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La Gamine

Titre original : The Flapper
  • 1920
  • 1h 28min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
470
MA NOTE
La Gamine (1920)
Comédie pour adolescentsComédie romantiqueRomance bons sentimentsRomance pour adolescentsComédieRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueGinger grows up in a slow town. Because of her wild attitude, her father decides to send her to a strict boarding school. Despite the strictness, the girls have fun getting into flapper life... Tout lireGinger grows up in a slow town. Because of her wild attitude, her father decides to send her to a strict boarding school. Despite the strictness, the girls have fun getting into flapper lifestyle trouble including flirting.Ginger grows up in a slow town. Because of her wild attitude, her father decides to send her to a strict boarding school. Despite the strictness, the girls have fun getting into flapper lifestyle trouble including flirting.

  • Réalisation
    • Alan Crosland
  • Scénario
    • Frances Marion
  • Casting principal
    • Olive Thomas
    • Theodore Westman Jr.
    • William P. Carleton
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    470
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Alan Crosland
    • Scénario
      • Frances Marion
    • Casting principal
      • Olive Thomas
      • Theodore Westman Jr.
      • William P. Carleton
    • 17avis d'utilisateurs
    • 9avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos69

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    Rôles principaux19

    Modifier
    Olive Thomas
    Olive Thomas
    • Genevieve 'Ginger' King
    Theodore Westman Jr.
    • Bill Forbes
    William P. Carleton
    William P. Carleton
    • Richard Channing
    • (as W.P. Carleton)
    Warren Cook
    • Senator King - Ginger's Father
    Katherine Johnston
    • Hortense
    Arthur Housman
    Arthur Housman
    • Tom Morran - The Eel
    Louise Lindroth
    • Elmina Buttons
    • (as Frances Marshall)
    Marcia Harris
    Marcia Harris
    • Mrs. Paddles
    Charles Craig
    • Reverend Cushil
    Bobby Connelly
    Bobby Connelly
    • King Jr
    Maurice Steuart
    • Schoolboy
    • (as Maury Stewart Jr.)
    Aleene Bergman
    • Schoolgirl
    • (non crédité)
    Barbara Butler
    • Schoolgirl
    • (non crédité)
    Mildred Cheshire
    • Schoolgirl
    • (non crédité)
    Russell Hewitt
    • Schoolboy
    • (non crédité)
    Dorothy Kent
    • Schoolgirl
    • (non crédité)
    Eileen Percy
    Eileen Percy
    • Schoolgirl
    • (non crédité)
    Athole Shearer
    • Schoolgirl
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Alan Crosland
    • Scénario
      • Frances Marion
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs17

    6,4470
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    Avis à la une

    9broadway_melody_girl

    Delightful 1920's Chick Flick Starring the forgotten Olive Thomas

    I believe that all 3 of the comments for The Flapper were written by men, who didn't rate it very high. This movie was obviously made to appeal to the women, or more appropriately girls, of the day. I'm a girl and I rate it very high. The Flapper is an adorable movie about a teenage schoolgirl, Ginger King (Olive Thomas), who dreams of lovers and jazz cabarets, wanting to escape her mundane life at boarding school and ride off into the sunset with the handsome older man all the schoolgirls are in love with, Richard Channing (William P. Carleton). She fools Channing into thinking she's 20, and he takes her to a country club, but her "romantic night" is ruined when the bad girl (though she looks to be 40!) at school, Hortense, gets in her way. Throughout the rest of the film, Ginger pursues her dreams and visits 1920's nightclubs, wears glamorous clothes, but finds that being a flapper is not easy when she gets involved in a mysterious jewel heist and more! The Flapper is all fluff, but so cute! Olive Thomas shows a definite comedic flair in this movie, and it's so sad that she didn't get to go on with her career. The Flapper is a treasure, not just because of it's one of Olive Thomas' few surviving movies, but because it's a good, solid silent comedy that any silent film fan should see (whether you like chick flicks or not).
    9ducatic-82290

    Apogee of The World's Sweetheart

    The radiantly beautiful Olive Thomas is just about believable as sixteen- year-old Genevieve King, although she was actually 24 or 25 at the time. It seems certain that the common, early movie practice of chest-strapping was used here. In the movie, in spite of the title, Olive plays what was known as a 'Baby Vamp'.

