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Ambizione

Titolo originale: Come and Get It
  • 1936
  • T
  • 1h 39min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
2561
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Frances Farmer, Edward Arnold, and Joel McCrea in Ambizione (1936)
An ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.
Riproduci trailer1:39
1 video
26 foto
DrammaRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAn ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.An ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.An ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.

  • Regia
    • Howard Hawks
    • William Wyler
    • Richard Rosson
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Edna Ferber
    • Jane Murfin
    • Jules Furthman
  • Star
    • Edward Arnold
    • Joel McCrea
    • Frances Farmer
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,9/10
    2561
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Howard Hawks
      • William Wyler
      • Richard Rosson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Edna Ferber
      • Jane Murfin
      • Jules Furthman
    • Star
      • Edward Arnold
      • Joel McCrea
      • Frances Farmer
    • 60Recensioni degli utenti
    • 28Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 1 Oscar
      • 4 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

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    Trailer 1:39
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    Foto26

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    Interpreti principali62

    Modifica
    Edward Arnold
    Edward Arnold
    • Barney Glasgow
    Joel McCrea
    Joel McCrea
    • Richard Glasgow
    Frances Farmer
    Frances Farmer
    • Lotta Morgan…
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
    • Swan Bostrom
    Mady Christians
    Mady Christians
    • Karie
    Mary Nash
    Mary Nash
    • Emma Louise
    Andrea Leeds
    Andrea Leeds
    • Evvie Glasgow
    Frank Shields Sr.
    Frank Shields Sr.
    • Tony Schwerke
    • (as Frank Shields)
    Edwin Maxwell
    Edwin Maxwell
    • Sid LeMaire
    Cecil Cunningham
    Cecil Cunningham
    • Josie
    Charles Halton
    Charles Halton
    • Mr. Hewitt
    Edwin August
    Edwin August
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Bobby Barber
    Bobby Barber
    • Diner
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Charles Bennett
    Charles Bennett
    • Man
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans
    • Gunnar Gallagher
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Dining Car Patron
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Lumberjack
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Harry C. Bradley
    Harry C. Bradley
    • Thomas Gubbins
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Howard Hawks
      • William Wyler
      • Richard Rosson
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Edna Ferber
      • Jane Murfin
      • Jules Furthman
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti60

    6,92.5K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7planktonrules

    No fool like an old fool....

    COME AND GET IT has a very strange cast. Having the reliable and talented supporting actor, Edward Arnold, in the lead is strange--especially since this rotund and rather doughy guy is cast as, believe it or not, a lumberjack when the film begins! Seeing him supposedly fight and beat up tough guys seemed pretty funny--especially since Arnold looked as if he'd have had a hard time beating up Frances Farmer--let alone burly lumbermen!! Additionally, having him play a very flawed hero who has a penchant for a very young lady (Frances Farmer) make it an unusual film.

    The film begins with Arnold being made the foreman of a logging company. However, his ambition is huge and he immediately has his sights set on running the entire company. So, to do so he agrees to marry the boss' daughter even though he could care less about her. Additionally, he'd just fallen in love with a spunky saloon singer (Frances Farmer--in a dual role). Regardless, his ambition is primary and he dumps farmer on his pal, played by Walter Brennan (who received an Oscar for his performance as a nice Swedish guy).

    Years pass. You see that Arnold's wife is a bit of a cold fish, though they did have some kids and they now own the company. Arnold just happens to visit his old pal Brennan and finds that through the magic of Hollywood clichés, Brennan's daughter (played by Farmer again) is the spitting image of her deceased mother. Arnold is an old lecher and takes her under his wing--with the intention of recreating the relationship he'd had with her mother. When his oldest son (Joel McCrea) finds out, he goes to confront the lady but falls for her instead. Naturally, this sets the son and hard-driven father against each other.

    Considering that this is based on an Edna Ferber novel, it isn't surprising that the film is about a man building an empire as well as infidelity--recurring themes I've noticed in several of her other films that were filmed during the era (such as CIMARRON, GIANT, SHOWBOAT and SO BIG). As a result, the film has a big and rather sweeping quality about it but is also a study of a hard-driven man who is deeply flawed.

