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IMDbPro

Gabriel au-dessus de la Maison Blanche

Titre original : Gabriel Over the White House
  • 1933
  • Passed
  • 1h 26min
NOTE IMDb
6,4/10
1,6 k
MA NOTE
Walter Huston in Gabriel au-dessus de la Maison Blanche (1933)
Gabriel Over The White House: Court Martial
Lire clip1:08
Regarder Gabriel Over The White House: Court Martial
1 Video
22 photos
DrameFantaisieRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA political hack becomes President during the height of the Depression and undergoes a metamorphosis into an incorruptible statesman after a near-fatal accident.A political hack becomes President during the height of the Depression and undergoes a metamorphosis into an incorruptible statesman after a near-fatal accident.A political hack becomes President during the height of the Depression and undergoes a metamorphosis into an incorruptible statesman after a near-fatal accident.

  • Réalisation
    • Gregory La Cava
  • Scénario
    • Carey Wilson
    • Bertram Bloch
    • T.F. Tweed
  • Casting principal
    • Walter Huston
    • Karen Morley
    • Franchot Tone
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,4/10
    1,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Scénario
      • Carey Wilson
      • Bertram Bloch
      • T.F. Tweed
    • Casting principal
      • Walter Huston
      • Karen Morley
      • Franchot Tone
    • 65avis d'utilisateurs
    • 21avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 2 victoires au total

    Vidéos1

    Gabriel Over The White House: Court Martial
    Clip 1:08
    Gabriel Over The White House: Court Martial

    Photos22

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    Rôles principaux69

    Modifier
    Walter Huston
    Walter Huston
    • Hon. Judson Hammond - The President of the United States
    Karen Morley
    Karen Morley
    • Pendola Molloy
    Franchot Tone
    Franchot Tone
    • Hartley Beekman - Secretary to the President
    Arthur Byron
    Arthur Byron
    • Jasper Brooks - Secretary of State
    Dickie Moore
    Dickie Moore
    • Jimmy Vetter
    C. Henry Gordon
    C. Henry Gordon
    • Nick Diamond
    David Landau
    David Landau
    • John Bronson
    Samuel S. Hinds
    Samuel S. Hinds
    • Dr. H.L. Eastman
    • (as Samuel Hinds)
    William Pawley
    • Borell
    Jean Parker
    Jean Parker
    • Alice Bronson
    Claire Du Brey
    Claire Du Brey
    • Nurse
    • (as Claire DuBrey)
    Oscar Apfel
    Oscar Apfel
    • German Delegate to Debt Conference
    • (non crédité)
    Mischa Auer
    Mischa Auer
    • Mr. Thieson
    • (non crédité)
    Max Barwyn
    Max Barwyn
    • German Officer
    • (non crédité)
    Jack Baxley
    • Unemployed Marcher
    • (non crédité)
    Brooks Benedict
    Brooks Benedict
    • White House Press Correspondent
    • (non crédité)
    Margaret Bert
    • Nurse Bert
    • (non crédité)
    B.F. Blinn
    B.F. Blinn
    • Politician
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Scénario
      • Carey Wilson
      • Bertram Bloch
      • T.F. Tweed
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs65

    6,41.5K
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    Avis à la une

    jimjo1216

    A fascinating, unsettling government fantasy

    GABRIEL OVER THE WHITE HOUSE (1933) is a movie that really tests the viewers' ideals about government and democracy. Is it meant to be inspirational? Aspirational? Frightening? A cautionary tale? It's certainly a movie that makes viewers think.

    Walter Huston plays Judd Hammond, newly elected President of the United States. The country is in the midst of an economic Depression, with millions out of work and starving, but President Hammond is happy to enjoy the comforts of his position while serving as a pawn of his political party. He has no intentions of fulfilling campaign promises or reforming the country. One character notes, "The right man in the White House can bring us out of despair, into prosperity again." It is clear that Judd Hammond is not the right man.

    But after a serious head injury, the President is reborn as a crusader for the greatest good. He takes action to help his suffering people, firing any cabinet members that stand in his way.

    The President could be suffering from some sort of brain damage, or perhaps Judd Hammond's body is being possessed by the angel Gabriel, God's messenger to the people. But, as Franchot Tone's character points out, is not Gabriel a messenger of Wrath?

