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IMDbPro

L'impossible Monsieur Bébé

Titre original : Bringing Up Baby
  • 1938
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42min
NOTE IMDb
7,8/10
68 k
MA NOTE
Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, and Nissa the Leopard in L'impossible Monsieur Bébé (1938)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Lire trailer1:38
1 Video
99+ photos
Screwball ComedyComedy

Alors qu'il tente d'obtenir un don d'un million de dollars pour son musée, un paléontologue abruti est courtisé par une héritière frivole et souvent agaçante accompagnée de son léopard de co... Tout lireAlors qu'il tente d'obtenir un don d'un million de dollars pour son musée, un paléontologue abruti est courtisé par une héritière frivole et souvent agaçante accompagnée de son léopard de compagnie, Bébé.Alors qu'il tente d'obtenir un don d'un million de dollars pour son musée, un paléontologue abruti est courtisé par une héritière frivole et souvent agaçante accompagnée de son léopard de compagnie, Bébé.

  • Réalisation
    • Howard Hawks
  • Scénario
    • Dudley Nichols
    • Hagar Wilde
  • Casting principal
    • Katharine Hepburn
    • Cary Grant
    • Charles Ruggles
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,8/10
    68 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Howard Hawks
    • Scénario
      • Dudley Nichols
      • Hagar Wilde
    • Casting principal
      • Katharine Hepburn
      • Cary Grant
      • Charles Ruggles
    • 346avis d'utilisateurs
    • 104avis des critiques
    • 91Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 victoires au total

    Vidéos1

    Bringing Up Baby
    Trailer 1:38
    Bringing Up Baby

    Photos152

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    Rôles principaux59

    Modifier
    Katharine Hepburn
    Katharine Hepburn
    • Susan Vance
    Cary Grant
    Cary Grant
    • David Huxley
    Charles Ruggles
    Charles Ruggles
    • Major Applegate
    • (as Charlie Ruggles)
    Walter Catlett
    Walter Catlett
    • Slocum
    Barry Fitzgerald
    Barry Fitzgerald
    • Aloysius Gogarty
    May Robson
    May Robson
    • Aunt Elizabeth
    Fritz Feld
    Fritz Feld
    • Dr. Lehman
    Leona Roberts
    Leona Roberts
    • Mrs. Gogarty
    George Irving
    George Irving
    • Alexander Peabody
    Tala Birell
    Tala Birell
    • Mrs. Lehman
    Virginia Walker
    • Alice Swallow
    John Kelly
    John Kelly
    • Elmer
    Ruth Adler
    • Minor Role
    • (non crédité)
    Adeline Ashbury
    • Mrs. Peabody
    • (non crédité)
    Asta
    Asta
    • George the Dog
    • (non crédité)
    William 'Billy' Benedict
    William 'Billy' Benedict
    • David's Caddy
    • (non crédité)
    Billy Bevan
    Billy Bevan
    • Joe - Bartender
    • (non crédité)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Doorman
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Howard Hawks
    • Scénario
      • Dudley Nichols
      • Hagar Wilde
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs346

    7,868.4K
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    Avis à la une

    9slokes

    Goofy, Glamorous Golden-Age Gonfalon

    "Bringing Up Baby" is the standard for timeless screwball comedy, clever, charming, with tons of heart. It's also probably the most satisfying comedy in both Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant's careers, together and apart, which is really saying something.

    Grant plays David Huxley, a nebbishy dinosaur expert who plans to get a million dollars for his museum and marry his icy fiancée Alice. Hepburn plays ditzy but determined Susan Vance, who sets her sights on upsetting Huxley's plans so she can have him to herself.

    What could be a protracted exercise in frustration comedy, or else a humorless excursion into the stalking habits of the rich and nutty, is made joyous instead by the way Hepburn pulls us into her zany character and makes us root for her to reel Huxley in. After telling David, who wants nothing to do with her, that she has a leopard in her apartment, Susan trips in mid-call and then gets the bright idea of pretending she's being mauled by the beast.

    "Oh, David, the leopard!" she screams, rubbing the phone's mouthpiece against a fireplace grate for added terror.

    David takes the bait. "Be brave, Susan. I'll be there!" he shouts as he trips for the door. Kate's merry smirk is the perfect scene-capper.

