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Dans l'Autriche-Hongrie d'avant guerre, un commis voyageur américain s'ingénie à intéresser l'empereur François-Joseph. Malheureux en affaires, il trouve l'amour auprès d'une jolie veuve de ... Tout lireDans l'Autriche-Hongrie d'avant guerre, un commis voyageur américain s'ingénie à intéresser l'empereur François-Joseph. Malheureux en affaires, il trouve l'amour auprès d'une jolie veuve de la cour.Dans l'Autriche-Hongrie d'avant guerre, un commis voyageur américain s'ingénie à intéresser l'empereur François-Joseph. Malheureux en affaires, il trouve l'amour auprès d'une jolie veuve de la cour.
- Nommé pour 2 Oscars
- 3 nominations au total
Harry Allen
- Gamekeeper
- (non crédité)
Gene Ashley
- Tyrolean Man
- (non crédité)
Franco Corsaro
- Spanish Marques
- (non crédité)
Paul De Corday
- Hungarian Officer
- (non crédité)
Cyril Delevanti
- Diplomat
- (non crédité)
Doris Dowling
- Tyrolean Girl
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBilly Wilder began shooting this film in 1946, soon after winning an Oscar for Le poison (1945). That film's great critical reception (and unexpected box-office success) gave Wilder more power and he spent a lot of time and money on this musical (which was his first color film). He was very dissatisfied with the result, however, and the release of the film was extensively delayed, perhaps for re-takes--Wilder liked to say he was hoping to delay its release as long as possible. It opened in Britain a month before its American debut, most unusually, and was a critical and box-office flop. In 1969, he told an interviewer, "I never want to see it again". His next film, La scandaleuse de Berlin (1948), opened in America only three months later.
- Citations
Princess Bitotska: The Lafuentes have more of everything. In fact, most of their children were born with eleven fingers.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Saturday Night Live: Melanie Griffith/Little Feat (1988)
Commentaire à la une
"The Emperor Waltz" is an underrated jewel, a true hidden treasure by the great Billy Wilder. The basic idea of the movie is authentic comic genius, Wilder's trade-mark superb wit: two parallel funny love stories, a canine one, of a dog with a blitch, and a human one, of the straightforward American guy Virgil (Bing Crosby) with the haughty Austrian Countess Johanna Augusta Franziska (Joan Fontaine), the respective masters of the pets.
Virgil is a commercial traveller: his stubborn attempts to sell gramophones to (no less a person than) the Emperor Franz-Josef are irresistibly comic. And then the Countess' blitch is the predestined partner of the Emperor's dog, and so she needs to be treated with extreme care (including sessions of psychoanalysis): all the hopes of the over-noble but impoverished family of the Holena von Shwartzemberg-Shwartzemberg lie in her paws... But it's all too funny to be described: see the movie and enjoy yourself.
The funny, gently mocking reconstruction of the Austrian Court and of its rituals at the beginning of the 20th century is stunning. The delightful subtleties are uncountable: see the gentry play lawn-tennis, and the footmen in white gloves who present the tennis-balls on a silver tray...
All the actors make an excellent job, and there are no words to praise enough Richard Haydn as Emperor Franz-Josef. The cinematography, in bright, cheerful colors, is accurate and evocative. The costumes and the locations are magnificent. The film was intended to be a musical: however, we find in it just a pair of nice songs and a rather short ballet. I consider it a further merit of the movie: I'm not much fond of musicals.
I highly recommend "The Emperor Waltz", a praiseworthy issue of Wilder's magic wit and talent.
Virgil is a commercial traveller: his stubborn attempts to sell gramophones to (no less a person than) the Emperor Franz-Josef are irresistibly comic. And then the Countess' blitch is the predestined partner of the Emperor's dog, and so she needs to be treated with extreme care (including sessions of psychoanalysis): all the hopes of the over-noble but impoverished family of the Holena von Shwartzemberg-Shwartzemberg lie in her paws... But it's all too funny to be described: see the movie and enjoy yourself.
The funny, gently mocking reconstruction of the Austrian Court and of its rituals at the beginning of the 20th century is stunning. The delightful subtleties are uncountable: see the gentry play lawn-tennis, and the footmen in white gloves who present the tennis-balls on a silver tray...
All the actors make an excellent job, and there are no words to praise enough Richard Haydn as Emperor Franz-Josef. The cinematography, in bright, cheerful colors, is accurate and evocative. The costumes and the locations are magnificent. The film was intended to be a musical: however, we find in it just a pair of nice songs and a rather short ballet. I consider it a further merit of the movie: I'm not much fond of musicals.
I highly recommend "The Emperor Waltz", a praiseworthy issue of Wilder's magic wit and talent.
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- How long is The Emperor Waltz?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 4 070 248 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 46 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was La Valse de l'empereur (1948) officially released in India in English?
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