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Mon mari le patron

Titre original : She Married Her Boss
  • 1935
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
774
MA NOTE
Claudette Colbert and Melvyn Douglas in Mon mari le patron (1935)
ComédieL'histoireMystèreRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn efficient secretary at a department store marries her boss, but discovers that taking care of him at home is a lot different to taking care of him at work.An efficient secretary at a department store marries her boss, but discovers that taking care of him at home is a lot different to taking care of him at work.An efficient secretary at a department store marries her boss, but discovers that taking care of him at home is a lot different to taking care of him at work.

  • Réalisation
    • Gregory La Cava
  • Scénario
    • Sidney Buchman
    • Thyra Samter Winslow
    • Gregory La Cava
  • Casting principal
    • Claudette Colbert
    • Melvyn Douglas
    • Michael Bartlett
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    774
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Scénario
      • Sidney Buchman
      • Thyra Samter Winslow
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Casting principal
      • Claudette Colbert
      • Melvyn Douglas
      • Michael Bartlett
    • 20avis d'utilisateurs
    • 6avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire au total

    Photos21

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    Rôles principaux63

    Modifier
    Claudette Colbert
    Claudette Colbert
    • Julia Scott
    Melvyn Douglas
    Melvyn Douglas
    • Richard Barclay
    Michael Bartlett
    Michael Bartlett
    • Lennie Rogers
    Raymond Walburn
    Raymond Walburn
    • Franklyn
    Jean Dixon
    Jean Dixon
    • Martha Pryor
    Katharine Alexander
    Katharine Alexander
    • Gertrude Barclay
    Edith Fellows
    Edith Fellows
    • Annabel Barclay
    Clara Kimball Young
    Clara Kimball Young
    • Parsons
    Grace Hayle
    Grace Hayle
    • Agnes Mayo
    • (as Grace Hale)
    Charles Arnt
    Charles Arnt
    • Victor Jessup
    Harrison Greene
    • Fat Shopper
    Dave O'Brien
    Dave O'Brien
    • Shopper
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Passerby
    • (non crédité)
    William Arnold
    • Department Head
    • (non crédité)
    Sam Ash
    Sam Ash
    • Salesman
    • (non crédité)
    Lynton Brent
    Lynton Brent
    • Assistant Window Dresser
    • (non crédité)
    Edmund Burns
    Edmund Burns
    • Newspaper Photographer
    • (non crédité)
    A.S. 'Pop' Byron
    A.S. 'Pop' Byron
    • Store Watchman
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Scénario
      • Sidney Buchman
      • Thyra Samter Winslow
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs20

    6,5774
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    Avis à la une

    Doylenf

    Dated comedy: "Marriage is a woman's real career."...

    Terribly uneven mix of comedy and romantic drama, the script of SHE MARRIED HER BOSS is unworthy of the talents assembled to interpret it. The always reliable Claudette Colbert has to contend with lines like: "Marriage is a woman's real career," as a woman secretly in love with her boss for six years. MELVYN DOUGLAS is the boss, but his part his so poorly written that you have to wonder what Colbert ever sees in him. Nevertheless, he plays it with a flair for this sort of inane comedy.

    JEAN DIXON as Colbert's friend and KATHERINE Alexander as Douglas' snooty sister are just cardboard cutouts. And poor EDITH FELLOWS has to play the most insufferable brat since Bonita Granville's turn in THE CHILDREN'S HOUR.

    There are various lapses of taste throughout (from today's viewpoint), and the costumes are really the most unflattering female designs ever worn by Colbert in any of her early films. You have to yearn for the Colbert of the '40s (so smartly sophisticated) because she looks downright dowdy in most of her odd wardrobe choices. As I say above, dated in more ways than one.

    Not recommended.
    5moonspinner55

    Begins well, and Colbert is good...

    Executive secretary marries her (presumably divorced) boss, a department store magnate, and tries making a home for them both and his bratty nine-year-old daughter; the trouble is, he thought he married a savvy, sharp businesswoman, not a "flouncy, coy" housewife. Interesting depiction of a woman's role in the workplace--circa 1935--vis-à-vis her role as a wife and stepmother. Some of the high society patter is fast and fresh, but when the moviemakers get maudlin, the picture goes down the drain. Claudette Colbert gives a good performance, though Melvyn Douglas gets stuck with the worst of it (walking in on family frivolity with a scowl, misunderstanding a compromising photo of his wife in the newspaper, getting drunk along with the butler, etc.). Sassy Edith Fellows gives it a goose until she, too, is reduced to hysterics. ** from ****
    7F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Claudette Colbert as a Smurfette.

