Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA playboy and scoundrel seduces women, and his questionable behavior gets him expelled from Oxford University and results in his serving in the army during World War II, but his actions and ... Alles lesenA playboy and scoundrel seduces women, and his questionable behavior gets him expelled from Oxford University and results in his serving in the army during World War II, but his actions and decisions may lead him to redemption.A playboy and scoundrel seduces women, and his questionable behavior gets him expelled from Oxford University and results in his serving in the army during World War II, but his actions and decisions may lead him to redemption.
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 wins total
- Soldier
- (as Jan van Loewen)
- Magistrate
- (Nicht genannt)
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I didn't go to Oxford, as Vivian does for a time. But I went to an Ivy League school and I knew many people like him: showoffs who thumbed their nose at convention but wanted, and generally had, the money convention brings. I was transported back not just to the time of the film but also a few decades back to the wise guy cutups of my own college years.
Harrison does a good job. Indeed, he seems to be playing himself, though that was doubtless just fine acting. I like him in most of what I've seen, particularly in "Anna and the King of Siam" and the brilliant "Unfaithfully Yours." The rest of the cast is superb, too: His real-life wife of the time, Lilli Palmer is very charming. Playing an Austrian girl, she reminded me of Luise Rainer, sans music. Griffith Jones plays his ostensibly more stuffy friend. To me, he is infinitely more appealing in all regards. And Margaret Johnston is beauty and charm itself as Vivian's father's secretary.
It would be interesting to show this on a double-bill with "Look Back in Anger." That was written as an antidote to the "mustn't forget about tea" movies and especially plays that had preceded it.
Yet Jimmy Porter, its protagonist, comes across today just as badly as Harrison's character does. The acting in that film, too, is marvelous. But at the core of each is a character who is not just a boor: Jimmy and Vivian are really creeps, though we are not intended to think them so.
Your enjoyment of this movie will depend on your reaction to Rex Harrison in the lead role of Vivian. If you see him as a fun loving bounder, you'll have fun. If, on the other hand you find him an annoying, faithless, womanising bastard then you'll find 124 minutes verrrrry long.
I started off in the first camp, particularly during the scenes when he is based in a coffee plantation in Latin America and the amusing conversations with his elderly aunt. However the charm soon wears off as he cuckolds an old university friend, uses a beautiful jewish refugee to pay off his debts and causes his own father's death in a drink driving accident.
Does he find redemption in the end? Well, this depends on your interpretation of the final scenes. If you buy the moral that he has now found his place then the film has some meaning. I found the redemptive ending tacked on - reminiscent of the way Hawkes was forced to insert the criticism of gangsters in Scarface.
There are some good performances, particularly from Godfrey Tearle as Vivian's father and Margaret Johnson as the Secretary. Rex acts as Rex just like in Blithe Spirit, Doctor Doolittle, My Fair Lady etc....
If you've nothing better to do on a wet Sunday afternoon, give this film a look and post your views.
Were it not for an intelligent witty script and Rex Harrison being so charming and likeable, this could have been a dark and moralistic sermon. The talented Frank Lauder and Sidney Gilliat team achieve the perfect balance here. They take a serious morality tale and transform it into a light, amusing upbeat drama which was necessary to make the film's message acceptable to an audience suffering the hell of the last six years.
Had this been made a decade earlier it would have been very different. To us watching now it would probably be funnier but it would have lacked the depth and gritty realism. As it transpired, you can now sympathise with Rex Harrison's character, you feel you want everything to work out for him, you want him to realise that he's a good man but you still don't like him.
It's a long film, beautiful Lilli Palmer isn't in it for long enough and the first half does meander quite a bit but nevertheless it's very easy watching, it's entertaining and you feel like you're watched something worthwhile.
Personally I dislike black and white films, however this film had a very modern approach to it and that was able to keep me interested throughout the length of the film. (I would still prefer to see this movie in color!)
Overall, this is a great film and I would recommend it to anyone who likes black and white romances.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesSir Rex Harrison (Vivian Kenway) and Lilli Palmer (Rikki Krausner) were married at the time of filming. They divorced in 1957.
- PatzerAlthough the bulk of the film takes place in the years 1931-1938, all of the women's hairstyles and clothes are strictly in the 1945 mode, which is all wrong, particularly for the 1931 period.
- Zitate
Vivian Kenway: [opens the door] Oh, I was expecting a friend.
Jennifer Calthrop: You see your mistake...?
- VerbindungenReferenced in The Man Who Ruined the British Film Industry (1996)
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- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Notorious Gentleman
- Drehorte
- Smuggler's Cottage, Portreath, Cornwall, England, Vereinigtes Königreich(Seaside cottage; interior and exteriors)
- Produktionsfirmen
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 50 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1