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There's Always Tomorrow

  • 1956
  • Approved
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
4K
YOUR RATING
There's Always Tomorrow (1956)
When a toy manufacturer feels ignored and unappreciated by his wife and children, he begins to rekindle a past love when a former employee comes back into his life.
Play trailer2:39
1 Video
27 Photos
DramaRomance

When a toy manufacturer feels ignored and unappreciated by his wife and children, he begins to rekindle a past love when a former employee comes back into his life.When a toy manufacturer feels ignored and unappreciated by his wife and children, he begins to rekindle a past love when a former employee comes back into his life.When a toy manufacturer feels ignored and unappreciated by his wife and children, he begins to rekindle a past love when a former employee comes back into his life.

  • Director
    • Douglas Sirk
  • Writers
    • Bernard C. Schoenfeld
    • Ursula Parrott
  • Stars
    • Barbara Stanwyck
    • Fred MacMurray
    • Joan Bennett
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Writers
      • Bernard C. Schoenfeld
      • Ursula Parrott
    • Stars
      • Barbara Stanwyck
      • Fred MacMurray
      • Joan Bennett
    • 41User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer

    Photos27

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Barbara Stanwyck
    Barbara Stanwyck
    • Norma Miller Vale
    Fred MacMurray
    Fred MacMurray
    • Clifford Groves
    Joan Bennett
    Joan Bennett
    • Marion Groves
    William Reynolds
    William Reynolds
    • Vinnie Groves
    Pat Crowley
    Pat Crowley
    • Ann
    Gigi Perreau
    Gigi Perreau
    • Ellen Groves
    Jane Darwell
    Jane Darwell
    • Mrs. Rogers
    Race Gentry
    Race Gentry
    • Bob
    Myrna Hansen
    Myrna Hansen
    • Ruth
    Judy Nugent
    Judy Nugent
    • Frances (Frankie) Groves
    Paul Smith
    Paul Smith
    • Bellboy
    Helen Kleeb
    Helen Kleeb
    • Miss Walker
    Jane Howard
    Jane Howard
    • Flower Girl
    Frances Mercer
    Frances Mercer
    • Ruth Doran
    Sheila Bromley
    Sheila Bromley
    • Woman from Pasadena
    Dorothy Bruce
    • Sales Manager
    Hermine Sterler
    Hermine Sterler
    • Tourist's Wife
    Fred Nurney
    Fred Nurney
    • Tourist
    • Director
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Writers
      • Bernard C. Schoenfeld
      • Ursula Parrott
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews41

    7.44K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7wes-connors

    Clifford the Robot Man

    Pasadena toy manufacturer Fred MacMurray (as Clifford "Cliff" Groves) is wealthy and successful, but feels neglected by his busy family. His children are preoccupied with their own lives and loving wife Joan Bennett (as Marion) always finds herself committed to something other than time with Mr. MacMurray. He feels ignored, unappreciated and lonely. Enter former employee Barbara Stanwyck (as Norma Miller-Vale). Formerly plain, but now an attractive dress designer, Ms. Stanwyck arrives in Los Angeles on business. She's clearly interested in rekindling something with MacMurray...

    The best part here is that "There's Always Tomorrow" has director Douglas Sirk working in the 1950s, with his best photographer Russell Metty. This means artful shadows, stairways, windows and reflections. Such visuals, especially as they complement the story, are great. There is even a scene with Stanwyck's face shedding tears that are actually reflected raindrops; a technique said to have originated with "In Cold Blood" (1967). Quite possibly, this was done even earlier...

    The cast is strangely unimpassioned. MacMurray and Stanwyck lack the level of spark they conveyed in previous collaborations. Perhaps this is the point. MacMurray has become like the toy robot he created. He's "Rex" the walkie-talkie mechanical man. Stanwyck appears to be hesitating an attempted seduction. While not the protagonist, she becomes the most interesting character. Completely and most maddeningly in the dark, Ms. Bennett acts robotically unaware of the threat to her supposedly perfect family life. Shaking things up is suspicious and literate son William Reynolds (as Vinnie).

    ******* There's Always Tomorrow (1/20/56) Douglas Sirk ~ Fred MacMurray, Barbara Stanwyck, Joan Bennett, William Reynolds
    10Savor

    An outstanding hidden treasure waiting to be rediscovered.

    This film is one of the great Hollywood films yet so few have ever heard of. Not only does it rate with Douglas Sirk's better known films ("Magnificent Obsession," "All that Heaven Allows," and "Imitation of Life), but is as much a devastating a critique of the American Dream as other fifties movies like "Bigger Than Life." And unlike many melodramas which center on the emotional isolation and turmoil of the central female character, this one analyzes the pain of the main male figure (Fred MacMurray). The film's acting, direction, and script have a precision so well thought out that the effect--both at any given moment and overall --is absolutely astonishing. An incredible film crying out to be rediscovered.
    7dbdumonteil

    Heaven does not allow everything.

