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Vers sa destinée

Titre original : Young Mr. Lincoln
  • 1939
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40min
NOTE IMDb
7,5/10
9,8 k
MA NOTE
Henry Fonda in Vers sa destinée (1939)
Drame juridiqueDrame politiqueBiographieDrame

Histoire fictive de la jeunesse de ce président américain alors qu'il affronte la plus grosse affaire de sa carrière d'avocat débutant.Histoire fictive de la jeunesse de ce président américain alors qu'il affronte la plus grosse affaire de sa carrière d'avocat débutant.Histoire fictive de la jeunesse de ce président américain alors qu'il affronte la plus grosse affaire de sa carrière d'avocat débutant.

  • Réalisation
    • John Ford
  • Scénaristes
    • Lamar Trotti
    • Rosemary Benét
  • Stars
    • Henry Fonda
    • Alice Brady
    • Marjorie Weaver
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,5/10
    9,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • John Ford
    • Scénaristes
      • Lamar Trotti
      • Rosemary Benét
    • Stars
      • Henry Fonda
      • Alice Brady
      • Marjorie Weaver
    • 185avis d'utilisateurs
    • 55avis des critiques
    • 91Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 6 victoires et 2 nominations au total

    Photos106

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    Casting principal61

    Modifier
    Henry Fonda
    Henry Fonda
    • Abraham Lincoln
    Alice Brady
    Alice Brady
    • Abigail Clay
    Marjorie Weaver
    Marjorie Weaver
    • Mary Todd
    Arleen Whelan
    Arleen Whelan
    • Sarah Clay
    Eddie Collins
    Eddie Collins
    • Efe Turner
    Pauline Moore
    Pauline Moore
    • Ann Rutledge
    Richard Cromwell
    Richard Cromwell
    • Matt Clay
    Donald Meek
    Donald Meek
    • Prosecutor John Felder
    Judith Dickens
    • Carrie Sue
    • (générique uniquement)
    Eddie Quillan
    Eddie Quillan
    • Adam Clay
    Spencer Charters
    Spencer Charters
    • Judge Herbert A. Bell
    Ward Bond
    Ward Bond
    • John Palmer Cass
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Man with Lynch Mob
    • (non crédité)
    Sam Ash
    Sam Ash
    • Townsman Dancing at Party
    • (non crédité)
    Arthur Aylesworth
    Arthur Aylesworth
    • New Salem Townsman
    • (non crédité)
    Dorris Bowdon
    Dorris Bowdon
    • Carrie Sue
    • (non crédité)
    Virginia Brissac
    Virginia Brissac
    • Peach Pie Baker
    • (non crédité)
    Paul E. Burns
    Paul E. Burns
    • Loafer
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • John Ford
    • Scénaristes
      • Lamar Trotti
      • Rosemary Benét
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs185

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    Avis à la une

    9craig_smith9

    Young Henry Fonda is young Mr. Lincoln

    Henry Fonda brilliantly captures what we have long believed Abraham Lincoln was like. It is a fooler. Through Fonda's performance we are led to believe (on the surface) that Abraham Lincoln was a country bumpkin. But, through his confrontation with the lynch mob and especially during the court proceedings, you can see that beneath the exterior posturings is a brilliant man who has a very good command of what is going on around him and how to influence the people around him.

    In this movie Henry Fonda shows that he has a very good grasp of how to present humor. It is an aspect of him that has been lost over the years. When he is telling stories and jokes he has the timing down perfect. There is a sequence in the trial that had me laughing quite hard. He shows this gift again in The Lady Eve in 1940.

    The ending by John Ford is absolutely brilliant with Henry Fonda going to the top of a hill and in the distance a tremendous storm symbolic of the Civil War. He goes forward into history. The movie is fiction but the insight into Lincoln is tremendous. Definitely worth seeing again.
    9bkoganbing

    A Jackleg Prarie Lawyer

    Young Mr. Lincoln marks the first film of the director/star collaboration of John Ford and Henry Fonda. I recall years ago Fonda telling that as a young actor he was understandably nervous about playing Abraham Lincoln and scared he wouldn't live up to the challenge.

    John Ford before the shooting starts put him at ease by saying he wasn't going to be playing the Great Emancipator, but just a jack-leg prairie lawyer. That being settled Fonda headed a cast that John Ford directed into a classic film.

    This is not a biographical film of Lincoln. That had come before in the sound era with Walter Huston and a year after Young Mr. Lincoln, Raymond Massey did the Pulitzer Prize winning play by Robert Sherwood Abe Lincoln in Illinois. Massey still remains the definitive Lincoln.

    But as Ford said, Fonda wasn't playing the Great Emancipator just a small town lawyer in Illinois. The film encompasses about 10 years of Lincoln's early life. We see him clerking in a general store, getting some law books from an immigrant pioneer family whose path he would cross again later in the story. And his romance with Ann Rutledge with her early death leaving Lincoln a most melancholy being.

