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IMDbPro

Quand une femme aime

Titre original : Riptide
  • 1934
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 32min
NOTE IMDb
6,3/10
716
MA NOTE
Robert Montgomery and Norma Shearer in Quand une femme aime (1934)
DrameRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMary is an impetuous romantic who marries British aristocrat Lord Philip Rexford on a whim. Their marriage is successful, though, and they grow closer over the years.Mary is an impetuous romantic who marries British aristocrat Lord Philip Rexford on a whim. Their marriage is successful, though, and they grow closer over the years.Mary is an impetuous romantic who marries British aristocrat Lord Philip Rexford on a whim. Their marriage is successful, though, and they grow closer over the years.

  • Réalisation
    • Edmund Goulding
  • Scénario
    • Edmund Goulding
    • Zoe Akins
    • Edith Fitzgerald
  • Casting principal
    • Norma Shearer
    • Robert Montgomery
    • Herbert Marshall
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,3/10
    716
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Edmund Goulding
    • Scénario
      • Edmund Goulding
      • Zoe Akins
      • Edith Fitzgerald
    • Casting principal
      • Norma Shearer
      • Robert Montgomery
      • Herbert Marshall
    • 25avis d'utilisateurs
    • 7avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 3 victoires au total

    Photos32

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    Rôles principaux63

    Modifier
    Norma Shearer
    Norma Shearer
    • Lady Mary Rexford
    Robert Montgomery
    Robert Montgomery
    • Tommie Trent
    Herbert Marshall
    Herbert Marshall
    • Lord Phillip Rexford
    Mrs. Patrick Campbell
    Mrs. Patrick Campbell
    • Aunt Hetty
    Richard 'Skeets' Gallagher
    Richard 'Skeets' Gallagher
    • Erskine
    • (as Skeets Gallagher)
    Ralph Forbes
    Ralph Forbes
    • Fenwick
    Lilyan Tashman
    Lilyan Tashman
    • Sylvia
    Arthur Jarrett
    Arthur Jarrett
    • Percy
    Earl Oxford
    Earl Oxford
    • Freddie
    Helen Jerome Eddy
    Helen Jerome Eddy
    • Celeste
    George K. Arthur
    George K. Arthur
    • Bertie
    Marilyn Spinner
    • Pamela
    • (as Baby Marilyn Spinner)
    Phyllis Coghlan
    • Nurse
    • (as Phillis Coghlan)
    Howard Chaldecott
    • Ransome
    Halliwell Hobbes
    Halliwell Hobbes
    • Bollard
    Robert Adair
    Robert Adair
    • Bartender
    • (non crédité)
    Harry Allen
    • Fire Chief
    • (non crédité)
    T. Roy Barnes
    T. Roy Barnes
    • Clegg
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Edmund Goulding
    • Scénario
      • Edmund Goulding
      • Zoe Akins
      • Edith Fitzgerald
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs25

    6,3716
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    Avis à la une

    zpzjones

    The legendary Mrs Patrick Campbell in a talking movie

    This movie may come off dull to some when first seeing. But you have to understand movie & theatre history to appreciate a film like Riptide. For me it was seeing a legendary and famous lady actually acting and speaking in one of her very few films. In this case Mrs Patrick Campbell(Stella Beatrice Tanner Campbell). Like Mrs Leslie Carter, another famous Mrs, Mrs Pat, in her youth, was a famed actress from the theatre of the 1890s and 1900s. Her relationship with writer George Bernard Shaw is legendary amongst Shaw or Broadway Theatre fans. Mrs Pat didn't seem to make any silents and for posterities sake made three or four talkies in the 30s as a novelty of which Riptide is the only one I've viewed. Thank goodness! because at least many of us fans, generations down the road, can get to hear and see what she sounded like and perhaps get a glimpse of her acting and appreciate her legend. This is what's great about film. Preserving the performances of a once famous actress like Mrs Patrick Campbell. If only other theatre Greats had done movies like Mrs Pat. Ie: Maude Adams(the original Peter Pan), Julia Marlowe(famed American Shakesperean actress), John Drew(uncle of the three Barrymores).

    This story is a typical Norma story of the day. Much like those that she had played in earlier films of the early 30s. She's caught between two men. In this case Herbert Marshall & Robert Montgomery. She marries Marshall, has a daughter with him and then he's gone away much of the time and she starts to take up with the younger Montgomery. The rest of the film is a series of adventures for Norma as Aunt Hetty(Mrs Pat) and others take her to St Moritz, Monte Carlo etc to help her find herself. Marshall was himself an interesting actor. He, like Ronald Colman and Basil Rathbone had seen action in WW1. In Marshall's case he lost a leg and even though a suave/textured leading man here, as well as in other films, he's walking around ably on a wooden leg. All in all I quite enjoy the treats this film offers. Norma was a very sexy woman with a nice shape. She wears some nice(and Pre-Code) form fitting gowns and looks fetching. Silent screen star Lilyan Tashman makes her next to last appearance in a supporting role as one of Norma's friends. She died soon after this was made. And of course the ultimate treat of this movie, seeing theatre great Mrs Pat Campbell and hearing her act. Wonderful!
    rosalita

    Norma is a precious jewel

    Norma Shearer's emotional range and charm is always a delight. Her costumes in shiny silk charmeuse and deep dark velvet translate so well in vintage black and white, and the topic of a woman's "decency" in the 30's and small minds is dramatic and poignant. I love this decade of movies for the history and social culture they often evoke.
    8cdale-41392

    Will Mary's "Past" Ruin Her Future?

