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Ma fille est somnambule

Titre original : High and Dizzy
  • 1920
  • Passed
  • 26min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
1,6 k
MA NOTE
Ma fille est somnambule (1920)
SlapstickComedyShort

Un jeune médecin reçoit la visite d'un père et de sa fille car celle-ci souffre de somnambulisme.Un jeune médecin reçoit la visite d'un père et de sa fille car celle-ci souffre de somnambulisme.Un jeune médecin reçoit la visite d'un père et de sa fille car celle-ci souffre de somnambulisme.

  • Réalisation
    • Hal Roach
  • Scénario
    • Frank Terry
    • H.M. Walker
  • Casting principal
    • Harold Lloyd
    • Mildred Davis
    • Roy Brooks
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    1,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Hal Roach
    • Scénario
      • Frank Terry
      • H.M. Walker
    • Casting principal
      • Harold Lloyd
      • Mildred Davis
      • Roy Brooks
    • 21avis d'utilisateurs
    • 9avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Photos57

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    Rôles principaux11

    Modifier
    Harold Lloyd
    Harold Lloyd
    • The Boy
    Mildred Davis
    Mildred Davis
    • The Girl
    Roy Brooks
    Roy Brooks
    • His Friend
    Wally Howe
    Wally Howe
    • Her Father
    • (as Wallace Howe)
    Marie Benson
    • Unidentified
    • (non crédité)
    William Gillespie
    William Gillespie
      Mark Jones
      Mark Jones
      • Hotel Bellboy Number 2
      • (non crédité)
      Gaylord Lloyd
        Charles Stevenson
        Charles Stevenson
        • Police Officer
        • (non crédité)
        Molly Thompson
        • Woman in corridor
        • (non crédité)
        Noah Young
        Noah Young
        • Man who breaks hotel room door
        • (non crédité)
        • Réalisation
          • Hal Roach
        • Scénario
          • Frank Terry
          • H.M. Walker
        • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
        • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

        Avis des utilisateurs21

        6,81.5K
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        10

        Avis à la une

        9django-1

        a perfect introduction to Harold Lloyd's brand of comedy

        I watched and taped all of TCM's tribute to Harold Lloyd last year, and have recently been working my way through the last few items I taped but hadn't watched. Wanting to turn my girlfriend on to Lloyd, I asked her to watch this short, made after he had established his "glasses character" but before he made the move to longer, feature-length films. HIGH AND DIZZY is the perfect introduction to Harold Lloyd's brand of comedy. As a doctor with few patients (he has cobwebs on his office phone), Lloyd shows great personal charm and the gags are brilliantly devised to move fast yet work a routine in every possible way before moving on from it. For instance, one scene where Lloyd helps his friend (they are both inebriated) put on a coat, and there is a telephone pole between the man's back and his coat, occurs naturally in the plot sequence, is milked every possible way for about thirty or forty seconds, and then leads to another ridiculous situation. The whole film is that well-constructed. Lloyd's great physical skills are in evidence throughout. Of course, there has to be a "danger" element in a Lloyd film, so here he (and his sleepwalking female patient) are put on a ledge. A drunken man AND a sleepwalker on a ledge about twenty stories high! Now THAT is a brilliant set-up for comedy. The clarity of the copy of the film provided to TCM by the Lloyd estate is sparkling, and Robert Israel's musical score, which subtly works sound effects (pratfalls, ringing telephones) into the musical compositions, helps to move the film along and also helps people not used to watching silent films to appreciate what is happening. It's sometimes hard to get an average person to watch a feature-length silent film, so HIGH AND DIZZY might be the perfect short to show someone as an example of Harold Lloyd's dazzling comedy genius. I heard a rumor that SAFETY LAST may be shown theatrically in 2005--let's hope that's true. Imagine how wonderful it will be to see Harold Lloyd's most famous "thrill comedy" on the big screen!
        6gavin6942

        Lloyd Gold?

        A tipsy doctor encounters his patient (Mildred Davis) sleepwalking on a building ledge, high above the street. A subplot has Lloyd and his friend (Roy Brooks) getting inebriated on homemade liquor and then trying to avoid a prohibition-era policeman who pursues them for being drunk.

        Certain aspects of this film are clearly anticipating Lloyd's more famous skyscraper-scaling scenes in "Safety Last!" and this short would make a good pairing with that film. (Criterion matches it with "The Freshman", which is fine, too.) Another reviewer commented, "It's obvious Lloyd is talented, but was still learning what roles were going to work best for him down the road." The film is further described as "uneven". I suppose I can relate. While I like this one, I will easily agree it does not rank among Lloyd's best work.
        8boblipton

        Learning at Length

        Mildred Davis sleepwalks. Her father, Wallace Howe, brings her in to Doctor Harold Lloyd for a consultation.