    Overall, the movie is exactly what you'd expect from such a film--good acting, big scope and a lot of romantic tension. Nothing extraordinary here, but it's enjoyable and competently made. I can't, however, understand how Brennan got an Oscar, as this was far from one of his best performances. Perhaps it was a slow year.
    8johno-21

    Good Frances Farmer flick from the 30's

    Edna Ferber had several of her novels made into films including Giant, Showboat a couple of times and Dinner at Eight among the well known. Come and Get it is based on the Ferber novel adapted to the screen by Jules Furthman and Jane Murfin. I grew up in the area where the story is set. In the story the town is called Iron Ridge but Ferber did her research for the story while staying at the Burton House hotel in the old lumber and mining town of Hurley, Wisconsin on the Michigan border with Ironwood, Michigan. The Burton House was a grand old three story 100 room wooden hotel that President Grover Cleveland once stayed at. It would burn down in the 1940's. In the character name Lotta Morgan she used the actual name of a famous Hurley saloon singer of the 1880's. Actually, the real Lotta Morgan earned her living from something other than just singing in the saloons. She was also an unsolved murder victim whose body was found floating in the river with a hatchet in her forehead. Ferber put together her romantic tale of the north woods and it's many lumber camps. This is a good movie set in the late 19th century. Frances Farmer plays dual roles of mother and daughter in the fourth leading role of her career and maybe her best. She would go on to star in only six more lead roles before being relegated to supporting actress in four more films and then her film career was over. Edward Arnold, Joel Mcrea, Walter Brennan and Mary Nash round out the fine cast. Howard Hawks directed and this was his project until an argument with the studio boss caused his dismissal and William Wyler was called in to finish the film. Excellent Cinematography from Rudolf Maté and Greg Toland. One of the last films of famed costume designer Omar Kiam. Walter Brennan won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor in his role of the Swedish logger Swan Bostrom. The first of three career Academy Awards he would win. Come and Get it also received an Academy Award nomination for Edward Curtis for editing which was well deserved being that he had to put together the work of three directors, Hawks, Wyler and Richard Rosson who directed the logging scenes. Farmer should have been nominated for Best Actress but was over looked by the Academy for Irene Dunn, veterans from silent film days Gladys George, Carole Lombard, Norma Shearer and German actress Luise Rainer who won. The studio in promoting this film had Farmer signing the book Come and Get it at autograph opportunities. She once found it exceptionally strange that she would be signing a book she had not written when she was doing a signing at the Bon Marché department store in her hometown of Seattle where she had been fired from a few years before. I've seen this several times in television over the years and it's worth a look. I would give it an 8.0 out of 10.
    dougdoepke

    A Lot's Going On

    No need to repeat the plot. Fortunately Arnold delivers a rousing performance. His big personality as the lumber tycoon helps distract from certain paunchy shortcomings as a screen lover. Seeing him in passion clinches with a nubile young Farmer takes some getting used to. Happily, Farmer also shines, especially in the saloon girl part, before giving way to a more routine turn as the daughter.

    According to film historian David Thomson, Farmer's performance was affected by Hawks' replacement by Wyler as director. Apparently, she and Hawks were more than sympatico off the set. So, Thomson's account goes, Hawks brought on writer Furthman to slant the film towards his beauteous blonde, thus causing novelist Ferber to complain to head honcho Goldwyn, resulting in Hawks' departure and a feud between Farmer and Wyler. I mention these behind-the-scenes shenanigans to maybe account for some of the plot's half-digested elements and Farmer's noticeable downturn.

    Nonetheless, it's still a compelling movie, thanks mainly to Arnold's dominating presence that holds the various threads together. I also like the logging footage, which lends a dramatically realistic air to Glasgow's empire. Then there's Lotta's haunting rendition of "Aura Lee", which evidently Farmer herself crooned. However, I'm still trying to figure out the title that appears to have little resemblance to the storyline. But however you cut that or the purported intrigues, it's still a dynamic movie.
    7ilprofessore-1

