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The Man Who Understood Women

  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
251
YOUR RATING
Henry Fonda and Leslie Caron in The Man Who Understood Women (1959)
Comedy

A producer is obsessed with turning his wife into a sexy star, ignoring her needs, and prompting her to return to France, where she becomes attracted to an attentive pilot, and ensuing a rev... Read allA producer is obsessed with turning his wife into a sexy star, ignoring her needs, and prompting her to return to France, where she becomes attracted to an attentive pilot, and ensuing a revenge plot by a jealous husband, that goes astray.A producer is obsessed with turning his wife into a sexy star, ignoring her needs, and prompting her to return to France, where she becomes attracted to an attentive pilot, and ensuing a revenge plot by a jealous husband, that goes astray.

  • Director
    • Nunnally Johnson
  • Writers
    • Romain Gary
    • Nunnally Johnson
  • Stars
    • Leslie Caron
    • Henry Fonda
    • Cesare Danova
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    251
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Writers
      • Romain Gary
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Stars
      • Leslie Caron
      • Henry Fonda
      • Cesare Danova
    • 14User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos18

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Leslie Caron
    Leslie Caron
    • Ann Garantier
    Henry Fonda
    Henry Fonda
    • Willie Bauche
    Cesare Danova
    Cesare Danova
    • Major Marco Ranieri
    Myron McCormick
    Myron McCormick
    • Preacher
    Marcel Dalio
    Marcel Dalio
    • Le Marne
    Conrad Nagel
    Conrad Nagel
    • G.K. Brody
    Edwin Jerome
    • The Baron
    Bern Hoffman
    • Soprano
    Harry Ellerbe
    Harry Ellerbe
    • Norman Kress
    Frank Cady
    Frank Cady
    • John Milstead
    Ben Astar
    Ben Astar
    • French Doctor
    Jacqueline Beer
    Jacqueline Beer
    • French Singer
    • (uncredited)
    Lilyan Chauvin
    Lilyan Chauvin
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Chefe
    • Waiter at Costume Party
    • (uncredited)
    Edith Clair
    • Script Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Ann Codee
    Ann Codee
    • French Maid
    • (uncredited)
    Booth Colman
    Booth Colman
    • Max
    • (uncredited)
    George Davis
    George Davis
    • Robert - Cafe Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Writers
      • Romain Gary
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    4.5251
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    Featured reviews

    1awillis-557-765466

    The Man Who Understood Women: really dreadful

    Amen to all the negative comments above: really dreadful. I have seen a reference to an original 135-minute running time for this film, which seems to have been reduced to 105 minutes soon after release. I also note that TCM showed a pan-and-scan version on Monday, October 12, without any mention of that by Robert Osborne. Does anyone know more about that matter? Anyway, as someone who has enjoyed almost every other performance by Henry Fonda (especially Young Mr. Lincoln, The Grapes of Wrath, The Lady Eve, The Ox Bow Incident, Advise and Consent)and Leslie Caron (Lili, Gigi, Fanny) I deeply regret that they found themselves involved in this disaster.
    5riccibilotta-167-829847

    Not a comedy

    I don't give this movie as low a rating that many had. It was an ok movie. It's listed as a comedy, that's the reason I wanted to watch it. But it's not a funny movie at all. If you want laughs from a movie, watch something else, this is not for you.
    2ekeby

    Well, some of the dialog is okay

    But that's about it. It's the reason I came here, to see who wrote the script. The tone of the dialog sounded vaguely familiar. I wouldn't be surprised to learn that there were other unnamed doctors who tried to breathe life into this script. I also began to wonder if this was some cockamamie remake of A Star Is Born. It isn't, not that I think it would be better if that had been the case.

    I'm also somewhat gratified to see that I'm not the only person who never saw the appeal of Leslie Caron. She's always just Leslie Caron; it doesn't matter what the role is.

    My fellow reviewers are right. Don't bother with this. It's a European production/film trying to be American, and as a consequence, it's neither one nor the other. It's a disaster of a hybrid.
    5blanche-2

    Goes nowhere - does nothing

    What the heck was this? The Bad and the Beautiful Goes on the Twentieth Century, I guess. Based on a novel by Romain Gary, Fonda plays Willie Bauche, a triple threat in the Orson Welles tradition whose films don't make any money, so he soon finds himself kicked out of the studio. While observing a screen test, he becomes interested in the actress doing the test, Ann Garantier (Leslie Caron) and decides to make her the biggest thing since Greta Garbo, manipulating his old boss at the studio to sign her. Ann and Willie fall in love and marry. On their wedding night, Willie becomes involved in some movie business and leaves the hotel. This turns Ann off, and the implication is that she doesn't sleep with him - and six months later, apparently, she's still not sleeping with him. His work always takes precedence over her, and she doesn't like it.

    While on a trip to Paris, Ann meets a soldier, played by Cesare Danova, and runs away with him. He applies for discharge from his regiment and tells her that he's supposed to leave at the end of the week, but he's not going.