        It's an ambitious comedy for Harold, timing in at almost half an hour.... which is, alas, a fawning way of saying that it's not as good as it might have been trimmed a bit shorter. But there's no doubt that Harold was getting popular. Yet so long as he stayed in short subjects, the money would remain likewise short, renting for so much a reel. The twenty-six minutes this one takes might not seem much to the modern audience for a blockbuster, but it allowed everyone at Hal Roach's studio to stretch a bit and see what they could do at longer lengths.

        Unfortunately, it sags in the middle. Harold gets drunk with friendly bootlegger Roy Brooks, and the gags when they are together are pretty good. However, eventually Harold is off on his own, and the jokes are not as good.... and then out of nowhere, it's time to wrap up the movie.

        Harold and his writers hadn't learned how to pace a longer comedy. They soon would learn; they could write a straight drama and when it didn't work out in previews, turn it into a comedy by dropping in gags, but stories don't stop and start like that.
        10Ron Oliver

        Out On A Ledge With Mr. Lloyd

        A Hal Roach HAROLD LLOYD Comedy Short.

        An intoxicated Harold goes HIGH AND DIZZY when he tries to rescue the dangerously sleepwalking girl of his dreams.

        This very funny film puts Harold for a few precarious minutes out on a ledge, thereby becoming one of the ‘thrill pictures' for which he is mostly remembered, especially by those who've not seen much of his work. The film was produced not long after the freak accident which destroyed half of his right hand, hence the gloves. Harold's eventual wife, Mildred Davis, plays the lovely Girl here; her longtime chum, Roy Brooks, plays the inebriated bootlegger with whom Harold shares an elaborate extended drunken sequence. Mr. Brooks would later become Harold's personal assistant at Green Acres, the Lloyd estate.
        7JoeytheBrit

        No Need for a Plot...

        Harold does his balancing act off the side of a building trick in this short, joined this time by wife-to-be Mildred Davis (or her stunt double). I didn't realise he performed this stunt in so many movies – this is the fourth I've seen – but it still leaves you with your heart in your mouth when you see him waving his arms wildly as he's perched on the very edge above a multi-storey fall. No doubt it was largely done with clever camera angles, but it still looks good, especially when Harold's drunken character doesn't realise the danger he's in.

        He plays a doctor in this one, and given his propensity for binge drinking and chain-smoking he could have stepped straight out of the pages of a red-top tabloid. He's not the most ethical of doctors either, declaring his undying love for his patient (the aforementioned Davis) within moments of meeting her. For some reason he feels it's important to pretend he has lots of patients and adopts a number of disguises to do so, even though his real patient is already sitting in the waiting room.

        After a while the action shifts to his friend's office down the hall. He's a home-brewing enthusiast, and when the corks start popping off the bottles he's got stashed in a filing cabinet, he and Harold decide its best to drink them all rather than let them go to waste. Lloyd makes a pretty funny drunk: not as funny as Chaplin maybe, but then he's not as spiteful either, even though he does do some distinctly un-Lloyd-like things while under the influence. In fact at times he's quite removed from the boyish, straw-hat sporting Lloyd we usually see. There's no real plot to speak of, but, given the strength of the material, Lloyd probably didn't feel he needed one…

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        Histoire

        Modifier

        Le saviez-vous

        Modifier
        • Anecdotes
          The opening title cards refers to the beginning of Prohibition in the United States. Cloves were chewed in an attempt to mask the odor of alcohol on one's breath.
        • Citations

          Title Card: The Time ~ That never to-be-forgotten period when cloves, cork-screws and foot-rails went out of fashion.

        • Connexions
          Featured in American Masters: Harold Lloyd: The Third Genius (1989)
        • Bandes originales
          Ah, non credea mirarti
          From the opera "La Sonnambula"

          Music by Vincenzo Bellini

          Heard on the soundtrack as the heroine is sleepwalking

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        Détails

        Modifier
        • Date de sortie
          • 14 décembre 1923 (France)
        • Pays d’origine
          • États-Unis
        • Langue
          • Aucun
        • Aussi connu sous le nom de
          • High and Dizzy
        • Lieux de tournage
          • 147 North Hill Street, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Bradbury Mansion on top of Bunker Hill - exterior of building set contructed here to give the illusion of height)
        • Société de production
          • Rolin Films
        • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

        Spécifications techniques

        Modifier
        • Durée
          26 minutes
        • Mixage
          • Silent
        • Rapport de forme
          • 1.33 : 1

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        Ma fille est somnambule (1920)
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        By what name was Ma fille est somnambule (1920) officially released in India in English?
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