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Our Very Own

  • 1950
  • Approved
  • 1h 33m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,7/10
673
MA NOTE
Our Very Own (1950)
DramaRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueGail discovers the shocking news that she is adopted during a heated argument with her sister, Joan. With the reluctant support of her adoptive parents and baby sister, Penny, Gail goes in s... Tout lireGail discovers the shocking news that she is adopted during a heated argument with her sister, Joan. With the reluctant support of her adoptive parents and baby sister, Penny, Gail goes in search of her biological mother and true identity.Gail discovers the shocking news that she is adopted during a heated argument with her sister, Joan. With the reluctant support of her adoptive parents and baby sister, Penny, Gail goes in search of her biological mother and true identity.

  • Director
    • David Miller
  • Writer
    • F. Hugh Herbert
  • Stars
    • Ann Blyth
    • Farley Granger
    • Joan Evans
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    6,7/10
    673
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • David Miller
    • Writer
      • F. Hugh Herbert
    • Stars
      • Ann Blyth
      • Farley Granger
      • Joan Evans
    • 33Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 4Commentaires de critiques
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 oscar
      • 3 nominations au total

    Photos11

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    Rôles principaux25

    Modifier
    Ann Blyth
    Ann Blyth
    • Gail Macaulay
    Farley Granger
    Farley Granger
    • Chuck
    Joan Evans
    Joan Evans
    • Joan Macaulay
    Jane Wyatt
    Jane Wyatt
    • Lois Macaulay
    Ann Dvorak
    Ann Dvorak
    • Gert Lynch
    Donald Cook
    Donald Cook
    • Fred Macaulay
    Natalie Wood
    Natalie Wood
    • Penny Macaulay
    Gus Schilling
    Gus Schilling
    • Frank
    Phyllis Kirk
    Phyllis Kirk
    • Zaza
    Jessica Grayson
    • Violet
    • (as Jessie Grayson)
    Martin Milner
    Martin Milner
    • Bert
    Kipp Hamilton
    Kipp Hamilton
    • Gwendolyn
    • (as Rita Hamilton)
    Ray Teal
    Ray Teal
    • Jim Lynch
    Arthur Berkeley
    • Poker Player
    • (uncredited)
    John Butler
    John Butler
    • Poker Player
    • (uncredited)
    John Considine
    John Considine
    • Boy at Birthday Party
    • (uncredited)
    Joe Devlin
    Joe Devlin
    • Card Player
    • (uncredited)
    Betty Jeanne Glennie
    • Student
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • David Miller
    • Writer
      • F. Hugh Herbert
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs33

    6,7673
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    Avis en vedette

    7blanche-2

    Nice, warm film

    Ann Blyth is "Our Very Own" in this 1950 film also starring Joan Evans, Jane Wyatt, Donald Woods, Phyllis Kirk, Natalie Wood, Ann Dvorak, Farley Granger and Martin Milner. Blyth is Gail, the oldest of three girls in an idyllic '50s family. She's in love with Chuck (Farley Granger) whom her sister Joan is trying to take away from her. She's also preparing for her high school graduation; she will be speaking at the ceremony. On her 18th birthday, Gail gets into yet another heated argument with Joan, during which Joan blurts out something she just learned by accident - that Gail is adopted. Even with a perfect mother like Jane Wyatt and a loving father like Donald Woods, Gail doesn't take it well and demands to meet her "real mother," Mrs. Lynch (Ann Dvorak).

    "Our Very Own" gives a good idea of what the '50s were like. You never told anyone anything for their own good was just one of the tenets - that includes Gail's parents not telling her she was adopted and Mrs. Lynch not telling Mr. Lynch she had a baby that she surrendered for adoption. Also, this was a private adoption, done through an attorney, which was very common in those days.