    The new President Hammond starts as an idealistic reformer, but ultimately transforms the United States government into a Machiavellian dictatorship, complete with firing squads. Everything the President does is for the good of the people, but the ends cannot always justify the means. He supports the unemployed masses, promising to stimulate the economy and bring back prosperity. But when he meets opposition on Capitol Hill, he dissolves Congress and takes sole control of the government under martial law.

    To combat gangsterism, the President repeals Prohibition and establishes government-funded liquor stores. Violent resistance from the gangsters is seen as a declaration of war on the United States and a special police army is created to wipe out the racketeering scum.

    It's unclear how director Gregory La Cava wants the audience to feel about President Hammond. On the one hand, he is a champion of the people, fighting for the common man and getting results. But he is destroying the American democratic system in the process. Senators are outraged when the President threatens to dissolve Congress, and rightly so. Yet characters speak in great admiration of the President after he bullies the nations of the world into accepting his vision for international peace.

    Coming at a time when Americans looked to their leaders for help, GABRIEL OVER THE WHITE HOUSE might have been a Depression-era fantasy, giving audiences the strong political leader of their dreams. Or it might have been a caution of the slippery slope of government involvement. The film is fascinating and controversial from a modern vantage point. The economic stimulus idea has gained some relevance in recent years, though the shadows of the fascism and Nazism to come in that decade are unsettling to see (especially portrayed in the United States).
    7bkoganbing

    Heavenly Intervention

    Gabriel Over The White House comes to the movie going public, courtesy of William Randolph Hearst's Cosmopolitan Productions, at a very special time in history when there was grave worry as to whether America and the capitalist system would survive. What producer Hearst is telling us is how he feels that the Deity if he intervened would solve all our problems.

    Walter Huston is our star/protagonist here, a newly elected president who is no Franklin D. Roosevelt, but rather more of a Warren Harding type. Catch Huston offering up the usual political pablum at his press conference in terms of what to do about the Depression. It's rather depressing. Later on at his cabinet meeting some issue about an appointment comes up and he just remarks that if you boys in the cabinet and party feel this way, who is he to question it.

    But then our president who the Secret Service would NEVER let get behind the wheel of a car totals the White House limousine and goes into a coma from the concussion. It's at that point Huston gets a heavenly intervention into his nature and starts enacting policies, presumably that God and William Randolph Hearst would approve, not necessarily in that order.

    Huston makes first an amiable nonentity and then a stern statesman in the White House. It's like he's playing two different parts and in fact that's precisely the point of the film.

    Besides economic want, folks in 1932-33 were very much concerned about the rise of lawlessness, organized criminal gangs that grew out of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution. A lot of what Huston does could be construed as worse than the disease in terms of civil liberties. Repealing Prohibition was something only a few wackos like Alfred E. Smith wanted and Smith was Hearst's mortal political enemy.

    From the man who couldn't wait to get to war in Cuba in 1898, William Randolph Hearst had become a pacifist and an advocate for disarmament and he proves it by going farther than either the Washington or London conferences on that subject. Adolph Hitler was on the verge of becoming Germany's Chancellor at the time Gabriel Over The White House came out, someone like him wasn't factored into the equation for world peace.

    All in the name of peace, prosperity, and the coming millenia and since it's all directed from heaven, we don't and aren't supposed to question it. The perfect world in the mind of William Randolph Hearst.

    Gabriel Over The White House tells us a lot about America midst the Depresssion, our hopes, fears, and aspirations. And it offers the more authoritarian method of attaining those aspirations. It's an entertaining film, but it's more a psycho-political picture of the USA at that point in our history.
    FilmFan2001

    Look for the little-seen alternate version

    While I was living in Madrid, the Filmoteca showed both the American version and the little-seen European version of this. My memory is a little hazy, but the European version was by far the more interesting of the two: firstly Hammond is seen to go just that much further into fascism; and secondly, rather than have him nobly struck down at the end, Pendie actually chooses NOT to save him, because she sees what he has become. I've yet to find anything written about this other version though. I think we should be told...
    8piapia

