this film! I always seek the forgotten and obscure- what a perfect film. Gorgeous photography, and the cast is ever so appealing. Has Loretta Young ever looked more beautiful than here? And Gene Raymond was just delightful. A film treasure not to be missed.
This film was transmitted in the early hours on the UK's Channel 4 terrestrial channel. (5 Dec 1998). It was an unusual film set in a zoo in Budapest and concerned the relationship between an enlightened keeper (Gene Raymond) and an escaped orphan (Loretta Young). There was a little too much anthropomorphism as far as the animals were concerned but overall that was forgivable. Some of the shots involving the animals were realistic and I suspect the modern disclaimer about animals not being hurt during the making of the picture could not have been made. There was a dream and fairy-tale air about the film and I wonder if it was regarded as unusual when it was made in 1933. It does not fit easily into any of the usual categories. I would recommend any one having the chance of seeing this film to take that chance. They will be rewarded with a pleasant novelty of a film.
It will take more than a little suspension of disbelief to buy the core fantasy: that fast talking Gene Raymond has lived his entire life inside the Budapest Zoo, ditto the idea that gorgeous Loretta Young is a poor orphan. But no matter, for the film is a marvelous and unusual piece of work, seldom seen and well worth finding. In fact, the sets alone make it a must see. As a side note, Raymond's character may be one of the sound era's first animal rights activists...I recall no previous studio film taking a stand against fur (though don't get your hopes up--the thrilling finale, featuring lions and elephants on the loose, surely traumatized the animals involved).
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe casting of Loretta Young in this film was officially announced by the studio on December 15, 1932.
- Citations
Dr. Grunbaum: Last Wednesday, did you steal a woman's fur?
Zani: Yes, sir.
Dr. Grunbaum: What made you do it?
Zani: People shouldn't kill animals... and wear their furs.
Dr. Grunbaum: Unfortunately, there's not a law against that... but there is a law against stealing. What makes you steal things? Did you sell the fur?
Zani: No. I burned it.
- Versions alternativesIn the original release prints a number of scenes were tinted amber or blue.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Biography: Loretta Young: Hollywood's Heavenly Beauty (1998)
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 436 649 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 34 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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