    Susan is brave, in her convention- and logic-defying way, and one can trace the line from Jo March to Grace Quigley right through her in the panoply of strong, feminist-icon Kate Hepburn roles. But while Hepburn was amusing in other parts, she was never as much so as she was here, taking pratfalls and throwing off non-sequiturs like a Vaudeville clown. Warm, too: I think one of the film's secret strengths is the notion a nebbishy guy could end up with a beautiful, self-assured woman despite his best and worst efforts. The hell with macho: This is one romantic comedy where the guy winds up fainting in the gal's arms.

    Of course it helps if the nebbish looks like Cary Grant in glasses. Grant did play fusty characters in other films, but there's something about him with the pretty but frigid Alice (Virginia Walker, director Howard Hawks' sister-in-law but a good performance anyway from someone not much seen again), who tells him there will be no honeymoon or "domestic entanglements of any kind." "This," she says, gesturing at the brontosaurus skeleton he has been painfully assembling over the past few years, "will be our child." "Oh, it's nice," David replies, sadly and submissively. He is in definite need of screwball intervention.

    The film is one of those classics that could only be made in the 1930s, when everything could be played in a light and airy fashion without any pretense of reality. 1972's "What's Up, Doc" is a classy replay of "Baby" in spirit if not script, but while I enjoy that film nearly as much, it's not hard to see the problem director Peter Bogdanovich had on his hands trying to make us accept such nutty behavior in living color.

    Bogdanovich's commentary on the "Baby" DVD is insightful and worthwhile, and I agree with him that the subplot involving Barry Fitzgerald's drunken gardener is the weak link in this otherwise fine film. I also worry about poor George playing with Baby; does anyone else notice that nasty gash on the poor dog's side? I wonder how many "Georges" Hawks went through before he got the scene as filmed.

    The other secondary characters are terrific all the way through, especially May Robson as Aunt Elizabeth (the one apparently sane character until she complains about waiting for her new pet) and Walter Catlett as the constable, which I have a soft spot for beyond his beetle brows and his way of slapping his hands together like a mad auctioneer. Anyone else notice he shares a last name with Harvey Keitel's lawman in "Thelma & Louise"? Given Kate's lawbreaking performance here, I wonder if that was intentional...
    dj_bassett

    Classic Screwball Comedy

    Maybe the prototypical example of the breed, in fact. Zoologist Grant (we'd call him a paleontologist nowadays) goes to a golf course to try to wrangle money out of a potential donor: along the way he meets up with Katherine Hepburn, and they have all sorts of wacky misadventures.

    Grant's great, though it's not a typical role for him -- he's uptight, buttoned down, smothered. He's clearly the superego character, straitlaced and repressed and anti-life (it's no accident he works with bones). Hepburn was never lovelier than she was here -- she's the id character, all action and movement. There's a dedicated minority of people who hate this movie, mostly I think because they see the things Hepburn's character does as cruel. That's the point. Hepburn's not supposed to be nice -- she's id. We laugh partly because Grant needs to be loosened up, but partly because some of Hepburn's actions are shocking. Ideally, we should be in the same position as Grant in the movie: half-attracted, half-afraid.

    Great "rat-a-tat" dialog in the classic Hollywood tradition. I can't think of many screenwriters today who could deliver such dialog. Highly recommended, one of the great Hollywood comedies.
    FrenchEddieFelson

    A gem of 80 years

    An excellent and wacky rom com inspired by the movies of Laurel and Hardy, during which we follow the adventures of Susan and David from a golf driving range until the destruction of a dinosaur skeleton, not to mention the songs needed to calm down a leopard. Certainly, the scenario is far-fetched but that's exactly the global idea! Indeed, we regularly flirt with the absurd through dialogues of the deaf, misunderstandings and tutti quanti. The manifold gags reinforce the endearing side of Susan and David. Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant excel in these atypical roles, and Walter Catlett is so hilarious. This black and white film of another era, between the Great Depression of 1929 and the Second World War, is a delight to be enjoyed with your sweetheart or with family.
    10rebeccax5

    Greatest MOVIE ever made!

    Those without a sense of humor in 1938, must have been insane, panning this film.

    Since I was a little kid this was my favorite movie, seeing it when it first came on TV. I loved other Cary Grant screwball comedies, like "Monkey Business" but this this one tops my list, not only a list of comedies, but of all motion pictures entirely.

    Move over Stanley Kubrick, David Lean or William Wyler. This film is at the top of cultural significance and hilarity. This makes me wonder about those in 1938 who hated this film. Why? How? It has to be broken, defective humans that would pan this film. What a shame that some have no concept of funny,
    10HenryHextonEsq

    Magnificent, joyous japery.

