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Die unvollkommene Ehe

Originaltitel: Spite Marriage
  • 1929
  • Passed
  • 1 Std. 16 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
2700
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Buster Keaton and Dorothy Sebastian in Die unvollkommene Ehe (1929)
Komödie

Ein unscheinbarer, aber gutmütiger Mann erhält die Chance, eine berühmte Schauspielerin zu heiraten, deren hoffnungsloser Fan er ist. Ihm ist jedoch nicht klar, dass er nur dazu benutzt wird... Alles lesenEin unscheinbarer, aber gutmütiger Mann erhält die Chance, eine berühmte Schauspielerin zu heiraten, deren hoffnungsloser Fan er ist. Ihm ist jedoch nicht klar, dass er nur dazu benutzt wird, den Verflossenen der Schauspielerin eifersüchtig zu machen.Ein unscheinbarer, aber gutmütiger Mann erhält die Chance, eine berühmte Schauspielerin zu heiraten, deren hoffnungsloser Fan er ist. Ihm ist jedoch nicht klar, dass er nur dazu benutzt wird, den Verflossenen der Schauspielerin eifersüchtig zu machen.

  • Regie
    • Edward Sedgwick
    • Buster Keaton
  • Drehbuch
    • Lew Lipton
    • Ernest Pagano
    • Robert E. Hopkins
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Buster Keaton
    • Dorothy Sebastian
    • Edward Earle
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,9/10
    2700
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Edward Sedgwick
      • Buster Keaton
    • Drehbuch
      • Lew Lipton
      • Ernest Pagano
      • Robert E. Hopkins
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Buster Keaton
      • Dorothy Sebastian
      • Edward Earle
    • 36Benutzerrezensionen
    • 19Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos32

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    Topbesetzung14

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    Buster Keaton
    Buster Keaton
    • Elmer Edgemont
    Dorothy Sebastian
    Dorothy Sebastian
    • Trilby Drew
    Edward Earle
    Edward Earle
    • Lionel Benmore
    Leila Hyams
    Leila Hyams
    • Ethyl Norcrosse
    William Bechtel
    William Bechtel
    • Frederick Nussbaum
    Jack Byron
    • Giovanni Scarzi
    • (as John Byron)
    Joe Bordeaux
    • Rumrunner
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ray Cooke
    Ray Cooke
    • The Bellboy
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Mike Donlin
    Mike Donlin
    • Man in Ship's Engine Room
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Pat Harmon
    Pat Harmon
    • Tugboat Captain
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Sydney Jarvis
    • Man in Audience Next to Elmer
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Theodore Lorch
    Theodore Lorch
    • Actor as 'Union Officer'
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Hank Mann
    Hank Mann
    • Stage Manager
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Charles Sullivan
    Charles Sullivan
    • Tough Sailor
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Edward Sedgwick
      • Buster Keaton
    • Drehbuch
      • Lew Lipton
      • Ernest Pagano
      • Robert E. Hopkins
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen36

    6,92.7K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    9Edisone

    Another reason Keaton was the greatest comedian of the 20s!

    The story isn't much, but Buster packs every scene with so many gags that you don't mind. It's easy to see why he was so successful, until MGM stuck him with stories that were totally unsuitable.

    The original score is fantastic, here - it includes a great deal of popular music and makes commentary on the situations, but the meaning will be lost on most modern viewers (I collect records from that period, so I recognize most all of it); even so, it moves the action right along and gives us a rare chance to experience a silent film just as it was presented to contemporary audiences. No cheesy piano accompaniment, here! The sound effects are well done, and used sparingly.

    The shipboard scenes could have been trimmed a bit; they seem to drag. Otherwise, time flies during this movie - you won't regret watching it! Just compare it with the average sound 'comedy' which Hollywood produced until 1932 or so, and you'll realize how they lost the art of making good films for a while. It's a crime that Keaton wasn't given the chance to produce his own talkies, because he might have changed the whole concept of what made a good SOUND comedy! It's a wonder that audiences didn't rebel against the boring, static, yawnful talk-fests that early sound comedies became; maybe the novelty of Talkies really WAS enough to bring them into the theaters.

    I'd haven given this a 10, except for the draggy ship scenes - but the ending is satisfyingly Keatonesque!
    7gbill-74877

    Not his best, but still lovable and a joy to watch

    This film is certainly not Buster Keaton's best work, though that's a very high bar. The plot meanders and lacks the charm and spontaneity we love from him. It too often relies on simple pratfalls, and there is not enough time devoted to his playful antics or wild stunts. The middle of the picture in particular is slow, and co-star Dorothy Sebastian acting drunk shows just how hard it is to do physical comedy that is sophisticated and funny, or to create something out of nothing, as Keaton so often does.

