Serge Karamzin, un séducteur, et ses deux cousins, qui vivent comme des gigolos, se font passer pour des militaires et des aristocrates. Karamzin s'en prend à plus fort que lui en tentant de... Tout lireSerge Karamzin, un séducteur, et ses deux cousins, qui vivent comme des gigolos, se font passer pour des militaires et des aristocrates. Karamzin s'en prend à plus fort que lui en tentant de séduire la femme du nouvel ambassadeur des USA .Serge Karamzin, un séducteur, et ses deux cousins, qui vivent comme des gigolos, se font passer pour des militaires et des aristocrates. Karamzin s'en prend à plus fort que lui en tentant de séduire la femme du nouvel ambassadeur des USA .
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
- Helen Hughes
- (as Miss Dupont)
- Count Sergius Karamzin - Capt. 3rd Hussars Imper. Russian Army
- (as Erich Von Stroheim)
- Pavel Pavlich
- (as Al Edmondson)
- Marietta Ventucci
- (as Malvine Polo)
- Monk
- (non crédité)
- Andrew J. Hughes
- (non crédité)
- Bit Role
- (non crédité)
- Mother Garoupe
- (non crédité)
- Rude Soldier
- (non crédité)
- …
- Extra
- (non crédité)
- Dr. Judd's Wife
- (non crédité)
- Actress
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
FOOLISH WIVES is generally believed to be the first film made that cost one million dollars. In the modern era, when film budgets often run into many millions of dollars, this may seem slight--but in 1922 Universal Studios was staggered not only by the costs, but by Von Stroheim's seemingly endless shooting schedule; at a time when most movies were made in six weeks or less, FOOLISH WIVES took a year or more to complete and threatened to bankrupt the studio.
The circumstances brought Von Stroheim into direct conflict with production manager Irving Thalberg, who threatened to replace him with another director. By most accounts, Von Stroheim laughed in Thalberg's face: not only was he director, he was the star as well, and if he were fired the film would never be completed. Thalberg and Universal had little choice but grin and bear it... but it was something Thalberg would recall several years later, much to Von Stroheim's chagrin.
Set in post-World War I Monaco, FOOLISH WIVES presents the story of the ultra-amoral Count Wladislaw Sergius (Von Stroheim) and his two supposed cousins Olga (Maude George) and Vera (Mae Busch) who present themselves as wealthy Russian nobility--but who are in fact a trio of vicious con-artists who generate cash flow by passing counterfeit bills through Monaco's legendary casinos. Eager to deflect suspicion, they scrape acquaintance with an American diplomat and his wife (Rudolph Christians and Helen Hughes)--and in time at all the naive wife is so much putty in the Count's diabolical hands.
Von Stroheim recreated a fairly large chunk of Monaco on the Universal back lot, and the sets, costumes, and crowds of extras still put most modern productions to shame. But the film's real fascination are the deadly trio of Maude George, Mae Busch, and most particularly Von Stroheim himself. Within the first few minutes of the film he contemplates advances upon an attractive but mentally deficient young woman--and as the plot unfolds we discover that he has seduced the maid with a promise of marriage he does not intend to keep. This, of course, does not prevent him from taking her life savings for a little gambling money when the need arises! The overall cast is quite good, with Miss DuPont a stand out as the diplomat's wife, and the cast plays without recourse to the broad mannerisms often seen in many silent films. But what drives the film is our curiosity at how far Von Stroheim will take both the film and his own performance. The answer? Plenty far indeed. It's all fascinating stuff, and truly this is the film that gave Von Stroheim the title of "The Man You Love To Hate." FOOLISH WIVES was soundly condemned by the moral authorities of the day, and Universal lost a bundle on the project. In an effort to recoup some of the loss, the studio cut and then recut the film to a more reasonable length for distribution; as a result, great chunks of the film were lost. While a "complete" version is an impossibility, the Kino version seems to restore the film as completely as possible.
FOOLISH WIVES inevitably pales in comparison to Stroheim's later GREED, but it is a remarkably fine, remarkably watchable silent--and the two films would have a circular effect. For when Von Stroheim went to Metro to film GREED, he eventually found himself face to face once more with Irving Thalberg... and this time Thalberg, who well recalled the financial disaster of FOOLISH WIVES, would have the upper hand. Strongly recommended, not only for the film itself, but for the backstory involved.
GFT, Reviewer
In al the films of the erotic trilogy there is a "l'homme fatale". In "Foolish wives" this l'homme fatale takes the form of the Russian Count Sergius Karamzin, Captain of the Hussars Imperial Russian army, played by Stroheim himself. This so called Count is a ruthless figure putting his need for money and sexual satisfaction well above the fate of his victims. Although "Foolish wives" is never explicit it was an exceptionally cynical film for that time.
Interesting is the autobiographical element in the role of Karamzin. That is not to say that the real Von Stroheim was ruthless, but he was a poseur. He was not of nobel descent (his real name was "Stroheim" and not "Von Stroheim" and he did not have a military background. These elements of his image were pure "make belief".
