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The Sun Also Rises

  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 2h 10m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
The Sun Also Rises (1957)
Trailer for this film based on the novel by Ernest Hemingway
Play trailer3:47
1 Video
26 Photos
Drama

A group of disillusioned American expatriate writers live a dissolute, hedonistic lifestyle in 1920s France and Spain.A group of disillusioned American expatriate writers live a dissolute, hedonistic lifestyle in 1920s France and Spain.A group of disillusioned American expatriate writers live a dissolute, hedonistic lifestyle in 1920s France and Spain.

  • Director
    • Henry King
  • Writers
    • Peter Viertel
    • Ernest Hemingway
  • Stars
    • Tyrone Power
    • Ava Gardner
    • Errol Flynn
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    2.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henry King
    • Writers
      • Peter Viertel
      • Ernest Hemingway
    • Stars
      • Tyrone Power
      • Ava Gardner
      • Errol Flynn
    • 53User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Sun Also Rises
    Trailer 3:47
    The Sun Also Rises

    Photos26

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    Top cast38

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    Tyrone Power
    Tyrone Power
    • Jake Barnes
    Ava Gardner
    Ava Gardner
    • Lady Brett Ashley
    Errol Flynn
    Errol Flynn
    • Mike Campbell
    Mel Ferrer
    Mel Ferrer
    • Robert Cohn
    Eddie Albert
    Eddie Albert
    • Bill Gorton
    Gregory Ratoff
    Gregory Ratoff
    • Count Mippipopolous
    Juliette Gréco
    Juliette Gréco
    • Georgette Aubin
    • (as Juliette Greco)
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Zizi
    Henry Daniell
    Henry Daniell
    • Doctor
    Robert Cunningham
    • Harris
    • (as Bob Cunningham)
    Danik Patisson
    Danik Patisson
    • Marie
    Robert Evans
    Robert Evans
    • Pedro Romero
    Ricardo Adalid
    • Spanish Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    Manuel Casanueva
    • Angry Spanish waiter
    • (uncredited)
    Ann Codee
    Ann Codee
    • Mme. Blanche - Concierge
    • (uncredited)
    María Luisa Corona
    • Maria Luisa (Elderly cleaning woman)
    • (uncredited)
    Fernando Curiel
    • Angry Spanish waiter
    • (uncredited)
    Julián de Meriche
    • Man in French cafe
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Henry King
    • Writers
      • Peter Viertel
      • Ernest Hemingway
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews53

    6.22.8K
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    Featured reviews

    8imdke

    As grim as Hemmingway could get.

    There are several films from the '40's to the '60's that I prefer to experience, rather than jump into Pauline Kael's skin. Let her successors dissect and occasionally say something of pith.

    George Herbert said, "Time is the rider that breaks youth."

    All the principal characters in this sad tale are broken. In their dissipation and aimless, joyless pursuits, they didn't stand for much of anything. It has been said that the cast was just too old for these roles. But they looked perfect for their roles, a group of people who were caught in a tepid tide pool, waiting to be washed out to sea. They were all tarnished goods.

    I was especially impressed by Errol Flynn's performance. Of all of them, he was the most pitiful. Remember the song, "Tired of living and scared of dying?" That's him-a far cry from Captain Peter Blood.

    Next is Robert Cohn (Mel Ferrer). He was a rich aimless child, eager to fasten himself to others, like a limpet. College had done nothing for him, except to make him an even greater useless snob. Then Lady Brett transformed him into a swine before casting him aside, because 'she couldn't stand his damned suffering.' After a crushing defeat at the hands of Brett and her bullfighter, he wisely headed home to Frances, if she would still have him.

    Now we come to Jake and Lady Brett Ashley. These two truly loved one another, but in a very unhealthy way. She lost a husband to the Great War and never recovered. He gave "more then his life" to the war. His impotence was probably not the real reason Brett would not marry him, nor he, her. Damaged goods.