    With all of that said, 'Spite Marriage' has a 34-year-old Buster Keaton still in his prime, and some pretty clever scenes. He gets enlisted into a stage play in the first part, and after botching up his make-up while another actor puts his on professionally, proceeds to foul up the production in various funny ways. As he tries to elude those chasing him afterwards, he does a rapid change into a top hat and tails that is both entertaining and shows off his muscular body. Later in the film, he does some impressive stuntwork on a yacht, at one point getting thrown off, and then as the yacht goes by quickly, catches a small boat trailing behind and hauls himself into it. Throughout the movie, he's lovable and a joy to watch. This was Keaton's last silent picture, and as the 1930's would not be kind to him, it marks a transition for him. If you can avoid comparing it to his masterpieces (which I know is tough!), you'll probably find it's well worth watching.
    8morrisonhimself

    Keaton's athleticism would be enough

    Though not of the quality of "The General," an almost perfect movie, "Spite Marriage" is worth watching both for the fun and for the historical value of its being Keaton's last silent.

    Co-star Dorothy Sebastian deserves a medal both for her performance and for putting up with being knocked about so.

    So many of Keaton's leading ladies get treated very physically, surely part of the auditions was a test of their good-natured sportsmanship -- and probably their physical conditioning, too.

    Dorothy Sebastian's character is not very sympathetic at first, but she learns, and when she has to assist in her own rescue, she is adorable, cute as the proverbial button.

    Keaton, though, is the real reason to watch, this or almost everything else he is in.

    He ranks among the top of the certifiable geniuses of motion picture making, with an unfailing sense of timing, with uncanny physical control, and with an understanding of what was (and is) funny that the studio bosses of his latter career should have paid attention to.

    Even with the worst material, with which he was saddled in so many of his talkies, Keaton and his abilities and talents still stand out, are still memorable.

    Buster Keaton will deserve our awe forever.
    7Igenlode Wordsmith

    Presage of things to come?

    Well, it had to happen some time; in the course of a year's experience at MGM, Buster Keaton's features have finally left youth behind, and left it hard and fast. In "The Cameraman" his character was still the dreamy boy -- but that famous angular face has filled out into a sculpted adult mask, alabaster assuming the opaque authority of marble; no longer playing a college student but a nervy man in his thirties, this is the mature Keaton who will become familiar from the publicity material of the new decade.

    He has abruptly grown into those strong bones at last. The alteration is not unbecoming, but it's undoubtedly somewhat marked.

    As to why, precisely, I found myself speculating so extensively during the first half of the film on the changes in Keaton's personal appearance... I'm afraid it was because I didn't find it very funny.

    The opening scenes have their moments, certainly. Dorothy Sebastian gets good material and can act, and so can Keaton -- when he's allowed. But too much of the humour I found simply to be farcical clowning: in an earlier film, the routine with the hats, for example, might have lasted a second or so for a throwaway laugh, but here it's milked far beyond what it can bear, and much of the other business I felt to be equally forced. There are moments that fly past with Keaton's old lightness of touch, such as the revelation of the true source of his elegant clothing, but there seems to be a general feeling that if a joke is worth doing once, it is worth labouring to death.

    The sequence in which 'Elmer' disrupts the performance of the Civil War melodrama was, for me, more a matter of cringing than laughter; it's only fair to say that these sentiments were very definitely not shared by those in the seats nearby, and it may well just be a case of my aversion to the destructive nature of slapstick humour. But what I love about Keaton isn't his ability to fall over things and knock things down -- any comic worth his salt can do that -- it's the ingenuity and resourceful illogic of his invention at its best, and there's precious little of that on show here.

    Fortunately, matters improve thereafter, as he is allowed a little more resource. Miss Sebastian shines during the restaurant scene, with Buster as second fiddle, and he is able to advance his relationship with his 'wife' during this section of the film into something a little more complex than fatuous knock-kneed idolatry. I have to confess that I didn't find the scene where he tries endlessly to put her to bed to be as classic as it's apparently held, although I did appreciate his typically Keatonesque solution to the chair problem, but the film definitely picks up from around this point.