    I've actually described the plot of this film in a much more exciting way than it was filmed. All I'll say is that Leslie Caron looked beautiful and had some beautiful clothes. Everyone is very low key and says their lines as if they're on their deathbed. Except for Fonda, they all sort of moan.

    The lead role, Willie, is indeed a Welles type or the kind of producer played by Barrymore in Twentieth Century. Fonda was in comedies, but he was usually the straight man. This role called for a flamboyant, meglomaniacal performance. Fonda was a very internalized actor - I can't imagine anyone worse for this role. It's like having Cary Grant play Mahatma Gandhi.

    A complete waste of time - your time, my time, and the actors' time.
    4bkoganbing

    The Men Who Did Not Understand Comedy

    The Man Who Understood Women was created by noted screenwriter Nunnally Johnson who had worked with Henry Fonda going back to Jesse James. On the basis of respect for his talent and his friendship with Johnson, Fonda got cast in the part of Hollywood wunderkind Willie Bauche, a man who it turned out did not understand women in the slightest or at least the woman whom he married and was responsible for her stardom, Leslie Caron.

    Willie Bauche needed an actor with the flair of a John Barrymore to carry it off. In fact Fonda's character of Willie Bauche is a second cousin to Oscar Jaffe from Twentieth Century. Now Henry Fonda has been successful in comedy, but the fellow who utilized him best, Preston Sturges in The Lady Eve did not tamper with Fonda's basic All American serious character, he played Barbara Stanwyck and the rest of the cast off against it. What Barrymore or Orson Welles on whom the lead is allegedly based could have done we'll never know.

    Speaking of Welles the character of Max Buda whom he played in The VIPs was exactly like what Fonda was trying to achieve in The Man Who Understood Women.

    Fonda is a Welles like character who discovers young hopeful Leslie Caron, makes her a star and marries her. But he's all about himself and Caron's eyes start wandering and land on young army officer Cesare Danova while she and Fonda are on the French Riviera. Of course Fonda gets jealous and begins scheming all kinds of things that you have to watch The Man Who Understood Women to find out.

    Leslie Caron was very hot at that point in her career having just come off the best film of 1958, Gigi. Still even I can't understand why she rated billing over Hollywood veteran Henry Fonda. I'm betting Fonda wasn't to thrilled with that either.

    Besides working with Nunnally Johnson, Fonda got to work with Myron McCormick with whom he had gone to Princeton with and was part of the famous Triangle Players during their college days. McCormick plays his number two guy who tries to instill a little reality into Fonda's life, but is unable to.

    The film actually begins quite promisingly. Nunnally Johnson who knew Hollywood as good as anyone has a great beginning with Fonda alerting producer Conrad Nagel to a new discovery in Caron, but doing it in such a way that Nagel thinks it's all his idea and that he's stealing someone from Fonda whom he can't stand, but who Fonda knows he can't stand. That was all very well done, if the film had kept up that quality it would be a classic today.

    The Citadel film series book The Films Of Henry Fonda also says that there are a lot of inside Hollywood jokes, but said to say they stayed inside. One reason I looked forward to seeing it was that after some 50 years of tell all memoirs and second hand accounts, I figured that things a 1959 audience might not have gotten I would have. Well frankly I didn't so Nunnally's inside stuff stays inside.

    After this one, Fonda stayed off the screen for three years coming back in a part in Advise And Consent that he was believable in. Far more than The Man Who Understood Women where he was probably the most miscast in his career.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The skimpy outfit Leslie Caron wears in the audition scene is the same one Marilyn Monroe wore in Bus Stop (1956).
    • Quotes

      Willie Bauche: [Willie's dressed in an Arab costume] Micky's okay. That gangster stuff is all in the past. He's strictly legit now. Nothing but slot machines.

      Preacher: Would Romeo have put a tail on Juliet?

      Willie Bauche: No, and that's probably why he's not with us today. Romeo happens to be the most overrated practitioner in the history of romance. Who else but a medieval Mortimer Snerd could have managed to get his whole wedding party knocked off?

      Preacher: Women don't like being tailed, Sire, especially women who are wives.

      Willie Bauche: Did you smell that Mimosa last night?

      Preacher: I was transported by its fragrance.

      Willie Bauche: That's what I mean. All that Mimosa, moonlight, music. There must be a thousand violins in this hotel alone. A woman's got to be protected against herself. Or, to put it bluntly, against over-stimulation.

      Preacher: I'm still perturbed, Sire.

      Willie Bauche: Your trouble, of course, is you know nothing about women. You realise why you're not married don't you?

      Preacher: Just luck, I imagine.

      Willie Bauche: Women can see through you.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits are shown next to several rolls of film strips, theoretically showing scenes from the film.
    • Connections
      Referenced in World by Night (1960)
    • Soundtracks
      A Paris Valentine
      Lyrics by Paul Francis Webster

      Music by Robert Emmett Dolan

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 23, 1959 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Über den Gassen von Nizza
    • Filming locations
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 45m(105 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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