ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,4/10
12 k
MA NOTE
Trois évadés de Devil's Island se cachent dans la maison d'un gentil marchand et lui rendent sa gentillesse en aidant lui et sa famille à sortir de plusieurs crises.Trois évadés de Devil's Island se cachent dans la maison d'un gentil marchand et lui rendent sa gentillesse en aidant lui et sa famille à sortir de plusieurs crises.Trois évadés de Devil's Island se cachent dans la maison d'un gentil marchand et lui rendent sa gentillesse en aidant lui et sa famille à sortir de plusieurs crises.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
George Chester
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
George Dee
- Coachman
- (uncredited)
Jack Del Rio
- Gendarme
- (uncredited)
John George
- Vendor
- (uncredited)
Ross Gould
- Foreman
- (uncredited)
Jack Kenny
- Vendor
- (uncredited)
Louis Mercier
- Celeste
- (uncredited)
Torben Meyer
- Butterfly Man
- (uncredited)
Avis en vedette
Humphrey Bogart, Peter Ustinov and Aldo Ray star in this film about three escapees from Devil's Island and how they affix themselves in the lives of Leo G. Carroll and wife Joan Bennett as Christmas approaches. By way of assuming the roles of handymen and salesmen, they start to help around the house and the store that Leo manages. In fact, their assistance turns out to be invaluable, as they interject themselves in a personal family squabble between Leo and cousin Basil Rathbone who comes to inspect the shop and the accounts, as he is the owner of the shop. I found the film to be very charming and enjoyable, and it has some very funny and clever moments. If I had to be nit-picky about it, I could say it does reflect the original play's pace and is somewhat too passive and slow in parts and is a bit too long. Also, it does have a rather unorthodox and irreverent feel to it due to a hardened criminal's point of view of things, from which is the root of a lot of the humor. But, it also has a very loose biblical feel to it, very loose. All in all, I liked its charming feel and the talented actors are good in the leads. If you're looking for a fresh and original film this December, "We're No Angels" should make for a different kind of family viewing come Christmastime.
Back when I was in college a friend of mine, the only other person I knew who had seen this film, used to recite lines to each other on appropriate occasions. He was a rugby player, a real rough and tumbly sort of guy, and I was a fairly gentle, studious type; we were two, very different types of people. The point behind this is that, while we were both very different, we both found "We're No Angels" to be a superbly executed film.
I recently had a chance to see the film again and it's just as enjoyable as ever. This light-hearted, if somewhat criminal, comedy is warming, family film with an evil streak. It's absolutely fascinating to watch Bogart in a light comedy role, and to see a young(er) Peter Ustinov as a wife-murdering safe-cracker with a heart. And throw in great (if typical) performances by Basil Rathbone and Leo G. Carroll to boot.
But in my mind, the three biggest stars in this film are playwright Albert Hussens, screenwriter Ranald MacDougall, and above all, a surprisingly masterful performance by Aldo Ray. Ray treads the line between being dumb, lovable, trite thug and being a brutal, sociopathic criminal with great resolve. In the end it is his smoothly delivered lines that one remembers above all else.
As for the dialogue, it too treads lines. This is a film for the entire family, yes. But it does have it's randier moments, and all of them are done in such a way that children will not understand the full implications of them (if they do you have no one to blame but yourself). This translates into a "something for everyone" type of film.
Check it out.
I recently had a chance to see the film again and it's just as enjoyable as ever. This light-hearted, if somewhat criminal, comedy is warming, family film with an evil streak. It's absolutely fascinating to watch Bogart in a light comedy role, and to see a young(er) Peter Ustinov as a wife-murdering safe-cracker with a heart. And throw in great (if typical) performances by Basil Rathbone and Leo G. Carroll to boot.
But in my mind, the three biggest stars in this film are playwright Albert Hussens, screenwriter Ranald MacDougall, and above all, a surprisingly masterful performance by Aldo Ray. Ray treads the line between being dumb, lovable, trite thug and being a brutal, sociopathic criminal with great resolve. In the end it is his smoothly delivered lines that one remembers above all else.
As for the dialogue, it too treads lines. This is a film for the entire family, yes. But it does have it's randier moments, and all of them are done in such a way that children will not understand the full implications of them (if they do you have no one to blame but yourself). This translates into a "something for everyone" type of film.
Check it out.
I stumbled upon We're No Angels one night on AMC. I found that I couldn't leave the TV. I enjoyed the three likeable convicts and discovered that Humphrey Bogart has a knack for light comedy. Peter Ustinov is very deadpan and as a result, some of the best lines come from his character. Aldo Ray is the sweet dumb guy with a heart of gold and a rather dangerous pet. Basil Rathbone is great as the guy you love to hate. A great cast, a good script and good direction by Michael Curtiz makes this a classic.
The film combines the witty nuttiness of Marx Brothers humor with some of the slapstick style of the Three Stooges and comes up as a wonderful comedy.
The whole cast is great, but Bogart is the real star in every respect. He shows that he is really a grand comedian. Rathbone is appropriately evil and nasty as the villain.
Don't confuse this movie with the other one of the same title. This one delivers real comedy.
The whole cast is great, but Bogart is the real star in every respect. He shows that he is really a grand comedian. Rathbone is appropriately evil and nasty as the villain.
Don't confuse this movie with the other one of the same title. This one delivers real comedy.
The humor is understated and quite droll with some brilliant moments. Peter Ustinov's expressions and nuances are priceless and Humphrey Bogart is very funny because he plays it straight. The last half hour is hysterical.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesGreen chartreuse is a potent French liquer produced by the Carthusian order of monks. The characteristic green color is used to describe vivid greens of its hue.
- GaffesThe movie supposedly plays on Devil's Island (It's superimposed in the establishing shot at the very beginning.) and Ducotel's general store is located in Cayenne (It's mentioned several times.), the capital of French Guiana. However, Devil's Island exclusively was a penal colony with no civilian settlement, and Cayenne lies on the mainland coast, approximately 50 miles east of Kourou, the closest mainland town to Devil's Island.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Bogart: The Untold Story (1997)
- Bandes originalesSentimental Moments
Music by Friedrich Hollaender (as Frederick Hollander)
Lyrics by Ralph Freed
Performed by Joan Bennett (uncredited)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- We're No Angels
- Lieux de tournage
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 685 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 94 $ US
- Durée1 heure 46 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was La cuisine des anges (1955) officially released in India in English?
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