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IMDbPro

24 Horas na Vida de uma Mulher

Título original: 24 timer af en kvindes liv
  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1 h 30 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,1/10
199
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Leo Genn, Merle Oberon, and Richard Todd in 24 Horas na Vida de uma Mulher (1952)
DramaRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA writer tells a crowd in a café about a woman he knows who once feel deeply in love with a desperate, compulsive gambler.A writer tells a crowd in a café about a woman he knows who once feel deeply in love with a desperate, compulsive gambler.A writer tells a crowd in a café about a woman he knows who once feel deeply in love with a desperate, compulsive gambler.

  • Direção
    • Victor Saville
  • Roteiristas
    • Stefan Zweig
    • Warren Chetham Strode
  • Artistas
    • Merle Oberon
    • Richard Todd
    • Leo Genn
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,1/10
    199
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Victor Saville
    • Roteiristas
      • Stefan Zweig
      • Warren Chetham Strode
    • Artistas
      • Merle Oberon
      • Richard Todd
      • Leo Genn
    • 10Avaliações de usuários
    • 1Avaliação da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos6

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    Elenco principal26

    Editar
    Merle Oberon
    Merle Oberon
    • Linda
    Richard Todd
    Richard Todd
    • The Young Man
    Leo Genn
    Leo Genn
    • Stirling
    Peter Jones
    Peter Jones
    • Bill
    Cyril Smith
    Cyril Smith
    • Harry
    June Clyde
    June Clyde
    • Mrs. Rohe
    Mark Baker
    • Mr. Rohe
    Moultrie Kelsall
    Moultrie Kelsall
    • Murdoch
    Joan Dowling
    • Mrs. Barry
    Trader Faulkner
    Trader Faulkner
    • Mr. Barry
    Isabel Dean
    Isabel Dean
    • Miss Johnson
    Peter Illing
    Peter Illing
    • M. Blanc
    Jeanne Pali
    • Mme. Blanc
    Peter Reynolds
    Peter Reynolds
    • Peter
    Mara Lane
    Mara Lane
    • Alice Brown
    Robert Ayres
    Robert Ayres
    • Frank Brown
    Rene Poirier
    • Attendant, Hotel Royal
    Jacques Cey
    • Concierge, Pension Lisa
    • Direção
      • Victor Saville
    • Roteiristas
      • Stefan Zweig
      • Warren Chetham Strode
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários10

    5,1199
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    5SimonJack

    A good cast works to keep this soap opera barely afloat

    From the accounts I have read about Austrian author Stefan Zweig, it's somewhat surprising that this British film would be made. ." It is based on a 1927 story by Zweig. The original title of "Affair in Monte Carlo" is the same as the novella, "24 Hours of a Woman's Life." While Zweig was apparently well-liked and read around much of Europe, and in the Untied States in the 1920s and 1930s, he got very little attention in Great Britain. So, it seemed a little odd that a British film company would make a movie based on a Zweig story.

    Adding to that peculiarity is the somewhat strange situation that so few of Zweig's many novels, biographies and other books have had films made or based on them. Just two others were adapted into movie dramas in 1946 and 1948 - "Beware of Pity" inn 1946 and "Letter from an Unknown Woman" in 1948. These films have foreboding stories that have dark palls over them. And, Zweig's writing style has been viewed as not very good by a number of critics. So, the lugubrious tone of his work doesn't appeal to many readers, and doesn't adapt well to films that are liked most by audiences.

    Now, the gist of this film, told in a flashback story, is about how a woman could fall in love with a man in one day. Robert Stirling is hosting people on his yacht in the Mediterranean, and relates the story that took place in Monte Carlo. The slight air of mystery is obvious, and one might guess where it will end, as I did.

    The cast are all quite good - Leo Genn as Stirling, and Merle Oberon ad Richard Todd as the main characters, Linda Venning and The Young Man. But this film, with its plot and screenplay, more closely resembles a soap opera than a good drama. But for the actors giving it their best, the screenplay would sink this film entirely. Except for fans of Oberon and Todd, most viewers will probably find this film dull at best, and depressing at worst.
    4wes-connors

    An Affair to Forget

    On the colorful Riviera, lonely socialite widow Merle Oberon (as Linda Venning ) is attracted to handsome gambling addict Richard Todd. At a Monte Carlo nightclub, with platonic pal Leo Genn (as Robert Sterling), Ms. Oberon senses Mr. Todd is suicidal after losing his money at the roulette table. The older woman begins to treat the distraught Todd like a gigolo, and he succumbs to her advances. Mr. Genn, who tells the story in flashback, worries about Oberon's relationship with the younger man.

    Re-titled "Affair in Monte Carlo" for US audiences, this film had great potential as a psychological drama. This is made most evident in Todd's final confrontation with Oberon, when he draws an interesting parallel between his luck and her presence. Moreover, the use of Genn as a rival for Oberon's affections comes too late. Sadly, the script gives Stefan Zweig's story short shrift. Note the version on TreeLine Film's "Hollywood Legends" is in black-and-white, robbing the picture of an obvious strength.

