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Cette sacrée vérité

Titre original : The Awful Truth
  • 1937
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30min
NOTE IMDb
7,7/10
23 k
MA NOTE
Cary Grant and Irene Dunne in Cette sacrée vérité (1937)
A married couple file an amicable divorce, but find it harder to let go of each other than they initially thought.
Lire trailer1:58
1 Video
89 photos
ComédieRomanceComédie romantiqueComédie Screwball

Un couple marié demande un divorce à l'amiable, mais ils ont plus de mal à se quitter qu'ils ne le pensaient au départ.Un couple marié demande un divorce à l'amiable, mais ils ont plus de mal à se quitter qu'ils ne le pensaient au départ.Un couple marié demande un divorce à l'amiable, mais ils ont plus de mal à se quitter qu'ils ne le pensaient au départ.

  • Réalisation
    • Leo McCarey
  • Scénario
    • Viña Delmar
    • Arthur Richman
    • Sidney Buchman
  • Casting principal
    • Irene Dunne
    • Cary Grant
    • Ralph Bellamy
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,7/10
    23 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Leo McCarey
    • Scénario
      • Viña Delmar
      • Arthur Richman
      • Sidney Buchman
    • Casting principal
      • Irene Dunne
      • Cary Grant
      • Ralph Bellamy
    • 155avis d'utilisateurs
    • 65avis des critiques
    • 87Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 1 Oscar
      • 7 victoires et 5 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:58
    Teaser Trailer

    Photos88

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux44

    Modifier
    Irene Dunne
    Irene Dunne
    • Lucy Warriner
    Cary Grant
    Cary Grant
    • Jerry Warriner
    Ralph Bellamy
    Ralph Bellamy
    • Daniel Leeson
    Alexander D'Arcy
    Alexander D'Arcy
    • Armand Duvalle
    Cecil Cunningham
    Cecil Cunningham
    • Aunt Patsy
    Molly Lamont
    Molly Lamont
    • Barbara Vance
    Esther Dale
    Esther Dale
    • Mrs. Leeson
    Joyce Compton
    Joyce Compton
    • Dixie Belle Lee
    Robert Allen
    Robert Allen
    • Frank Randall
    Robert Warwick
    Robert Warwick
    • Mr. Vance
    Mary Forbes
    Mary Forbes
    • Mrs. Vance
    Claud Allister
    Claud Allister
    • Lord Fabian
    • (non crédité)
    Asta
    Asta
    • Mr. Smith
    • (non crédité)
    Al Bridge
    Al Bridge
    • Motor Cop
    • (non crédité)
    Wyn Cahoon
    • Mrs. Barnsley
    • (non crédité)
    Ruth Cherrington
    Ruth Cherrington
    • Minor Role
    • (non crédité)
    Dora Clement
    Dora Clement
    • Minor Role
    • (non crédité)
    Kathryn Curry
    • Celeste
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Leo McCarey
    • Scénario
      • Viña Delmar
      • Arthur Richman
      • Sidney Buchman
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs155

    7,722.6K
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    Avis à la une

    grandcosmo

    Dunne is brilliant in this screwball classic that also made Grant a star.

    Irene Dunne is luminous in what critic Andrew Sarris called one of the finest comic creations in film history. Dunne and Grant (this film launched him as a huge star) play a couple who hastily divorce and then alternately take turns trying to win each other back. Ralph Bellamy has the Ralph Bellamy role and plays it perfectly. This was the first of three great pairings between Dunne and Grant (My Favorite Wife and Penny Serenade being the others).

    Dunne is THE great overlooked movie star - primarily because so many of her films were remade with the originals being taken out of circulation by the film studio (e. g. Show Boat, The Awful Truth, My Favorite Wife, Anna and the King of Siam, Cimarron, Back Street, Magnificent Obsession, Roberta, Love Affair among others). She was nominated for 5 Academy Awards for Best Actress (2 comedies- TAT, Theodora Goes Wild, a western - Cimarron, a character role - I Remember Mama, and a romance - Love Affair) but never won. I can only imagine that politics played a part in her not getting a special lifetime achievement Oscar later in her life (she was a strong Republican), after all Ralph Bellamy himself got one and his film career paled next to Dunne's.