    Ann Dvorak has the strongest role as the biological mother, and she's excellent, creating a vibrant character without the class of Gail's adopted mother and with a lout for a husband. Her intentions are good - they probably always were - but she's lived her life under someone's thumb and has never been able to pull it together. Blyth does a complete turnaround from Veda in "Mildred Pierce," the role for which she will always be identified, and plays a mature, responsible young woman. Natalie Wood plays her brat sister - by the end of the first scene, you want to slap her. Joan Evans and Phyllis Kirk are both very good, Joan with her slutty moments and beautiful Phyllis, a favorite of mine from the "Thin Man" television show is good as Gail's best friend. Was there ever a mother as ideal as Jane Wyatt? Like Margaret on Father Knows Best, she's practical, kind, wise and lovely. Donald Woods doesn't have much to do, but plays the loving father well. Handsome Farley Granger makes a great suitor, and Martin Milner as a goof - a role he played often in his early career - is cute.

    My only objection is that Gail's mother is too good to be true, her boyfriend is too good to be true, and her best friend is too good to be true. But those sisters - whoa.

    A good movie with a lot of heart.
    8Jay09101951

    a post-war classic

    This movie was made in 1949, just 4 years after the end of World War 2. It was a time when the average American family got to enjoy the post-war USA: Having Dad at home and not fighting a war , Mom at home instead of working in a factory making bombs , being able to buy gas anytime you wanted and having the thrill of seeing the what everyone wanted: a TV set in their home. It is with this backdrop, that one of the smaller studios, RKO, produced this wonderful and warm-hearted story of a young woman who discovers a secret kept from her since birth. It is not a typical story for it's time and that what makes it so different. It was written and directed with much care while dealing with a very sensitive subject. The major Hollywood Studios like MGM, Paramount, Warners, etc, still made all of the big-budget films, but RKO turned out some real good ones and Our Very Own is at the top of the list.
    7mls4182

    Be patient, it gets good

    The film starts out feeling sickeningly saccharine. Natalie Wood's character is extremely annoying. I guess they did this to establish what a happy family they are. It is overdone. The film gets serious and very good - especially for its time. Ann Dvorak is outstanding as usual.
    7samhill5215

    No stereotype

    I watched this movie on the strength of comments on this site. I was not a great fan of any of the actors save for Natalie Wood and Ann Dvorak and neither was the headliner. But I stand corrected. Notwithstanding the negative comments posted by adopted IMDb members I found the film compelling on several levels. It touched me deeply. Several scenes brought tears to my eyes with the same effect on my wife who is the tough one in the family. They weren't melodramatic, just done with the right dose of pathos to convey feelings and put the viewer in the characters' places. Each member of the family was successively portrayed and then relegated to the background to focus on Ann Blyth's character, her adoptive parents and her birth mother. All these actors' performances were just right, Dvorak's in particular.

    One scene stands out in my mind and I don't think I'm giving much away in retelling it: after Blyth discovers she was adopted she asks the family maid Violet - played by Jessica Grayson in another memorable performance - if she knew. Violet answers "Honey I was here when they brought you 18 years ago". Grayson delivered it with just the right amount of sensitivity to underscore to us and the deeply wounded Blyth that the circumstances of her birth had no effect on her status within the family. There were many more such vignettes, when Blyth returns at 3am and gets yelled at by her father, when Blyth and Wyatt get tangled up in the meaning of the word "mother" the morning after the revelation, the look of fear on Wyatt's face when she allows her second daughter to look for her birth certificate. They showed us a strong, caring family, with patient, intelligent and understanding parents capable of mistakes they were not afraid to admit and tackle. Nobody was all good or all bad, just people with a full range of human strengths and frailties, people like you and me.

    I could go on like this forever and give away the whole plot but I'll stop here and close with another memorable scene I feel rounds out this movie. It takes place before Blyth discovers she's adopted, on the beach with Farley Granger. They come out of the surf, draw close and Blyth reaches up on her tiptoes to kiss Granger. The camera draws away and looks down on them from high up as the waves approach them from both sides to merge where they stand. There was a raw sensuality to this scene. It was full of the passion that complements altruistic love.
    7muulesaver

    Dated postwar dating devolves into powerful family drama

    Behind the well-woven plot of a budding high school graduate's family problems is an earthy, though somewhat stereotypical examination of a Caucasion based, middle class existence in suburban America of 1949. Ann Blyth earnestly portrays the vicissitudinous impact of a revelation about her character's childhood. The storyline backdrop comes complete with proper but sincerely well meaning parents and a beloved, part-of-the-family, African-American housekeeper and cook (portrayed with gentility and grace by Jessica Grayson in her final film role) without whose valuable, understated contributions the family's daily routine would be reduced to chaos. Finally, of course, there's the obligatory family dog, playfully short-circuiting the household.