    Genevieve is a bored upper-crust girl, who lives in a classic plantation mansion, well provided with colored servants. Unfortunately, the flighty, potentially vampish, teenager, was prone to disappearing with a male friend, and, after being double-crossed by a governess, father packs her off to a girl's boarding school. Here she falls in with some unsavory schoolgirls, and is easily led into being a naughty girl….one who is keen to attach herself to a particular adult man whom she informs that she is 'about twenty' and not sixteen as she's meant to be in the film.

    After many adventures and a ridiculous suicide attempt, Genevieve decides to transform herself into a flapper, although, in her new garb, she is not girly enough to be a flapper of the 1920s. It seems 1920 was a transitional year during which the line between vamp, flapper and even diva was blurred. Flapper, however, was the 'in' term.

    Snow scenes always work well in black and white film, and the scene with the horse drawn sleigh and girls sledging is no exception. The scene where the girls turn over their sledges at speed on a downhill run is not as comical as it seems. These extras were in fact badly injured in the shoot, and they filled the local hospital with their broken bodies.

    Ginger-haired, violet-eyed Olive Thomas (nee Duffy) was of Irish descent, and became the wife of Jack Pickford (brother of Mary). She had been in the Zeigfield Folies before entering the movies, but it was while on a European tour with Jack that she somehow ingested a solution of bichloride of mercury. It may have been accidental or, perhaps, suicide. She died five days later, leaving Jack devastated, although sister Mary seemed unconcerned for the 'World's Sweetheart' (Mary was only 'America's sweetheart'). One person who was concerned was Mabel Normand, a good friend of Jack. It seems Mabel never met Olive, but had a signed photo of the Baby Vamp in her dressing room and an album of her photos at home. After Olive died, Mabel spent many hours sitting with her grieving mother, and always remained very angry about the circumstances of Ollie's death. Jack Pickford built a mausoleum in New York and had Ollie interred within it. This had the Pickford name inscribed over its doorway, but no other Pickford was ever buried there. We can assume that the sweet Mary, who didn't bother to attend the funeral, saw to that.

    Olive seems very modern-looking in her films, and very unlike, say, Mabel Normand who was an entrenched Edwardian. Ollie could easily be cast in a picture today, whereas Mabel is clearly the face of the 1890s (producers have never found any modern actress Mablescent enough to portray her accurately). The World's Sweetheart would undoubtedly have gone on to play more mature, womanly roles had she lived, while Miss Normand and Miss Pickford were hamstrung by their child-like appearance (off-screen as well as on-screen).
    9planktonrules

    A wonderful and clever film...download it today.

    Olive Thomas was a terrific actress. Too bad she died so young (see her IMDb biography for more on this). This is one of her last films as she died later in 1920--at only age 25. And, it's the most accessible as it can be downloaded for free from the link on IMDb or you can get it from Netflix (which also includes a documentary about her).

    The film is a parody of the 'flapper' attitude of the post-WWI years. Many women were becoming more liberated--socially and even sexually. In the film, Olive plays a 16 year-old who desperately wants to become one of these worldly flappers. She throws herself at an older man and pretends to be a lot older and MUCH more experienced girl to impress him--all the while ignoring a nice young man who is interested in her. Towards the end, she accidentally drifts into a robbery--and is implicated although she is innocent. But, as the worldly and wicked woman she's been pretending to be, the authorities are more than willing to believe she is involved.

    This film would make a terrific double-feature along with Clara Bow's "It". Both show a similar sort of character but from different perspectives. Plus, both are quite enjoyable and well written. Worth seeing and a must-see if you are a fan of silents (like me).

    By the way, the bad guy in the film is played by Arthur Housman. Housman was a VERY prolific guy in silents and talking pictures and mostly played silly and affable drunks. Here he plays a very, very different sort of man.
    6nukisepp

    I Am a Big Girl Now

    'The Flapper' is a charming girl power movie. It is obvious that it was aimed at teenage girls and young women who dreamed about more adventurous life like its protagonist. Chick-flick of the 1920s. Olive Thomas stars as sixteen-year-old Genevieve who is sent into a boarding school by his strict senator father. Life in school is dull and she longs for adventures. Her life gets even more exciting for her than she first could have hoped for. Olive Thomas is adorable and her performance as a naive girl is a perfect balance between seriousness and comedy.