    Fast forward about 10 years and Lincoln is now a practicing attorney beginning to get some notice. He's served a couple of terms in the legislature, but he's back in private practice not really sure if politics is for him.

    This is where the bulk of the action takes place. The two sons of that family he'd gotten the law books from way back when are accused of murder. He offers to defend them. And not an ordinary murder but one of a deputy sheriff.

    The trial itself is fiction, but the gambit used in the defense of Richard Cromwell and Eddie Quillan who played the two sons is based on a real case Lincoln defended. I'll say no more.

    Other than the performances, the great strength of Young Mr. Lincoln is the way John Ford captures the mood and atmosphere and setting of a small Illinois prairie town in a Fourth of July celebration. It's almost like you're watching a newsreel. And it was the mood of the country itself, young, vibrant and growing.

    Fans of John Ford films will recognize two musical themes here that were repeated in later films. During the romantic interlude at the beginning with Fonda and Pauline Moore who played Ann Rutledge the music in the background is the same theme used in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance for Vera Miles. And at a dance, the tune Lovely Susan Brown that Fonda and Marjorie Weaver who plays Mary Todd is the same one Fonda danced with Cathy Downs to, in My Darling Clementine at the dance for the raising of a church in Tombstone.

    Lincoln will forever be a favorite subject of biographers and dramatists because of two reasons, I believe. The first is he's the living embodiment of our own American mythology about people rising from the very bottom to the pinnacle of power through their own efforts. In fact Young Mr. Lincoln very graphically shows the background Lincoln came from. And secondly the fact that he was our president during the greatest crisis in American history and that he made a singularly good and moral decision to free slaves during the Civil War, albeit for some necessary political reasons. His assassination assured his place in history.

    Besides Fonda and others I've mentioned special praise should also go to Fred Kohler, Jr. and Ward Bond, the two town louts, Kohler being the murder victim and Bond the chief accuser. Also Donald Meek as the prosecuting attorney and Alice Brady in what turned out to be her last film as the pioneer mother of Cromwell and Quillan. And a very nice performance by Spencer Charters who specialized in rustic characters as the judge.

    For a film that captures the drama and romance of the time it's set in, you can't do better than Young Mr. Lincoln.
    7hereontheoutside

    Delicious with a grain of salt

    According to John Ford's lyrically shot, fictional biopic of Abraham Lincoln's life his greatest faults may have been an obtuseness with woman and an ability to dance in "the worst way." Ford's camera has only praising views to reveal of Mr. Lincoln's early life. But for what the film lacks in character complexities it makes up for in beauty and depth of vision. Uncharacteristically beautiful compositions of early film, what could have been a series of gorgeous still frames, Ford has a unique eye for telling a story. The film sings of the life of a hopeful young man. Henry Fonda plays the contemplative and spontaneously clever Lincoln to a tee, one of his best roles.

    The film concerns two young men, brothers, on trial for a murder that both claim to have committed. In classic angry mob style, the town decides to take justice into their own hands and lynch the pair of them, until honest Abe steps into the fray. He charms them with his humor, telling them not to rob him of his first big case, and that they are as good as lynched with him as the boys lawyer. What follows seems to become the outline for all courtroom- murder-dramas thereafter, as Abe cunningly interrogates witnesses to the delight and humor of the judge, jury and town before he stumbles upon the missing links.

    The film plays out like many John Ford movies do: a tablespoon of Americana, a dash of moderate predictability, a hint of sarcasm that you aren't sure if you put in the recipe or if Ford did it himself. Despite the overtly 'Hollywood' feel of the film, and overly patriotic banter alluding to Lincoln's future presidency, the film is entirely enjoyable and enjoyably well constructed, if you can take your drama with a grain of salt.
    eibon09

    Henry Fonda is Terrific

    Young Mr. Lincoln(1939) was released in the same year as another classic by John Ford called Stagecoach(1939). Its amazing that two great films like these were overlooked for the Best Picture award of 1939. Tells the fictitious but compelling story of the early days of Abraham Lincolm when he was a young struggling lawyer. He shows traits that made him famous during his role as the President of the United States. He does have a touch of the Sherlock Holmes method of solving crimes for he uses it to have defend a man falsely accused of murder.

    Patriototic motion picture that is one of my favorite films from John Ford. Henry Fonda is perfect in the role of the young Abraham Lincoln. In fact, he bears a little resemblence to the late admired and revered, Abraham Lincoln. Fonda gives a performance of admiring humaine tenderness. Many of the scenes in Young Mr Lincoln(1939) are done with beauty and finesse.
    roy-4

    Great Ford, and Great Americana

    Why does this movie get so little attention? Maybe because it came out in that overstuffed great-movie year, 1939 (Wizard of Oz, Dark Victory, Grand Illusion, GWTW [which I can't stand]). But I really think it's because YML is a transitional film for Ford -- it's stuck between his early expressionistic period ("The Informer") and his classic Western period, with one stylistic foot in each. And it's unabashedly patriotic, only hinting at the dark reimagining of the American experience that the Master would come to in "The Searchers" and "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" -- but still hinting at it enough to turn off the McVeighs among us.

