IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,8/10
946
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ein amerikanischer Kriegskorrespondent verliebt sich in eine BBC-Reporterin, aber ihre Beziehung scheint von Anfang an dem Untergang geweiht.Ein amerikanischer Kriegskorrespondent verliebt sich in eine BBC-Reporterin, aber ihre Beziehung scheint von Anfang an dem Untergang geweiht.Ein amerikanischer Kriegskorrespondent verliebt sich in eine BBC-Reporterin, aber ihre Beziehung scheint von Anfang an dem Untergang geweiht.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Jack Armstrong
- Reporter
- (Nicht genannt)
Mabel Etherington
- Woman at Inn
- (Nicht genannt)
Lee Fenton
- Reporter
- (Nicht genannt)
Aidan Harrington
- Man at Inn
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
I found myself 'fast-forwarding' thru the last half hour. The script missed some great chances at early character development, which left the 'talent' struggling to pull this movie together. Their characters lacked depth and motivation in the later going, and the 96 minutes seemed much longer.
Everybody around here seems to be criticizing this fine piece of melodrama. It feels like a duty to say some good things to save it right away. I only heard about the title yesterday from Amazon, and then, in the afternoon, a friend of mine offered to lend it to me. I appreciated the coincidence. I've just finished watching it, and must confess I really enjoyed the show. The image is great, Lana Turner is beautiful. I will accept the fact that it's not as original as other melodramas, but it definitely uses all the ropes we love about this kind of movies. So my mark here is seven, I had a great time and I would advise anyone interested in melodramas to have a look at it on a sunny day, just before going to the beach. And dream while watching seagulls in the sky.
I had heard a lot about this film. I like Lana Turner and I have always thought that Glynis Johns is one of the loveliest British actresses who ever went to Hollywood - our loss, their gain. She seemed to steal every scene that she was in.
I thought this was just going to be another love story with a wartime background, but it was more than that. It turned out to be a very touching and human story.
The scenes of Cornwall were beautiful. It would have been great in colour, and the film had the loveliest ending that I have ever seen in any film of this genre.
Lana Turner never won an Oscar, but I am surprised that she was not, at least, nominated for an Academy Award for this picture. She was always good at playing this sort of role, lighting up the screen as her performance developed.
I am not usually a fan of love stories, but there was just something about this film that made me keep watching it. I do not know what it was. Maybe it was just Lana Turner's performance and the beautiful scenes of Cornwall. I have recorded it on Talking Pictures. I might even watch it again.
I have also enjoyed watching Sean Connery in one of his early roles. He is always good, no matter what film he is in. However, I should imagine that British audiences must have sat in the cinema wondering how a Scotsman could have been born in Cornwall.
I thought this was just going to be another love story with a wartime background, but it was more than that. It turned out to be a very touching and human story.
The scenes of Cornwall were beautiful. It would have been great in colour, and the film had the loveliest ending that I have ever seen in any film of this genre.
Lana Turner never won an Oscar, but I am surprised that she was not, at least, nominated for an Academy Award for this picture. She was always good at playing this sort of role, lighting up the screen as her performance developed.
I am not usually a fan of love stories, but there was just something about this film that made me keep watching it. I do not know what it was. Maybe it was just Lana Turner's performance and the beautiful scenes of Cornwall. I have recorded it on Talking Pictures. I might even watch it again.
I have also enjoyed watching Sean Connery in one of his early roles. He is always good, no matter what film he is in. However, I should imagine that British audiences must have sat in the cinema wondering how a Scotsman could have been born in Cornwall.
Whilst on assignment in a very 1950s-looking WW2 London, a plastic-haired US ace-journo' (Turner) and an impossibly baby-faced Cornish ace-journo' (Connery) are lost in the throws of a torrid affair, despite the disapproval of colleagues (stiff-upper-lip Longdon, laconic James). However, even as declarations of undying love are uttered, dark clouds loom in the form of Turner's newspaper boss and erstwhile lover Sullivan, and Connery's shock disclosure that he has a wife and child tucked away in his native Cornish village. When Connery is killed in a plane crash, a devastated Turner makes a pilgrimage to his native Cornwall where her path crosses that of his wife and child...