    I used to deal in old-movie memorabilia. In the 1960s, while running a stall in the Portobello Road, I acquired and resold a full-colour poster for 'She Married Her Boss'. What a bizarre piece of artwork! The poster depicted Claudette Colbert with blue eyes, blue hair, and blue skin: she looked a proper Smurfette, or perhaps an Oompa-Loompa. Worse luck, the blue Colbert was placed against a background in the same shade of blue, making her seem to vanish altogether ... except for her lips, which were bright red. For decades, I wanted to view this movie to find out if it was as weird as the poster art.

    It turns out to be even weirder. Who designed the costumes here? In the opening scene, Colbert wears a dress with some nice gauntlet cuffs, but it also has a titchy little bow-tie and a pair of lapels the size and shape of an aircraft carrier. In a later scene, Jean Dixon wears an outfit with what appears to be a springboard jutting out of her left shoulder. In the final sequence, Colbert sports raccoon shoulder pads that are so enormous she looks like a linebacker.

    This is a screwball comedy, but it's screwier than it needs to be. Michael Bartlett plays a lounge lizard who charms Colbert by telling her she ought to have a mole on her chin. (Ugh!) You know those horribly phony camera set-ups in which an actor sits at a piano keyboard, pumping his elbows, and we're expected to believe he's playing? Bartlett does that here, in one of the fakest versions I've ever seen.

    On the positive side, there's a stand-out performance by 12-year-old Edith Fellows as a spoilt brat. Fellows was an immensely talented child actress who had the misfortune to be much less pretty than Shirley Temple, so she got lumbered with Virginia Weidler roles. Colbert hauls Fellows offscreen and gives her a spanking, which would have been funnier if shown on screen. I was delighted by the performance of Raymond Walburn as Melvyn Douglas's butler: amiable, loyal and eventually drunken. Walburn usually played blustering shysters or roguish criminals, so it's a pleasure to see him given this change of pace. Grace Hayle, a character actress whose heavy physique usually cast her in buffoonish roles, is personable here in a nice bit role as Colbert's assistant.

    Although the plot is unbelievable (even by screwball comedy standards), individual set pieces are delightful and funny. Colbert and Bartlett host a cocktail party in the shop window of Douglas's department store, with shop dummies as the guests.

    The climax of the movie is meant to be funny and romantic, but I found it saddening and maddening. Douglas pretends to abduct Colbert at gunpoint: we know he's faking, but she doesn't and she's evidently terrified. Douglas and Walburn, both drunk to the eyebrows, take Colbert speeding through the city in Douglas's motorcar, the stonkered Walburn at the wheel whilst an undercranked camera shows the car speeding wildly through the streets. I can laugh at comedy based on drunkenness, but it stops being funny when the drunks grab a steering wheel: there have been so many drink-driving tragedies, I just can't laugh at the notion of an inebriate operating a car.

    Talking of booze: this movie was directed by Gregory La Cava, a hugely talented and under-rated director who ruined his career through alcoholism. Maybe I'm reading too much into this, but quite a few of La Cava's films -- including this one -- depict characters who solve their problems by getting drunk. I'll rate 'She Married Her Boss' 7 out of 10, but I wish someone could explain this movie's weird Smurfette poster and those ridiculous costumes.
    6blanche-2

    Uneven comedy with good performances

    Claudette Colbert and Melvyn Douglas star in "She Married Her Boss," a 1935 comedy also starring Edith Fellows and Jean Dixon.

    This is a very dated comedy including a wife having to leave her career when she gets married, drunk driving, and child abuse - all things that are pretty much out now. Sometimes it's hard, but the only way to get anything out of these movies is to take them for what they were - done at a specific time when society mores were different. Some of it, however, has to do with the censors, particularly the career woman part, and there really wasn't any need for it. Interesting to me that the censors were very careful to push the nonworking mom but okayed spanking a kid with a hairbrush and drunk driving.