    Maybe that's why I love it. You can see Ford coming to terms with the grand, Griffithesque vision of America through its most complicated avatar, Lincoln. Ford's love for his country was more like Lincoln's than Griffith's, anyway: like Lincoln, he acknowledged the genius of the democratic experiment, but he was also aware of its dangers: mob rule and self-satisfaction. YML's greatest scenes are all about this.

    First, there's the local parade Abe attends, surrounded by yahoos whom he loves but also sees for what they are. (We see him in another scene accepting a legal case from one of these -- and warily biting the coin offered him for a retainer.) Veterans of the recent War of 1812 and Indian Wars march through; the crowd is wild for them, Abe merely respectful.Then a agon of old men in tricorners is pulled through the parade route. No one seems to know who they are. Lincoln quietly informs his friends that they are veterans of the War for Independence -- and gravely doffs his stovepipe hat. His friends, mildly ashamed (it appears) of their prevous jingoistic glee, follow suit, and stand silent and hatless as the old men pass.

    Then the mildly ludicrous plot -- about two brothers accused of another man's murder -- kicks in, and Abe goes to work. The scene where he confronts a lynch mob, putting his foot up against the log they're using for a battering-ram against the jailhouse door, is a classic by any standard. But note how Abe talks to the mob on its own level while remaining, in spirit, resolutely on his own higher plane. After appealing to their macho impulses by offering to "lick any man here," he delivers a house-divided speech that soothes their savagery and leaves them confused and irresolute. "Dontcha wanna put that log down now, boys?" he asks when they have been flummoxed by his eloquence. "Ain't it gettin' a mite heavy?"

    Throughout Ford indulges in shameless historical foreshadowings that would have made Stephen Vincent Benet blush. Abe meets Mary Todd and Stephen Douglas; he rides down a dirt road with a bumpkin who's playing a new tune called "Dixie" on a jaw-harp. "Kinda makes you feel like marchin'!" says the bumpkin, as he and Abe ride through a muddy patch in the road.

    The ending is impossible to describe without inviting derision, but I swear to you, it works. Having won his case, Lincoln allows as how he might take a walk -- "maybe to the top of that hill." As he trudges on, the skies send down rain and lightning -- and Abe seems to know what this is a prelude to.

    I acknowledge the superiority of the great Ford films that came after, but I will always have a special place in my heart for "Young Mr. Lincoln." Independence Day (the federal day of observance, not the movie) is coming; you could do far worse than to watch this great film before the barbecue.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Drame politique
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    Biographie
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    Drame

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      John Ford and producer Darryl F. Zanuck fought an extended battle over control of the film. Ford even had unused takes of the film destroyed so the studio could not insert them into the movie. One scene that Ford insisted on cutting was a scene where Lincoln met his future assassin, a very young John Wilkes Booth.
    • Gaffes
      Lincoln is shown playing "Dixie" on a Jew's harp. That portion of the film is ostensibly set in the year 1837, but most reliable sources indicate that "Dixie" wasn't written, publicly performed nor published before 1859. During the Civil War, Lincoln was known to be partial to the tune (it was almost as popular in the North in the 1860s as in the South), but it's unlikely he would have heard it in the 1830s.
    • Citations

      Abe Lincoln: [cross-examining Cass] J. Palmer Cass.

      John Palmer Cass: Yes, sir.

      Abe Lincoln: What's the "J" stand for?

      John Palmer Cass: John.

      Abe Lincoln: Anyone ever call you Jack?

      John Palmer Cass: Yeah, but...

      Abe Lincoln: Why "J. Palmer Cass?" Why not "John P. Cass?"

      John Palmer Cass: Well, I...

      Abe Lincoln: Does "J. Palmer Cass" have something to hide?

      John Palmer Cass: No.

      Abe Lincoln: Then what do you part your name in the middle for?

      John Palmer Cass: I got a right to call myself anything I want as long as it's my own name!

      Abe Lincoln: Well then if it's all the same to you, I'll call you Jack-cass.

      [Roar of laughter from spectators]

    • Connexions
      Featured in L'oiseau bleu (1940)
    • Bandes originales
      The Battle Cry of Freedom
      (1862) (uncredited)

      Written by George Frederick Root

      Played during the opening credits and sung by an unidentified chorus

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Young Mr. Lincoln?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Is this film based on a novel?
    • Is this film based on real events?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 17 août 1939 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Young Mr. Lincoln
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Sacramento, Californie, États-Unis(river scenes)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Cosmopolitan Productions
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 1 500 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 40min(100 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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