    The real enjoyment for me, however, only started when Elmer and the girl are left alone on the yacht together; it's almost as if a script that has been written to date by somebody else is taken over by an inspiration that's characteristically Keaton's, as both he and his character rise to the occasion. It occurs to me in passing to wonder if isolation of the filming crew aboard the yacht could possibly have helped foil studio interference..? But maybe it's simply that this is the Keaton we're used to, coming up with wonderfully complex schemes, disabling an entire crew of villains one by one or launching himself intrepidly into the unknown mysteries of the rigging. I was struck by the difference in tone between the sympathetic comedy of this section, where he tries to reduce sail with the help of the girl and the handicap of their joint ignorance, and the earlier, clumsy, 'varnishing' sequence, in which he is purely inept and we are expected to find it funny.

    If the 'adrift alone' theme echoes "The Navigator", then the final knock-down fight inevitably recalls "Battling Butler"; as in that film, Keaton produces not only an athletic but a well-acted confrontation, as Elmer faces up to an opponent tall enough and strong enough to hold him ineffectual at arm's-length... armed only with bantam courage, and the luck and resolve that enable him to survive and keep coming back for more even as he visibly tires. And the payoff in the final line of this scene repaid, for me, all the clumsy physical clowning of the stage scenes earlier! (I must add that as a satire on overwrought drama, I actually find the depiction itself of the play "Carolina" quite funny; it's Buster's distinctly unsubtle involvement that grates on me so.)

    At the start of "Spite Marriage", I'd have been hard put to rate it above a wavering 5 or 6, with the low comedy of scenes such as the riding encounter definitely toward the low end of that scale. I was pleasantly surprised to find it veering upwards as it went on, into the territory of 7 or above, and the ending I'd generally rate at an 8. (The return of the hat gag, I have to say, was not to my taste!) However, I cannot in all conscience give the film as a whole a ranking above about seven on my personal scale: worth watching, worth recommending to others, but not really worth going through discomfort or inconvenience to see.

    Edit: re-watching this film with the original soundtrack (the love theme, "I'm Afraid of You", is certainly appropriate!), I'm impressed above all by Dorothy Sebastian's performance; now that I've seen his later work, Keaton's performance and material here actually reminds me more of his sound-era pictures. You may not be able to hear his voice, but you can certainly see a lot of the same mannerisms appearing...
    8mjneu59

    Buster's last stand

    Buster Keaton's last silent comedy was a change of pace from his earlier, independent features, lacking many of his distinctive idiosyncrasies but adding a refreshingly modern love interest with determined, temperamental actress Trilby Drew (Dorothy Sebastian), who unlike most silent film heroines gets angry, gets drunk, and throws a few well-timed temper tantrums. Because it's a corporate comedy from the MGM assembly line the film can be a bit plot-heavy at times, but even so allows room for some now classic routines: a Civil War stage melodrama sabotaged by Buster's accident-prone performance; Buster attempting to put his dead-drunk bride to bed; and a heroic chase and rescue aboard an underworld yacht. If Keaton was now performing gags that might have been suited to anyone (many seem Chaplin-inspired), at least he was doing so with his usual grace and deadpan precision, and the film highlighted a more confidant, aggressive side to his personality rarely seen in his earlier films.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Buster Keaton wanted this film to be a full talkie, but MGM released it with only a musical score and sound effects. One thing that prevented this picture from being a full talkie was that MGM was late to the sound game and had only one full set of recording equipment at the time. Its Loew's Theater chain also was not yet fully equipped to show sound pictures. Plus, MGM's head of production reasoned Keaton's films were made with a lot of time-consuming improvisations and didn't think the added expense of using valuable, scarce sound equipment was worth it.
    • Patzer
      In the dressing-room, while attempting to trim the hair for his false beard, Elmer accidentally severs the left-hand shoulder strap of his tank-top undershirt and has no time to repair it. When he hurriedly changes back into his smart clothes after the performance, both straps are still whole.
    • Zitate

      Trilby Drew: What's that blonde hanging around you for?

      Lionel Benmore: Can I help it if I'm good-looking?

    • Crazy Credits
      Rather than appear at the beginning, the MGM roaring lion opening appears after the conclusion of the film, but just before "The End" title, which immediately follows it.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Arena: Cinema: Christmas Special (1976)
    • Soundtracks
      I'd Rather Be Blue Over You
      (uncredited)

      Music by Fred Fisher

      Lyrics by Billy Rose

      Played as background music at the cafe

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 22. Oktober 1930 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Noon
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Trotzheirat
    • Drehorte
      • Hotel Carmel - 201 Broadway St, Santa Monica, Kalifornien, USA(Lionel confronts Buster outside this hotel on the 2nd Street side - still in business in 2022)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 16 Min.(76 min)
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.33 : 1

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