    Claudette Colbert is Julia Scott, an efficient assistant at a department store, taking care of a huge office for her boss Richard Barclay (Melvyn Douglas). Julia isn't happy - her idea of a real career would be to marry her boss, with whom she's been in love for six years. She gets her wish, and his darling daughter (Fellows) along with it.

    Julia finds that Barclay's home is a mess, and sets about putting it in order. Bonding with his daughter is going to take more, however, than mere efficiency. The kid's a brat. And Barclay's sister, who's used to having things her own way, is no party either.

    Colbert is fabulous, and Douglas, one of the great actors, doesn't infuse a terrible part with much warmth. His character isn't very likable, and one never feels that this is a truly married and in love couple. I don't really blame Douglas - the role is badly written, to go along with some of the script. The supporting actors are all excellent, including the aforementioned, Katherine Alexander as Barclay's sister and Raymond Walburn as the butler.

    There are some very good scenes, and the film is definitely worth it for Colbert - and a look at how far we've come in some arenas.
    5lianfarrer

    What a Difference a Year Makes

    I've read the other comments that talked about aspects of this film that are dated, offensive, or just plain bizarre. I was rather surprised that no one brought up the movie's cringe-inducing gender stereotypes. Anyone who has seen Claudette Colbert or Melvyn Douglas in the films they made before the introduction of the Production Code(in mid-1934) would immediately recognize the heavy hand of the censors, who did their best to impose on Hollywood their narrow-minded idea of "family values." (On the basis of this film, it would appear that allowing married women to pursue a career would bring about the end of American society, but child abuse and drunk driving are just good clean fun!) Though the cast and plot look good on paper, the result is strained and uneven, as if the script had been written to Pre-Code standards and then hastily cleaned up so as not to offend the censors.

    Claudette Colbert plays Julia Scott, a bright, capable, and confident executive assistant at a large department store. She runs the busy office like a well-oiled machine and clearly enjoys the work. It's hard to fathom why she's spent six years mooning over her boss, Richard Barclay. The way the role of Barclay is written, the usually charming Melvyn Douglas comes off as a humorless, sexless cipher. All the more jarring, then, to hear Julia talk about her desire to give up her terrific job and marry Barclay. Without a trace of irony, she describes marriage as "a woman's REAL career."

    Okay, she wants to get married. But why on earth would the lovely and vivacious Julia want Barclay as a husband? Not only is he dull as ditch-water, he treats her as if she were a piece of super-efficient office equipment. Once they're married, he ridicules her for assuming the stereotypical role of housewife, despite the fact that she's set his chaotic home in order and tamed his obnoxious brat of a daughter. There's nothing in the movie to explain Barclay's eventual change of heart; apparently it's brought on by a quart of whiskey. So much for good old "family values." The film is so devoid of any hint of sexual attraction that we don't see a single cuddle or smooch--not even at the very end when it's clear that the newlyweds will finally get around to doing what newlyweds are famous for doing. Julia has more physical contact (and chemistry) with Leonard Rogers, her sweet-tempered playboy suitor, who's a lot more appealing as husband material than that cold fish Barclay.

    Solid performances are turned in by familiar actors in some of the secondary roles: Raymond Walburn as the perfect butler; Katherine Alexander as Barclay's drama-queen sister; Edith Fellows as the evil daughter; and especially Jean Dixon as Julia's wise-cracking, matchmaking best friend.

    Would love to have seen this film made just a year earlier, before the Hays Office started taking their moralizing hatchet to so many of the things that made movies of the 30s worth watching.

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    Centres d’intérêt connexes

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    Comédie
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    L'histoire
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    Mystère
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The beginning theme music is the same as the 1934 movie It Happened One Night.
    • Citations

      Julia Scott: This is Grandma Scott. She knitted the Dred Scott decision on a piece of old burlap.

    • Connexions
      Referenced in You Must Remember This: The Blacklist Part 9: She: Richard Nixon + Helen Gahagan Douglas (2016)
    • Bandes originales
      Love Me Forever
      (uncredited)

      Written by Victor Schertzinger and Gus Kahn

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 29 octobre 1935 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • She Married Her Boss
    • Société de production
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 25min(85 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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