    This film is excellent. Important, as is the book, emotional Tours De Force. Hemmingway is incredible.
    6bkoganbing

    Generation Lost for 15 Years

    Two insurmountable problems keep The Sun Also Rises from being a great film classic. The first was the ever present Code which prevented the frank discussion of impotency and secondly the fact that the cast was 15 to 20 years older than the roles they were portraying. Maybe had the film been identified as 1932 instead of plainly set in 1922 Tyrone Power, Errol Flynn, and Ava Gardner and the rest could have gotten away with those performances. The pity is that they all try very hard under an impossible burden of age. They would have been a dream cast around 1946. Ironically this cast is a lost generation unto itself.

    Tyrone Power is in the lead as Jake Barnes, the hero modeled after author Ernest Hemingway himself. Barnes received a war wound below decks just as Hemingway did in World War I. The close brush with impotence himself no doubt inspired Hemingway to write The Sun Also Rises. That fact has kept him from resuming a relationship with the love of his life, Lady Brett Ashley as played by Ava Gardner.

    As a jaded sophisticate Gardner is great, but Hemingway again wrote about a lusty young woman with all her sexual appetites intact and unfulfilled. All Power can do is watch how she collects the men around her.

    And they do flock be it, exiled Count Gregory Ratoff, dissolute British army veteran Errol Flynn, self conscious Jew Mel Ferrer, and eager young bullfighter Robert Evans. None of them measure up to Power, but Power can't give the lady what she most needs.

    The location cinematography is great from Paris to Mexico which substituted Spain for the famous bull fighting scenes and the annual running of the bulls in Pamplona. I'm guessing that Henry King did not film in Spain because the Franco dictatorship did not want a film that glorified the days before his dictatorship even under the monarchy which Franco swore to restore. Ernest Hemingway being a veteran for the Republic was also not an author looked kindly on by the Caudillo.

    Ernest Hemingway has had accusations of anti-Semitism hurled at him and no doubt because of the way Mel Ferrer's character of Robert Cohn is written. Cohn has sustained a lot of prejudice in his life, he became a boxer in college to help deal with it. He's also a bumptious sort, Power tolerates him even likes him on a certain level. The others in the group make it plain every way they don't want him around. But he's under Gardner's spell and there's no talking to him. In many ways Mel Ferrer does the best acting job in the film.

    The Sun Also Rise marks Power's farewell film at the studio which carefully nurtured his stardom, 20th Century Fox. It also was his ninth and last film with director Henry King. It was at Fox where Power got his breakthrough role in Lloyd's Of London, also directed by Henry King. They had quite a screen partnership themselves and are rarely discussed as a director/actor team.

    This is one film that could stand a remake, but where could you get a cast as classy as this one today even if they are a generation behind to be making The Sun Also Rises.
    7blanche-2

    sad film for a variety of reasons

    This is a depressing movie on several levels, the first being the actual story, about the "Lost Generation" after World War I hanging out in Europe and being drunk and/or unhappy and disillusioned.

    For me it's one of those movies to watch when you really want to dwell on life's misery and wax philosophical and feel like there's something romantic about disenchantment.

    The second depressing thing is the casting, which is a major problem. Tyrone Power had been the most important star at 20th Century Fox for many years - in fact, when he became a star in the late 1930s, each film he made was a bigger hit than the one before. He literally kept the studio solvent.

    He was cast in this film at the age of 42 which was near the end of his life. He and the rest of the actors are all too old. I suppose to have made it with younger actors would have made it less of a big movie, but in fact, people like Jeffrey Hunter, Robert Wagner (both Fox actors) and Natalie Wood were closer to the right age. But you can see how that would have made it seem a lighter film.

    In Power's case, I have read several comments here about how bad he looked. Were he alive, I'm sure he would thank you, as his fondest desire in life was to lose his looks. As far as he was concerned, his impossibly beautiful appearance wrecked his acting ambitions.

    The funny part of it is, in candids taken during the filming, one of which is included in Mai Zetterling's All Those Tomorrows (she was his then girlfriend and on the set with him) he looks absolutely fantastic, healthy and tanned, not at all what is being described here.

    He also had all his hair for those who seemed to think he was balding. His hair was downright luxuriant in Solomon and Sheba, the film he was making when he died. In fact, in photos taken one hour before he died, he looked better than he did in "The Sun Also Rises." Go figure.