Risible weepy, serving as a star vehicle for Lana and an early showcase for the handsome young Connery, both of whom fail miserably to convince. Turner seems to possess only three facial expressions, even when trying to stay upright in her stilettos as she totters round 'St. Giles' (actually Polperro) - witness her horribly 2-D efforts to comfort Martin Stephens after his nightmare. Meanwhile Connery's description of his Cornish fishing village birthplace is delivered in such a rich Edinburgh brogue as to be quite giggle-some.
So often the case with British cinema of the 40s and 50s, it's the support players who steal the show - Glynis Johns' is a beautifully judged and modulated depiction of a woman recovering from grief. Her resolute kindness, generosity and warmth make her reaction to the final reel revelations all the more believable. Sid James shines as a world-weary American journalist trying to juggle loyalties, and Stephens' post-nightmare scene is desperately convincing.
Sadly however, excellent support playing, and beautiful location shooting are just not enough to save this overwrought turkey.
Risible weepy, serving as a star vehicle for Lana and an early showcase for the handsome young Connery, both of whom fail miserably to convince. Turner seems to possess only three facial expressions, even when trying to stay upright in her stilettos as she totters round 'St. Giles' (actually Polperro) - witness her horribly 2-D efforts to comfort Martin Stephens after his nightmare. Meanwhile Connery's description of his Cornish fishing village birthplace is delivered in such a rich Edinburgh brogue as to be quite giggle-some.
So often the case with British cinema of the 40s and 50s, it's the support players who steal the show - Glynis Johns' is a beautifully judged and modulated depiction of a woman recovering from grief. Her resolute kindness, generosity and warmth make her reaction to the final reel revelations all the more believable. Sid James shines as a world-weary American journalist trying to juggle loyalties, and Stephens' post-nightmare scene is desperately convincing.
Sadly however, excellent support playing, and beautiful location shooting are just not enough to save this overwrought turkey.
Another Time, Another Place is a multi-dimensional movie. Keeping in mind that it is fifty-eight years old, I imagine the storyline and character building was fairly innovative. Still today, the acting, script, and directing were relevant enough on a general level and pulled me in. I felt drawn towards each character and their individual plights, albeit some more than others. Emotions emanated off the screen, and some scenes were very powerful. While this isn't the best movie of all time, and arguably may not be the peak of Turner's and Connery's careers, it is certainly a heartfelt film that deserves respect.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesDuring the shooting of the movie in England, Sir Sean Connery was confronted by Johnny Stompanato, an ex-marine turned mob enforcer, who was in an abusive relationship with Lana Turner. At the time, Connery and Turner got along very well, so much that when Stompanato found out about it, he suspected that they were having an affair. Stompanato, who was notorious for his jealousy and violent tendencies, then stormed to the set and threatened Connery with a gun. But he quickly disarmed Stompanato and forced him from the set. Following that incident, Stompanato was deported by Scotland Yard. Shortly after he arrived in the USA, he met his end at the hands of Turner's teenage daughter Cheryl, who fatally stabbed him in self-defence while he was beating her mother. Connery, who was filming Das Geheimnis der verwunschenen Höhle (1959) at the time of the latter incident, behaved very cautiously when he walked the streets of Los Angeles, because it was rumoured that a mobster made him responsible for Stompanatos death. That caused him to avoid the USA for several years.
- PatzerThe story takes place in 1945, but all the women's hairstyles and clothes, particularly the high fashion designs worn by Lana Turner, are strictly 1958.
- Zitate
Kay Trevor: Music has such a way of bringing back memories doesn't it? Does it remind you of anyone?
- VerbindungenReferenced in Feuerball (1965)
- SoundtracksAnother Time, Another Place
Written by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 31 Min.(91 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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