    Watch Theodora Goes Wild for another great Dunne Screwball performance.
    10robb_772

    That hat doesn't fit, Cary

    Nominated for six Academy Awards (including Best Picture and Best Screenplay) and a huge box office hit when originally released, THE AWFUL TRUTH is a screamingly hysterical marital comedy that hasn't lost one iota of its punch in the seven decades since it's release. Irene Dunne is amazing in a layered performance that is both subtly affecting and side-splittingly funny - sometimes within the same scene! The scene in which Dunne masquerades as Grant's floozy, night club dwelling sister is one of the brightest highlights in film comedy history. Dunne received a well-deserved Oscar nomination for her inspired work in this film, which endures as a reminder of why she was one of Hollywood's top actress during the thirties and forties.

    After flirting with success in SHE DONE HIM WRONG (1933), SYLVIA SCARLETT (1935), and TOPPER (1937), Cary Grant finally became a bonafide superstar with his performance in THE AWFUL TRUTH. Grant was an absolute master when it came to delivering one liners, and the prowess that he displays in the film's many moments of physical comedy is nothing short of phenomenal. Exceptional performances are also delivered by the rest of the cast (including Best Supporting Actor Oscar Nominee Ralph Bellamy), but the film's real scene stealer is the incredible canine performer Asta as Mr. Smith, which is easily the best performance by a dog ever! Leo McCarey won a much-deserved Academy Award for his frenetic direction of what is surely one of the all-time greatest comedies.
    10stmichaelsgate

    We're In On the Joke

    This movie is exquisitely directed and acted. The "fourth wall" is gone; the movie rides so high and smart that we as audience can be subtly acknowledged throughout and made complicit in the production, while we continue to believe in the characters and care about what happens to them.

    Much of the important dialogue is "throw-away" dialogue, in a sense. It's clear to the hearing, but lines are often spoken by the characters to themselves, for their own (and our) amusement, or delivered in very deftly choreographed "simultaneity," each speaker maintaining an independent point of view in rapid-fire repartee. Implications are understated. We are expected to expect the unexpected, to listen to every line.

    The plot is composed like a piece of music. Each scene takes moment from the time-line established by the impending day and hour and minute at which a husband (Cary Grant) and wife (Irene Dunne) become legally divorced, and the movie ends at precisely the stroke of midnight which marks that moment. They clearly want each other back, but will they cleave together or cleave apart as the clock strikes midnight?

    One extended "movement" of the movie lets Cary Grant charmingly undermine his wife's new relationship. In corresponding scenes later, Irene Dunne brilliantly plays a dumb floozie, pretending to be the husband's sister and demolishing in one evening his reputation and his prospects for marriage in respectable society. In these later scenes, in another of the movie's nice compositional touches, she does a reprise of a hoochie musical number performed earlier by a girlfriend of her husband's, and then falls into her husband's arms, apparently drunk. He gestures for her to look back and say goodnight to the horrified guests (and to us) as they do a wonderful little wobbly dance out the door, having burned their bridges behind them.

    I found the opening few scenes of the movie unlikable, but with the entrance of Irene Dunne, the movie gets us on board. There's so much great understated visual and verbal double entendre (in the best sense) that I want to go back and see if there's more that I missed. In one scene, Cary Grant has brought to Irene Dunne's new fiancé the paperwork on a coal mine the divorcing couple still own. Interrupted by a visitor while advising the fiancé on where it would good to sink a shaft (har!), he explains that he and the fiancé (brilliantly played by Ralph Bellamy as a very successful bumpkin businessman) are transacting a business deal. The movie moves along briskly and doesn't play up the point, but we catch, for a fraction of a second, Irene Dunne squirming as she finds herself looking like the business transaction in question. The movie moves through moments like this quickly, with high respect for our intelligence and our capacity to get in on the joke.
    8jamesrupert2014