    **** 24 Hours of a Woman's Life (9/10/52) Victor Saville ~ Merle Oberon, Richard Todd, Leo Genn, Stephen Murray
    10clanciai

    A young beautiful widow saves a gambler from suicide - or so it seems

    The story is by Stefan Zweig, and that warrants some very interesting watching experience. The story is very romantic and splendid in its Mediterranean settings around Monte Carlo with a focus on the gambling house. The most interesting detail of the film and story is perhaps the study of the hands at the gaming table. Leo Genn makes as comforting appearance as ever, and he is the one who watches the hands of the gamblers and analyses them, and there is one pair of hands that his friend Merle Oberon can't detach herself from. It takes a very long time before you are admitted the sight of the man's face whose hands have revealed to her the most bottomless desperation in the world. It's a psychological drama, and the main psychology is about the demon of gambling. Richard Todd wants to quit gambling and swears that he will do it and still returns to the the gambling table. The demon is there to stay, and his irresistibility is as relentless as devastating. Merle Oberon makes as usual a blinding performance for her beauty, Leo Genn is perfect as usual as the superior mind of solace, Richard Todd is perfect as usual in his obsession, and Stephen Murray is quite convincing as a French musical priest. It's a beautiful film with a very concentrated and multi-faced story with many surprising turnings, so it's worth while indeed to see this one again - but preferably in colour.
    9boblipton

    Deep Focus For a Stefan Zweig Story

    Leo Genn and his friends are awaiting the arrival of his wife. While they hold her birthday dinner in absentia, Genn tells a story of a woman who ran away with a man she had just met. The narrator is a necessity for this story, because it's from a story by Stefan Zweig. With Zweig, you never know if you have a work of fiction, a work of keyhole literature, in which the events happened but the names have been changed, or the unvarnished, rueful truth.

    Genn is a successful author, and he and some friends and unwanted leeches are vacationing in Monte Carlo. He takes Merle Oberon to the Casino, and leaves her to watch the roulette table. There she sees Richard Todd. He has just lost everything and is getting ready to kill himself. She saves him, and lends him money to pay back what he has stolen.... and then they fall in love. Or do they?

    Last year's ROMA was a very interesting movie, but its constant use of deep focus disturbed me. In watching movies, the camera focuses on what you are supposed to look at. ROMA's deep focus never permitted you to focus on the story, because something else might grab your attention: a riot outside, or a marching band, or a giant statue of a crab. Might the story wander off to look at them? Yet with a story by Zweig, with its ironic twists and turns, its sardonic and self-slighting attitudes, such camerawork might work.

    Maybe it did. The copy I looked at was a very soft print, and seems to have been cut by half an hour from its original 90-minute length. Nonetheless, Victor Saville's direction makes this the most successful adaptation of a Zweig story I have seen.
    4HotToastyRag

    Melodramatic '24 Hours in a Woman's Life'

    I recognized it immediately in the opening scene, but in case you don't, Affair in Monte Carlo is the original version of Twenty-Four Hours in a Woman's Life (turned into a live television production in 1962 with Ingrid Bergman). As I'd seen that version first, I knew how the story would progress.

    The main difference is the narration of the movie. In this original version, Leo Genn tells the story to a bunch of friends about how his old flame Merle Oberon fell in love with a gambler. In the remake, an elderly Ingrid Bergman tells the story of her own romance to her granddaughter. Besides that, the stories are nearly identical. Merle is a classy woman of high society who randomly chances upon a destitute gambler in Monte Carlo, Richard Todd. She senses that he's about to commit suicide, and she makes it her personal mission to save him and inspire him to live. It doesn't really feel like a 1952 drama, but instead one from the 1930s. It's very melodramatic and has hardly any depth to it, but if you love Merle, you can try it. I found it rather thin, but since it was such a short movie I figured it wouldn't hurt me to finish it.

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    • Citações

      The Young Man: You've been talking all night to a gambler and a thief. I put the word 'thief' second, notice? All my life I've been a gambler. No, don't go... listen to me. I think you should hear what sort of a mudpie you've dipped your ladylike fingers into. I was born in Ireland where my father owned a racing stable. At the age of 6 I was saving pennies to back horses for the local bookmaker. Then when I came to England and school, I stopped backing horses and taught the other kids how to play poker. I used to win. At Oxford I got in with the racing set again, and I lost a packet, more than I could ask my father for, so I was sent down. My old man put me into his business in Dublin, providing I promised never to gamble again. So for five years I neither touched a card nor made a bet. I thought I'd got the devil out of my system. As a reward, my father sent me to France to stay with my uncle in Paris. He had a business there. One afternoon we all went to Longshore. They didn't realize that to me, gambling was a disease, a disease which had lain dormant like a cancer for five long years. I knew nothing about form, but luck was with me. That day and the next and the next after, I won a packet. But I didn't really find what was to give me complete and utter satisfaction until I walked through the glass doors of the casino. The sight of the green baize, the scented atmosphere of the room made me drunk, reeling drunk. I was mad to gamble. I can remember my fingers twitching as I picked up the plaques from the cashier's desk and sat down like a drunken man and played. For five nights in succession I won. Some of them advised me to quit, but it was like asking a drug addict to give up dope. I couldn't quit. On the sixth night I had my return ticket into Paris, that was all. I found that my uncle had gone to London and my aunt had gone with him, so I was alone in my apartment without a sou in my pocket. But luck was with me this time. A few weeks before, my aunt had asked me to get something from the safe. And I knew where she kept the key, so I opened it... borrowed a pair of diamond earrings.

      Linda Venning: You mean you stole them.

      The Young Man: Call it what you like, but if I had won last night, I'd have gone back to the pawnbroker and nobody would have been any the wiser. I told you you were dipping your fingers into a mudpie.

      Linda Venning: I followed you last night because I wanted to help you, but you seem to be beyond help.

      The Young Man: If you'd known anything, you'd have recognized that fact in the first place. I'm through, and I've got the sense to know it. You're only delaying the end of the story.

    • Conexões
      Referenced in Fulano y Mengano (1957)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Prière
      (uncredited)

      published as "Hour of Meditation"

      Music by Léon Boëllmann

      Adapted by Philip Green

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    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 8 de janeiro de 1953 (Japão)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Francês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Affair in Monte Carlo
    • Locações de filme
      • Associated British Picture Corporation Studios, Elstree, Hertfordshire, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Associated British Picture Corporation (ABPC)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 30 min(90 min)
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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