    As depicted in this typical period film people dressed more formally, even in hot weather (for whatever reasons!), with air conditioning yet to permeate even modern, well equipped homes. As a rule, practical personal dress comfort didn't prevail over formality until the 1960's.

    The prolonged initial sequence showcases a wonderful nuisance of a girl (scene-stealing Natalie Wood) "helping" with the installation of a new television, the up and coming electronic marvel of the day (whose commercial success was on the verge of becoming reality, thanks in part to some price breaking discoveries that soon rendered TV sets sufficiently affordable for the masses). Boys and girls were portraying themselves while being quietly groomed for achieving good citizenship standards as defined by the generally conservative post-war period.

    In "Our Very Own" personal relationships expressed themselves in ways that depicted subtle, yet significant differences from those of years to come, revealing an overall interesting and introspective perspective of the fairly tranquil, but brief period between World War II and the Korean War. The latter event broke shortly before the public release of this film in 1950. Meanwhile, as the storyline reveals, the "cold war" had already begun and, for many people, nuclear experimentation was beginning to command a scary center stage presence. Other "hot" issues of the day include McCarthy type anti-Communism (or Anti-Americanism as it was in actuality!), racial and ethnic equality and mixed sexual attitudes; but in "Our Very Own" we are deliberately steered inward, into family and personal matters, with the broad and burgeoning concerns of the day kept at bay...almost. Issues such as those mentioned above are not directly infiltrating any aspect of daily life in the treatment offered here, except for occasional inference. The period feel is thereby enhanced.

    As "Our Very Own" grapples its way toward the emerging central theme of adoption, its still subtle stigmas of the times permeate the otherwise gentile facade of the featured suburbanite family. Ann Dvorak, in character, offers a fine portrayal as a birth mother as opposed to a rearing one. Her persona is carved from the "other side of the tracks" folks, but a sensitive manner prevails. She exudes pathos, yet maintains dignity for all concerned.

    Now, some sixty years hence, we are treated to a time capsule view of an earlier, mostly bygone, America complete with some focal points of its day plus those things eternal that seem to pass through generations, oblivious to time and technology. The story line may be unremarkable (although it maintains interest) but the real and stylized adaptations of Middle American life at the time are enhanced by fine performances that lend a glimpse into aspects of our culture that were probably at least partly present at mid-century past.

    One acoustic footnote: "Our Very Own" also concentrates on excellent sound and sensitive background music. An Oscar nomination was achieved for Best Sound Recording.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Film debuts of Kipp Hamilton (as Rita Hamilton) and Phyllis Kirk.
    • Gaffes
      Mrs. Macaulay tells Joan her birth certificate is in a "sealed" box. There is a lock on the box, but Joan opens it without a key. Her mother never mentions needing a key. There is a very good reason that box should have been locked. Mr. Macaulay produces a key later and locks the box.
    • Citations

      Penny Macaulay: [about Chuck] He really is awfully cute, isn't he?

      Joan Macaulay: [feigning ignorance] Who?

      Penny Macaulay: [exasperated] President Truman!

    • Connexions
      Referenced in Edge of Doom (1950)
    • Bandes originales
      Happy Birthday
      (uncredited)

      Written by Mildred J. Hill and Patty S. Hill

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Our Very Own?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 27 juillet 1950 (United States)
    • Pays d’origine
      • United States
    • Langue
      • English
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Beloved Over All
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Samuel Goldwyn Studios - 7200 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Hollywood, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • société de production
      • The Samuel Goldwyn Company
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 33 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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