    Classic 'screwball comedy'

    Jerry and Lucy, a mutually distrustful couple (Cary Grant and Irene Dunne) agree to divorce, only to end up sabotaging each other's attempts at new romances. The film is one of the best of the 'screwball comedies' to come out of the 1930s (and, like so many of the good ones, was based on a play). Grant is very good in his second major comedy (after 'Topper', 1937) and director Leo McCarey's film (for which McCarey won an Oscar) established him as a comic star (although apparently little love was lost between the two). Oscar-nominated Dunne is excellent. The scene she where meets the wealthy family of Jerry's current flame (a celebrity heiress) and pretends to be a brassy burlesque singer is priceless. Ralph Bellamy is also very good as Lucy's wealthy, earnest, 'aw-shucks' Oklahoma oil-man beau who lives with his Ma (Bellamy plays a similar character in the classic Grant comedy 'His Girl Friday', 1940). Like all the top comedies of the era, the clever, often rapid-fire script sparkles and the characters' delivery is impeccable. The film also co-stars Hollywood A-list dog 'Skippy', best known for his portrayal of Asta in the 'Thin Man' series . All in all, the film is a clever comedy that has aged well due to the quality of the script, and the talent of the director and the players.
    10Mihnea_aka_Pitbull

    Platinum Class Comedy!

    When I was a little child, my mother used to tell me again and again the main scenes of this irresistible comedy, and we laughed our asses off. Much later, I had the good fortune to see it myself, at an oldies-goldies TV re-run, and it amused me like nuts.

    Today, as a movie professional, I can safely state that it's an instance of PURE COMEDY: bright humor, pointed satire, a healthy dose of absurd, deliciously foolish, a fast-paced rhythm that makes the 90 minutes seem barely 9 seconds! You see it again and again, and wish for it never to come to an end! THIS, ladies and gentleman, is the stuff of real comedy - not all the Apatow and Seltzer moronic obscenities! Platinum class vintage!

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Ralph Bellamy got a good taste of Leo McCarey's working style very early on. He simply was told to show up on the set the following Monday for filming, with no script, no dialogue, or even a hint about his upcoming scene. So he went to see the director but received no help at all from the perpetually upbeat McCarey. "He just joshed and said not to worry, we'd have lots of fun but there wasn't any script", Bellamy wrote years later. The actor showed up on set for the first day of production to find Irene Dunne at a piano. (McCarey almost always kept a piano on his sets, and he often would sit playing while he thought up a new scene or piece of business he wanted his actors to try.) Dunne was pecking away at the melody to "Home on the Range", and McCarey asked Bellamy if he could sing. "Can't get from one note to the other", the actor replied. "Great!", McCarey said and ordered the cameras to roll while Dunne played and Bellamy sang for all he was worth. When they finished the song, they heard no "Cut". Looking over, they found McCarey by the camera, doubled over with laughter. Finally he said, "Print it!" The scene ended up in the finished picture. That was the way McCarey worked, and Bellamy had to get used to it quickly.
    • Gaffes
      Lucy introduces her music teacher "Armand Duvalle" as "Armand Lavalle".
    • Citations

      Armand Duvalle: I am a great teacher, not a great lover.

      Lucy Warriner: That's right, Armand. No one could ever accuse you of being a great lover.

    • Versions alternatives
      There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA srl, "ONCE UPON A TIME: L'OTTAVA MERAVIGLIA (1944) + LA MOGLIE DEL VESCOVO (1947) + L'ORRIBILE VERITÀ (1937)" (3 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Hollywood: The Great Stars (1963)
    • Bandes originales
      My Dreams Are Gone With the Wind
      (1937) (uncredited)

      Music by Ben Oakland

      Lyrics by Milton Drake

      Performed by Joyce Compton (dubbed)

      Reprise by Irene Dunne

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    FAQ16

    • How long is The Awful Truth?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 22 décembre 1937 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Italien
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Awful Truth
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Big Bear Lake, Big Bear Valley, San Bernardino National Forest, Californie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Columbia Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 600 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 30min(90 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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