    Coming,in Sirk's career ,just after "All that Heaven allows" ,it looks like its twin movie.Unlike "Written on the wind" or "Imitation of life" or "Magnificent obsession" ,it's not melodrama.It's closer to realistic psychological drama.More than the lingering charm of a romantic past (Blue Moon/You saw me standing alone/Without a love of my own),Sirk focuses on the selfishness of the children.Remember in "All that Heaven..." how the son and the daughter could not admit that their mother (of the upper class) should fall in love with a gardener and how they bought her a TV set where she only could see the reflection of her loneliness.Here the boy's attitude is not far from that: a spoiled child -as his sisters are- ,only concerned by his studies and his love affair,he does not care if his papa has become a nine-to-five man ,useful only for the dough he brings home,a life no more exciting than that of the toy robot he sells.Barbara Stanwyck 's role recalls the 1953 effort "all I desire" : the return of the woman,be she legitimate or a former flame.But in "there's always tomorrow",one can notice one of the permanent features of melodrama though: the woman who turns her back on love and becomes a successful businesswoman (or star) (see also the end of "written on the wind" "imitation of life" or Stahl's "only yesterday")
    Jim West

    Sirk at his best

    Sirk aptly deals with basic family values and problems in a critical way, questioning the false appearance of stability and harmony of a typical American home. MacMurray's job in a toy factory provides plenty of interesting metaphors, often visual ones. In one scene Sirk even places 'Rex, the Walkie-Talkie Robot-Man' on the foreground, upstaging MacMurray and forcing a comparison between them. MacMurray's home, under the resemblance of a happy and harmonious family life, really seems like a big doll's house – MacMurray being here a sort of male 'Nora'. The happy ending seems a bit awkward or phony, but it's what audiences were taught to expect back in the 50's; no other ending would have been allowed under the infamous Production Code, then still being enforced.
    8Lejink

    Wrong said Fred

    Yet another impressive Douglas Sirk melodrama centring on the contemporary American family and in this particular film the American husband / father figure. Most of the Sirk movies I've seen seem to put women at the heart of the action but here the emotional crisis is thrust upon Fred MacMurray's toy salesman, a conventional, dutiful husband and father to his three growing children, one boy on the verge of adulthood, one daughter in her late teen, mildly rebellious years and another somewhat childish younger teenager. His wife, played by Joan Bennett, seems preoccupied with the needs and wants of these rather selfish children to the point where she seems ignorant of the effect the cumulative family disinterest is having on his emotional needs.

    Just as he's feeling especially insignificant along comes old flame Barbara Stanwyck in her third fine film with MacMurray to fan the sparks of his mid-life crisis into a full-blown blazing passion, to the extent where he has a secret if accidental weekend away with her and quickly comes to contemplate leaving his family for a life of excitement with her. Which way will he turn and what part will his two mortified older children, who in typical Sirkian grand coincidental fashion, learn of his plans, play in his final decision?

    Once again, Sirk brings family members to a crisis-point and even if the resolution this time takes a conventional course, still there's real drama in these excellently crafted and written scenes of anything but cosy domesticity. Cynics may make sneering remarks about all this amounting to shallow soap operatics but I think they would be wrong. Post-War Western and especially American society was evolving even against the "I Like Ike" background of greater personal wealth and the growth in consumerism but just under the surface it wasn't all sweetness and light and Sirk was one director who caught that change in attitudes in his mid-50's work.

    Once again MacMurray surprised me with the depth and roundedness of his performance as a middle-aged man cornered by society's expectations of him while Stanwyck in one of her last major roles before she, like MacMurray a bit later, turned to TV, is as good as she usually is as the unwitting Eve in Fred's supposed Garden of Eden. Her character of a flamboyant, self-confident, but importantly unmarried career-woman is equally worthy of deeper investigation as MacMurray's worm-turning Mr Suburbia.

    Lesser known than other Sirk dramas of the decade it's as good as any of them in my opinion and well worth watching.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Errol Morris named it as one of his 10 favorite films in the 2002 BFI Sight & Sound Poll.
    • Goofs
      Near the end, Vinnie is telling his girlfriend that he was wrong "about Norma and Cliff" in these exact words. But Cliff is his father; he wouldn't refer to his father by his first name.
    • Quotes

      Norma Miller Vale: Love is a very reckless thing. Maybe it isn't even a good thing. When you're young and in love, nothing matters except your own satisfaction. The tragic thing about growing older is that you can't be quite as reckless anymore.

    • Connections
      Featured in Perspectives on the American Family: Allison Anders on Douglas Sirk's 'There's Always Tomorrow' (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Blue Moon
      (uncredited)

      Written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart

      Played on one of the toys and heard as a theme throughout the film

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 8, 1956 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Pasión otoñal
    • Filming locations
      • Apple Valley Inn - Apple Valley Inn Road, Apple Valley, California, USA("Palm Valley Inn")
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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