Due to his perfectionism the production budget of "Foolish wives" was exceeded by a huge amount of money and the film became exceptionally long. It was no wonder that the studio curtailed the film to a normal running time. The conflict between Stroheim and producer Thalberg dates back to "Foolish wives". When Stroheim changed studio's from Universal to MGM and made "Greed" (1924) he had the bad luck that Thalberg made the same career move and the conflict continued.
Apart from director Stroheim was also lead actor in "Foolish wives". His career as actor (71 films) would be much larger than his career as director (12 films). In "Foolish wives he is both striking and extravagant. Also in films from other directors he had some convincing parts. Think of his roles in "La grande illusion" (1937, Jean Renoir) or "Sunset boulevard" (1950, Billy Wilder).
Have a great laugh when Ms. DuPont, while applying her face cream, declares she is twenty-one years old; husband's reply he that is a sun-burned forty-one shows he can shave off years with the best of them. Mr. Christians died during the production, and his white-haired replacement, back to the camera, is obvious; with all the expense obviously spent on "Foolish Wives", it's difficult to understand why von Stroheim could not add a little bit of cheap shoe polish to Robert Edeson's head. There are other problems with the story, which was brutally cut down from a multi-hour epic. Still, the studio heads could not cut the neither the length of von Stroheim's cigarettes, nor the fact that his (vanity) production of "Foolish Wives" retains its spectacle.
The film begins just after WWI and is set in Monte Carlo. Three worthless Russian nobles live there and they are thieves who live through stealing from others. But they maintain a very solid image...that of noble and virtuous folk. Sergius (Von Stroheim) is a cad and plans on using the American Ambassador's wife to make a fortune and a false sense of respectability...all in order to help his poor cousins, the Princesses, to live in luxury. How? Well, by hanging out with respectable folks, the assumption is that the forged money he and his cousins gamble with will be assumed to be real...and readily accepted by the casinos. Plus, Sergius plans on hitting up this woman for money...money that she will gladly give him after he seduces her. Is this all there is to his infamy...nope. Along the way, he seduces several women!
Overall, this is a very watchable film and generally didn't seem disjoint...at least until the ending. At this point, the film jumped about a bit and seemed to be pieced together. As a result, I'd give the film a 7--a very good film but one that suffered, a bit, from being too melodramatic at times as well as being a bit weak at the end.
The movie has a good enough story but it isn't exactly the most intriguing or tense stories to follow. Lots of sequences don't seem to have a relevant enough importance. It might have to do with the fact that the original length of the movie was over 6 hours long, which might had shown some of the relevance of certain sequences and characters but there is really no way I'm ever going to watch this longer version. The movie was already overlong as it was. The movie didn't had very much interesting drama in it and although the main character seemed intriguing, it just didn't worked out powerful enough in the movie.
The movie also isn't as technically advanced as some of the other movies from the same time period, clearly directed by more talented and more experimental directors such as F.W. Murnau, Fritz Lang, Victor Sjöström and D.W. Griffith, among others.
But this all of course doesn't mean that the movie is a bad one to watch. The story of a fake Russian aristocratic lady-killer in Monte Carlo trying to get money from rich ladies as on its own quite a good story and in a way for movie standards also ahead of its time. Many more movies like this one, in many different forms were made and are still being made, many years later now. In this particular case this is a movie I wouldn't mind seeing remade, perhaps also with some more humor in it and a more clear message. The movie also uses some quite good camera positions, on a positive note.
Also the acting is good enough, though Miss DuPont seems heavily miscast as a pretty 21 year young girl. She is too old looking for her role and she also most certainly wasn't pretty enough to find the story very convincing. Same perhaps goes for Dale Fuller. Erich von Stroheim plays the real main part of the movie and he does this with lots of flair. He also wrote and directed the movie. Laurel & Hardy regular Mae Busch shows up in a serious role for a change and it was refreshing to see her like that for a change.
Certainly a watchable movie but really no essential viewing in my opinion.
6/10
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Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesErich von Stroheim's attention to detail was such that he ordered an engraver to print copies of French money as props for the movie (he was playing the role of a counterfeiter). Unfortunately, the money printed was realistic enough that, shortly before shooting began, von Stroheim was arrested and hauled into court on counterfeiting charges. He escaped punishment by arguing to the judge that "the money was for use in pictures only."
- GaffesWhen the original actor playing Mr. Hughes died in the middle of filming, he was replaced by a double, who completed his scenes with his back mostly to the camera. Apparently, however, nobody noticed that the original actor had significantly darker hair than his replacement. Therefore, Mr. Hughes's hair turns white in several scenes, including the sequence where his wife says goodbye to him in the casino, and his confrontation with the count at the villa.
- Citations
Count Sergius Karamzin - Capt. 3rd Hussars Imper. Russian Army: Yes-husbands are stupid; with them a woman won is a woman secure...
- Versions alternativesThe Kino Video edition released in 2003 is 143 minutes.
- ConnexionsEdited into The Moving Picture Boys in the Great War (1975)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Foolish Wives?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Foolish Wives
- Lieux de tournage
- Point Lobos State Natural Reserve, Californie, États-Unis(at Point Lobos)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 100 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée1 heure 57 minutes
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1