    Dazzling beautiful, dazzling real

    When Frances Farmer was a drama student at the University of Washington she won a scholarship to visit Russia and watch the Moscow Art Theater headed by the great actor and director, Konstantin Stanislavski. When that Russian company first came to tour the United States in the 1920s, the truthfulness and expressivity of the acting so impressed many of America's best young actors that they eventually formed The Group Theater (1931-1940),modeling their ensemble work on it. In 1937 The Group Theater invited Frances Farmer, a non-member of the company, to play the female lead in Clifford Odets' new play "Golden Boy." At the time it was thought by many that the sole reason for the invitation was because Farmer was a beautiful movie star whose presence would boost box office. Today anyone who sees her remarkable work in the dual roles of Lotta in "Come and Get It" (1936) will recognize that not only was she dazzling beautiful, she was also dazzling real and painfully truthful --a true actress in the Stanislavski tradition. No wonder Howard Hawks said she was the best actress he had ever worked with in his long career.
    10Ron Oliver

    Topnotch Acting Enlivens Lumber Tale

    An aging lumber tycoon tries to relive his youth after meeting the hauntingly beautiful daughter of an old friend.

    Based on the sprawling novel by Edna Ferber, COME AND GET IT is a fascinating love story, filled with action & tenderness and some very good acting. The production values are on a high order, with the authentic logging sequence especially exciting.

    Boisterous, brash & bold, Edward Arnold portrays the brawling two-fisted lumberjack who pushes himself to the top of the heap, trampling on his one great love in the process. Although completely unbelievable as a young man during the first three-quarters of an hour, this is not a problem as he is never anything less than enjoyable in the role.

    Miss Frances Farmer, playing a tenderhearted floozy and her own ambitious daughter, has the best film of her career. She is nothing less than radiant and her obvious talent makes her bizarre personal history all that much more tragic.

    Wonderful Walter Brennan plays Arnold's jovial Swedish pal, in a performance that would catapult him out of cinematic anonymity and earn him the first of his three Oscars for Best Supporting Actor. Seemingly able to play any kind of part - as long as the character was middle-aged or elderly - during his 46 years in movies & television Mr. Brennan would become one of America's most beloved character actors. He died in 1974 at the age of 80.

    Almost obscured by the oversized talents around him, Joel McCrea wisely turns in an understated performance as Arnold's quiet, intelligent son (he invents the disposable paper cup!). His years of solid successes in front of the cameras were adding up and he would soon become a major Hollywood star.

    A quartet of fine actresses fill smaller roles: Mary Nash as Arnold's neglected wife; Andrea Leeds as his adored daughter; Mady Christians as Brennan's sturdy, sensible niece; and Cecil Cunningham as Arnold's intuitive, sharp-tongued secretary. That's porcine Edwin Maxwell once again playing a bad guy, this time the crooked owner of a lumber camp saloon.

    The song which is used as the theme for Miss Farmer's characters is ‘Aura Lee,' (written in 1861 by W. W. Fosdick & George R. Poulton) a very popular strain on both sides during the War Between The States. Decades later, in the 1950's, Elvis Presley would use the tune for one of his biggest hits, ‘Love Me Tender.'

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Howard Hawks's take on his being "fired" is that he wasn't. Rather, he quit, after refusing to agree with Samuel Goldwyn, who wanted the narrative to stay closer to that of the book. Goldwyn had been ill and absent for the 42 days of shooting that Hawks directed and was unaware of Hawks' rewrites. Hawks left the production with only 14 days left to go.
    • Blooper
      During the early montage showing the lumber process, fluorescent lights are seen on the ceiling of a workshop. While they had just become commercially available when the film was made, this scene takes place in 1884, decades before their refinement.
    • Citazioni

      Swan Bostrom: You.. you love him Lotta...

      Lotta Morgan: What do you think?

      Swan Bostrom: I think... I think... I think I have another drink.

      Lotta Morgan: Hey you better leave some of that for Barney.

      Swan Bostrom: I ain't have to. He ain't comin' back.

      Lotta Morgan: What did you say?

      Swan Bostrom: That's what I tried so hard to tell you and it yust slip out...

    • Connessioni
      Edited into Sunset in Wyoming (1941)
    • Colonne sonore
      Aura Lea
      (1861) (uncredited)

      Music by George R. Poulton

      Lyrics by W.W. Fosdick

      In the score often as Lotta's theme

      Performed by Frances Farmer and an unidentified quartet in LeMaire's bar

      Reprised later by her, Edward Arnold and Walter Brennan

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 28 maggio 1938 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Come and Get It
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Clearwater River, Idaho, Stati Uniti(logging sequences)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • The Samuel Goldwyn Company
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 39min(99 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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