    Lord Rexford (Hebert Marshall) is an English aristocrat visiting Manhattan, and he meets Park Avenue party-girl Mary (Norma Shearer) when they share a ride to a costume party. They hit it off immediately, ditch the party, and start a Vacation Romance.

    The Vacation Romance turns serious when the Lord is supposed to go back to the UK and he asks Mary to marry him. It's made clear that they were already having sex and that he knows of her "past" flings with other men. Mary resists at first, worried how he'd feel later on about marrying a woman who has been around a few times, but gives in.

    "A ring in the nose and a beating every Saturday night, please!"

    A few years later we see that they are still happily in love ... or perhaps I should say -nauseatingly- in love because they lay it on thick when they get all lovey-dovey.

    The Lord has to go away on a business trip to the US and can't take Mary, so he leaves her with his Aunt Heddy who lures her away to Cannes for the duration. It's there that she runs into an old flame, Tommy (Robert Montgomery), and things get complicated. They get drunk and exchange a kiss. That gets Tommy's engines going and he goes after Mary even though he knows she is married!

    What follows is a bit of comedy, a bit of melodrama, and a lot of business about Mary's scandalous past (and present).

    "In New York you were the kind of girl who didn't stop at a kiss!"

    It's an interesting story with some great actors and clever dialogue.

    Recommended!
    8gbill-74877

    Norma Shearer is a delight

    Norma Shearer is a delight in this film, which was the last of her pre-Code appearances. She gives a very natural, charming performance in scenes that call for tenderness, temptation, flirtation, and playfulness, including those with the two leading men (Robert Montgomery and Herbert Marshall), her aunt-in-law (theater legend Mrs. Patrick Campbell), and her adorable daughter (Marilyn Spinner). She's helped considerably by the script which has a lot of life to it, something evident from the beginning, when we see Marshall in a giant 'Insect Man' costume and Shearer in a revealing 'Lady Sky bug' number, get ups designed by Adrian for a "World of the Future" ball. The story degenerates into a bit of a soap opera in its second half, but it had scored enough points with me early on that I didn't mind too much.

    One thing that's great about it is its frankness with the sexuality of Shearer's character. From the dialogue, it's clear she's had premarital sex with men before meeting Marshall's character, and has sex with him too. She's content to leave it at a fling, but he wants marriage, a role reversal from what we'd traditionally see. At the same time, she's not portrayed as a tramp, on the contrary, she's sweet, funny, honest, and full of life. When they marry, though, the expectation is that she'll "settle down," which she jokingly agrees to ("From now on, a ring in the nose and a beating every Saturday night, please"). Fast forward five years, and tension comes in the form of Montgomery's character, a friend from her single days who meets her while her husband is travelling, and over drinks makes a pass at her. She rebukes him, but the story makes the newspapers, and between that, Montgomery's persistence, and Marshall judging her, she's torn between the two men from then on.

    As I mentioned, it spirals a bit, but watching Shearer deal with the emotions of the character made the film for me. In one fine scene, Marshall throws her past up into her face while suspecting her of adultery, thinking of how she "didn't stop with a kiss" back in the day, calling to mind the double standard of the period. That's a little irritating, but this was the reality in 1934, and Shearer is given the power of choice, without being condemned. Eyebrows are raised by the other characters, but if she goes off with Montgomery's character they and the audience will know it's due to the thrill having faded from her marriage, and that she will survive. As she puts it, "No man is gonna let me or not let me do anything ever again."

    The film drew the ire of the Father Daniel Lord, one of the authors of the Production Code, who condemned Shearer for taking the role of a "loose and immoral woman" and her husband Irving Thalberg for casting her in films like these, which in turn enraged Thalberg. Lord (and Joseph Breen's) position were more about keeping women in their place, since the behavior of Marshall's character is the same but there were no comments about a "loose and immoral man." They would soon put the shackles of the Production Code on Hollywood, which makes seeing this last Shearer film before that happened, at a time when she was quite good as an actor, special for me.
    6AaronPK

    Norma Shearer was the best

    She was incredible. This movie quickly jumps forward in time, but the dialogue between Mary (Norma) and Trent was great. If only she had kept making movies and not ended so abruptly.

    No movies today compare to Riptide (which was controversial at the time)

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Evita Perón's favorite movie during her teenage years in Junín.
    • Gaffes
      The length and styling of Norma Shearer's hair repeatedly changes from scene to scene and from one sequence to another.
    • Citations

      Mary: Listen, I tell you what. We'll go up to my sister Sylvia's. There's some fun going on up there! Do you like mad parties?

      Lord Rexford: Well, yes, I-I think I do. Thank you very much.

      Mary: Good! What's your name?

      Lord Rexford: Rexford.

      Mary: Rexford... well, you run along home and get on a nice little dinner dress and pick me up in an hour. How's that?

      Lord Rexford: Right!

      Mary: Right! No, wrong! I'll pick you up. That'll be good and step on it!

    • Connexions
      Featured in Complicated Women (2003)
    • Bandes originales
      We're Together Again
      (1933) (uncredited)

      Composed by Nacio Herb Brown

      Lyrics by Arthur Freed

      Played as part of the score throughout

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 1 juin 1934 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Riptide
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 769 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 32min(92 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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