Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhile trying to impress a woman, a man stumbles upon an idea that would double the profits of gas stations. Being rebuffed by the woman's father, he takes his idea to a rival company, who hi... Tout lireWhile trying to impress a woman, a man stumbles upon an idea that would double the profits of gas stations. Being rebuffed by the woman's father, he takes his idea to a rival company, who hires him and runs his competition out of business.While trying to impress a woman, a man stumbles upon an idea that would double the profits of gas stations. Being rebuffed by the woman's father, he takes his idea to a rival company, who hires him and runs his competition out of business.
- George Hamlin
- (as Barrie Livesey)
- Mrs.Tremlett
- (uncredited)
- Man Refusing to Employ Peter
- (uncredited)
- Girl
- (uncredited)
- First Duped Waiter
- (uncredited)
- Tony
- (uncredited)
- Card Player
- (uncredited)
- Tenement Mother
- (uncredited)
- Brent - Hatch's Colleague
- (uncredited)
- Man Refusing to Help Peter
- (uncredited)
- Blue Point Executive
- (uncredited)
- Glenda
- (uncredited)
- Proprietor of the Maison de Paris
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
It's because the mores have changed distinctly in 73 years. This relates to the little boy we first see in the film. He is a street orphan and is touchingly written, acted -- and directed, though what else would one expect from the great Michael Powell? Ian Hunter, quite charming as a loafer from a higher class, finds him on the street. He is down on his luck too; so he takes the boy under his wing. The first thing that would not pass muster with censors and/or would upset some viewers today is that he rents a room and has this child share it with him. Oh my! What a scandal that would create! And in addition, he makes pajamas for the child from the softhearted landlady's rug.
Then, when things look up, he seems to have hired the child to work for the car company where he's wangled a job. (The film is primarily about his romance with the daughter of an auto magnate and his change in fortune.) The boy wears a uniform, no less! Child labor laws would make such employment for a little boy unacceptable.
The acting is excellent throughout. The young woman, the boy, the landlady -- all are good. And Hunter shows himself a much more interesting actor than his roles in Kay Francis vehicles a few years hence would have suggested.
Hunter is Peter Middleton, a man down on his luck. He meets a street urchin (John Singer), and together they finagle room and board with a kindly landlady (Muriel George).
Looking to procure a foreign car for a millionaire, he meets a young woman, Cynthia (Nancy O'Neil) whom he assumes is also broke. In fact, her father owns a fleet of gas stations. When she learns he needs a job, she sends Peter to him without revealing her identity.
Cynthia's rather, Hatch, throws him out, but Peter gets the man's rival to agree to his money-making idea. Soon he's on top. He and Hatch are now rivals.
Very charming and entertaining British film.
The film is a simple (if properly restrained British) love story. It begins as an unemployed car salesman, Peter Middleton, who has lost the last of his money in cards, takes a street orphan under his wing and pretending the orphan is his son, persuades a softhearted landlady to rent him a room, although he has no money.
The next day, while trying to con the chauffeur of a fancy motorcar, he meets the rich young Cynthia Hatch. However, intrigued by his audacity, she hides her identity from him when he mistakes her for a working girl and to impress her, he pretends that the car is his. And so, in the best scene in the movie, she convinces him to take her to a fancy restaurant that he, of course, he can't pay for. There she puts him up to going to the powerful Mr. Hatch (her father, still unknown to him) to pitch a scheme for petrol (gas) stations. He promises that he will make good and then hire her as his secretary.
However, her scheme backfires when her father rejects him and he goes to work for the competition. He holds her to her promise, and she finds herself working for her father's chief competitor.
Its all wrapped up neatly in a little more than an hour as the young entrepreneur gets the best of his future father-in-law and wins the girl. As the girl, Nancy O'Neil is quite good and Ian Hunter is good, if a little stiff, as the lead. After this film, he went to Hollywood, where he may be best known for playing King Richard in "The Adventures of Robin Hood".
It was directed by Michael Powell, who went on to make "Black Narcissus" and "The Red Shoes", among other classics.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDirected by Michael Powell, Something Always Happens (1934) is one of 23 "quota quickies" he was hired to helm for Teddington Studios, all of which were typically one-hour features needed to satisfy a legal requirement that cinemas in England exhibit a certain quota of British movies.
The film's producer Irving Asher was an American who oversaw film production at Warner Brothers' British Studios. According to Powell in his autobiography, "A Life in Movies," Irving "had to make about 20 films a year to fulfill his British quota ... He went back to California each year with the head of his scenario department, raided the story department at Burbank and came back to Teddington with perhaps 50 scripts that had already been turned into films by those satanic mills and were already playing at Palaces and flea-pits all around the world, many of them with big stars like Bette Davis, Edward G. Robinson and James Cagney. Everything was run like a machine at Burbank and the average length of a script was 80 pages ... All that Irving had to do was hand the script to his story department, who cut it down to 50 pages and handed it over to a director like me. This was how tight little dramas like my Crown v. Stevens (1936), or comedies like "Something Always Happens"... arrived on the British screen. I made six or seven of these for Irving, slotting them in between other assignments. Jerry [Jackson] and he, both young Americans both in the quota-quickie business, were good friends. They carved me up between them, dovetailing their schedules so that I could work for both of them."
- GaffesWhen Peter pushes over the fruit cart vendor and goes to duck through a doorway, a clear moving shadow of the boom microphone is visible to the left of the doorway.
- Citations
Mrs. Badger: You'll get no food in this house until the rent's paid!
- Bandes originalesSpin a Little Web of Dreams
(uncredited)
Music by Sammy Fain
Played at the restaurant when Peter pours champagne for Cynthia and himself
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Succede sempre qualcosa
- Lieux de tournage
- 12 St. Jame's Square, Londres, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni(Cynthia gets out of her Bently and enters here)
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 9 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1