    The writing is good, especially the first hour of the movie. The conclusion is a little bit disappointing, it felt rushed. It is kinda feel-good fantasy, although there are quite dark undertones - a young girl charms an older good looking man. And then there is the heist. In this case, also you have to notice that the thief, Tom 'The Eel' Morran (sinister portrayal by Arthur Housman) is paired with a schoolgirl, Genevieve's schoolmate, Hortense (Katherine Johnston). But mostly, it is an amusing movie.

    It was the first major movie that depicted the flapper lifestyle. Besides being entertaining, this movie also carries a historical value.
    7springfieldrental

    Flappers' Image First Captured and Defined on Celluloid

    One of several meanings of the term 'flapper' is a teenage girl. Less flattering definitions include young prostitutes and female dancers. Most likely, a combination of the varying interpretations of 'flapper' resulted in the look and lifestyle of a segment of the female population during the 1920's which symbolized the departure from the traditional matronly ethos of generations past.

    The development of 'flappers' emerged after the trauma of World War One. Their iconic image received a huge boast in Selznick Pictures' May 1920 "The Flapper." Young actress Olive Thomas plays cinema's first epitome of the Jazz Age's independent women, beginning with her scene midway in the movie. As a schoolgirl traveling on break, she's invited by an another schoolmate and her boyfried to a nightclub. She tries on the 'flapper' outfit contained in the luggage the couple demands she transport back to her father's home in Florida, where they secretly plan to pick up the stolen goods. Seeing an older man she admired back in school at the club, Thomas, wanting to impress him, exhibits all the mannerisms of future flappers by smoking a cigarette in public and acting cool.

    The Frances Marion script was capitalizing on an emerging trend just in its early stages. But seeing the rebellious and confident Thomas as a young woman adopting a flapper image solidified the movement going forward.

    "The Flapper" was Thomas' last viewable surviving movie she made (She acted in a later lost film, 'Darling Mine,' and a posthumously-released film, 'Everybody's Sweetheart," which is currently unavailable for public viewing.). At 25, Thomas and her husband Jack Pickford, Mary's brother, took what they called their second honeymoon in France. Their marriage, a tempestuous one at best, was filled with fights and tender make-ups ever since they had been married in October 1916. During their stay in Paris, the two returned to the hotel room on the night of September 5, 1920, after an evening of heavy drinking. According to Pickford, who was prescribed a topical medication for syphilis sores, Thomas mistook the French label on the container for water or as a sleeping liquid, despite its gooey substance, and swallowed some. The poisonous mercury bichloride solution was fatal, killing her five days later in a Paris hospital.

    The media had a field day on the cause of her death. Sensational headlines screamed accusations from suicide to her being murdered by Pickford in order to claim her life insurance. The French police investigated all the circumstances behind the incident and, with the autopsy report, confirmed her death was accidental. "Olive and I were the greatest pals on Earth," lamented Pickford. "Her death is a ghastly mistake."

    On the way back to the States with her body, Pickford had been rumored to have attempted suicide, so distraught was he. In an emotionally crowded funeral service in New York City, women fainted and several onlookers were crushed rushing to view her casket. Thomas is buried in a crypt at Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx.

    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Comédie pour adolescents
    Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in Quand Harry rencontre Sally... (1989)
    Comédie romantique
    Omar Epps and Sanaa Lathan in Love & Basketball (2000)
    Romance bons sentiments
    John Cusack and Ione Skye in Un monde pour nous (1989)
    Romance pour adolescents
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comédie
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      A then-unknown, but very recognizable Norma Shearer has an uncredited bit part as one of Ginger's boarding school chums.
    • Citations

      Genevieve 'Ginger' King: He looks delightfully wild and dangerous.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Gangster Empire: Rise of the Mob: Chicago and the rise of Al Capone (2013)

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    FAQ11

    • How long is The Flapper?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 30 juin 1922 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Flapper
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Miami, Floride, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Selznick Pictures Corporation
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 28min(88 min)
    • Mixage
      • Silent
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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