    A political fantasy with fascistic overtones

    I remember having seen this movie when I was very young, and it impressed me then as propaganda for President Roosevelt's New Deal. Now I know better, and have read something about its real history. William Randolph Hearst had become an FDR fan, and had this picture made by his Cosmopolitan productions, affiliated with MGM, in order to express what he hoped the new President would do. MGM's boss, Louis B. Mayer, a staunch Republican, shelved the picture until after the Roosevelt inauguration. Now we can see that what Hearst expected FDR to do by dictatorial means, the President achieved as a real believer in Democracy. The picture is intelligent; Walter Huston's performance, brilliant, as well as the supporting work by Karen Morley and Franchot Tone (was this his movie debut?). The direction by Gregory LaCava, exceptional, as he managed to make the audience believe in such far-fetched and unbelievable sequences as the "war" against racketeers with courts martial included, but he could not avoid the allusions to the Archangel Gabriel sounding ridiculous. Anyhow this a curious motion picture, and probably the most politically inclined ever made by a major Hollywood studio. But the fascistic leanings of Hearst could not be hidden, not even by a producer as liberal in politics as Walter Wanger.
    8blanche-2

    remarkable, strange film

    I basically checked out "Gabriel Over the White House" because of Walter Huston, an actor I have always considered one of the greats.

    He doesn't disappoint as the President of the United States in this bizarre fantasy, produced by William Randolph Hearst and promoting his ideas of fascism.

    I gave this film a high mark (8) not because I loved it but because it is a fascinating film from a historical point of view.

    Newly-elected President Hammond (Huston) pays lip service to the needs of the depression-ridden people by uttering platitudes, and meanwhile, is content to do what the party tells him. Meanwhile, he brings his girlfriend on as his personal assistant.

    He pays no attention to the head of a group of unemployed men who plan to march on Washington, though it isn't made clear why his party isn't interested in doing anything to stop the depression.

    One day, while driving his car at breakneck speed (as if all Presidents are encouraged to do this), he crashes and slips into a coma. When he comes to, he hears a horn playing a passage from Brahms Symphony 1 in C Minor, Opus 68 and has a change of heart.

    This supposedly is the angel Gabriel checking in. After that, he becomes a dictator of sorts, usurping the system of checks and balances. He forms a WPA for the unemployed, has executions of gangsters, and forms the Washington covenant to reduce arms buildup from countries around the world.

    Supposedly there was an assassination attempt that takes place in the film that was cut after an attempt was made on Roosevelt's life.

    This film was shelved by a nervous Louis B. Mayer until after FDR was elected. It's surprising he released it at all.

    There isz, rumor has it, an alternate version that acknowledges the dangers of fascism. Whatever version you see, this is a film very much of its time as far as the political climate and the thinking of a powerful man like Hearst, and as such makes for remarkable viewing.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The protest march of the "army of the unemployed" in the story was no doubt a reference to the protest march of the "Bonus Army" in 1932, where veterans of WWI marched on Congress to demand payment of promised bonuses. They were attacked with tanks and tear gas by the U.S. Army led by Gen. Douglas MacArthur on orders of President Herbert Hoover. William Randolph Hearst, who railed against that action in his newpapers, saw to it that the President in this film helped the people. Meanwhile, Louis B. Mayer, a staunch Republican, delayed the movie until Hoover was out of office.
    • Gaffes
      Through out the whole movie Walter Huston's hair is combed differently in one continuous scene after another. It's obvious many of the cuts back to him are from different takes.
    • Citations

      Jimmy Vetter: I got a speech.

      Hon. Judson Hammond - The President of the United States: A speech? Let's hear it.

      Jimmy Vetter: I love my uncle Judd because he's going to cure the Depression and make everybody rich.

    • Versions alternatives
      In 1995, the Madrid Filmoteca screened both the American version and the little-seen European version of Gabriel Over the White House. In the European version, Hammond is seen to go just that much further into fascism. It also features a significantly altered ending. In the American version, Hammond is nobly struck down at the end, whereas in the European version, Pendie actually chooses NOT to save him, because she sees what he has become.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Great Depression (1993)
    • Bandes originales
      Symphony No. 1 in C minor Op. 68 IV. Adagio
      (1876) (uncredited)

      Music by Johannes Brahms

      A fourth movement theme is played during the opening credits

      The same theme is used often as a leitmotif suggesting Archangel Gabriel's presence

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 31 mars 1933 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Italien
      • Français
      • Japonais
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Gabriel Over the White House
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Palos Verdes Estates, Californie, États-Unis(Lee Highway to Arlington Cemetery)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Cosmopolitan Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 26min(86 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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