    Zetterling states that he reported to the set daily on 3 hours sleep and took pills to stay awake to attend social functions that he felt were necessary. He told Zetterling that he was pretty impressed with how bad Errol Flynn looked. Apparently he was envious.

    Zetterling felt once filming started that he looked exhausted and haggard, but he didn't seem to care. Frankly, I thought he looked fine, particularly in the beginning of the movie. I think you can tell the scenes where he was running on no sleep.

    And as far as looking bad, what about Ava Gardner? At 35, she was a mess. Someone in the comments said that with all these men chasing after Brett, people would think the war had made everyone's eyesight dim.

    That's really not so - Gardner until the day she died had men falling for her right and left, including the husband of one interviewer who brought her flowers every day his wife spoke with Gardner. She was a very magnetic and sexy woman, and we can assume Brett Ashley had the same gifts.

    That all being said, the ages are wrong but the acting is right, even if it comes not from disillusioned youth but disillusioned middle age. This is particularly true of Power as the impotent Jake Barnes and Gardner as Lady Ashley.

    I would think as far as the emotions, the roles were very close to their own lives at that point. Power felt he had achieved nothing; he was supporting wives he no longer loved who lived in houses he paid for and would never enter, and he was only proud of a few films.

    In the last years of his film-making, Tyrone Power turned in some wonderful performances in this movie, Abandon Ship, and Witness for the Prosecution. A shame he wasn't able to continue and do the sorts of roles he wanted.

    Gardner's activities are well documented. She drank all night and slept all day and bullfighters were her thing, though "my man Frank" as she called him was always in the background.

    Flynn and Eddie Albert are terrific - the dissipation was starting to pay off well for Errol Flynn, but unfortunately he wouldn't live long enough to make much money from it.

    These two had the showiest roles - in fact, in a somewhat lifeless film, they lifted it up. Mel Ferrer's character wasn't sufficiently fleshed out to tell if he was doing a good job or not.

    If you can put the ages aside, this is a good, not very good, and not great film - but great as far as production values and acting. Hemingway is very difficult to put on screen, as we all know from sitting through films based on his books and stories.

    A final note: For those who didn't like Power's performance, consider Jake's wild enthusiasm over the bullfights. While Power was making Blood & Sand, he actually had to attend a bullfight.

    Of course, a great deal was made of him and he was sitting with his wife, Annabella, down front and center. Unfortunately he became violently ill over the whole thing.

    In order to leave with some dignity, Annabella said she was sick so they could get out of there. So give the man some credit - Jake sure did look like he was enjoying himself.
    samanteks

    The Looks from the Matador...

    This is a ploddingly slow movie that has some nice action sequences thrown in, and some fun humor, but the funniest parts are the close ups of Pedro the matador during the last bull-fight. (Other reviews have addressed the main cast well-enough).

    I doubt there has ever been a matador as miscast as this one. He neither looks nor acts like one - although in his defense, he appears to be trying really, really hard to look important. His expressions are priceless, with that shiny face, and the band-aid. Very funny. I wondered who it was, but as the cable channel didn't run any end-credits, I looked him up here in IMDb. Turns out it was Robert Evans.(?!) At least it's clear now why he turned to producing...
    6slam21c

    A positive comment of the movie

    It was great to see 2 of Hollywood's film idols on a film together. Tyrone did look tired in this movie. Errol and Eddie Albert as two drunks were very funny. Tyrone, as always, was great as a jaded WWI veteran. Ava Gardner was also very interesting to watch and I thought she played her character very well. The bullfighting was very graphic for its time, however, the actor who played the bullfighter couldn't act.

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    Related interests

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    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      If Hemingway walked out after 25 minutes claiming Flynn's performance was the only good thing, he couldn't have seen it as Errol didn't appear until 54 minutes in.
    • Goofs
      When Jake and Brett ride in the cab in 1922 Paris, cars from the 1940s and 50s can be seen through the cab's rear window.
    • Quotes

      Lady Brett Ashley: Do you always kill your friends?

      Pedro Romero: Yes, so they do not kill me.

    • Connections
      Edited into The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 23, 1957 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • arabuloku.com
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises
    • Filming locations
      • Pamplona, Navarra, Spain
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 10m(130 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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