    "Bringing Up Baby" is a film I unconditionally love; it is so utterly sublime a comedy that I was truly sighing, awed, 'it can't get better than this...' at many points. Yet it regularly does; Hawks keeps the momentum going majestically; it is one incredibly surreal, bizarre tangent going off unexpectedly into another, at every juncture. He photographs and presents his actors in the most charming and amusing possible ways, and the film is certainly a more leisurely, perfectly pitched film than "His Girl Friday", which I nonetheless admire. There is a beauty in the photography and simple choice of perspectives and angles that matches the

    There is not one actress in the annals of film who I adore more than Katharine Hepburn; she is a compelling performer, of great charm, intelligence and wit; of very real, idiosyncratic looks that to this eye are beautiful, vivacious, impish. In "Bringing Up Baby" her Susan Vance is a very interesting diversion from her more usual type of character - the slightly superior, in-control ice maiden, as shown in say "The Philadelphia Story". She is phenomenal in that film, yet here beguiling in a completely different fashion, playing a slightly scatterbrained, sprightly, charmingly delinquent woman, who seems to have no control over anything; least of all her feelings for Grant. Her giddy, breathless exuberance and anarchic helplessness are really endearing; it's a wonderful film that stretches out the credulity of Grant's wonderfully straight-laced character's resistance to Miss Vance. The ending is a gorgeous, satisfying pay-off, as he finally gives way, as would we all! It's a charming, suitable ending that rectifies the slight fall-off of the preceding jail section of the film. That is very amusing, but in a more predictable, slightly laboured way. In stark contrast to the first 70-80 minutes of the film, which amounts to about the finest sustained American comedy I have seen of that length - "Way Out West" and "Duck Soup" being shorter in total.

    Cary Grant, truly an institution of a comedic player, is very different to his more remembered persona of later years. It's remarkable to see this absurd little man, bespectacled, unworldly and cutting an orthodox figure played so perfectly by the suave Grant. This is gleefully played on with the sublime scene where Hepburn and Grant are trying to catch the leopard - Kate butterfly net in hand! She accidentally happens to break his glasses and is even more taken with him without them... The tension between how we usually remember Grant and the character he is playing here does add an extra layer of amusement to the film. Need I really add that the rest of the film's company are note perfect? Charles Ruggles, Barry Fitzgerald and many more really give the perfectly matched stars a fine backdrop.

    I shan't spoil too much of this heady, sublimely silly film... just go and watch it and see Howard Hawks, a master craftsman, at his best - there are no pretensions but making a quite wonderful character comedy - and Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant on insurmountable form. With these delightful stars and anarchic, scintillating comic material, what we have on our hands is an unutterably fine film, one of my very favourites of all time. Where else are you going to get such plot threads running simultaneously as: a hunt for a rare archeological find buried by a dog, an absurd upper-middle-class family dinner and an escaped leopard?

    Rating:- *****/*****

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Throughout filming, RKO executives complained that the film was destined for commercial failure. They asked Howard Hawks to insert more romance and less slapstick and told him to take away Cary Grant's glasses, but he ignored them.
    • Gaffes
      When Susan follows Fritz into the house, the shadow of the boom mic can be seen against the wall of the house.
    • Citations

      Mrs. Random: Well who are you?

      David Huxley: I don't know. I'm not quite myself today.

      Mrs. Random: Well, you look perfectly idiotic in those clothes.

      David Huxley: These aren't *my* clothes.

      Mrs. Random: Well, where *are* your clothes?

      David Huxley: I've *lost* my clothes!

      Mrs. Random: But why are you wearing *these* clothes?

      David Huxley: Because I just went *GAY* all of a sudden!

      Mrs. Random: Now see here young man, stop this nonsense. What are you doing?

      David Huxley: I'm sitting in the middle of 42nd Street waiting for a bus.

    • Versions alternatives
      Some scenes were cut for the German theatrical release. In 1992 the German ZDF TV reconstructed the missing scenes but the German voice actors/actress who dubbed the movie were no longer available. Thus the reconstructed version changes between the existing dubbed scenes and English-speaking scenes with German subtitles. However, the additional scenes are also from a different print, resulting in a much lesser contrast.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The 42nd Annual Academy Awards (1970)
    • Bandes originales
      I Can't Give You Anything but Love
      (1928) (uncredited)

      Words by Dorothy Fields

      Music by Jimmy McHugh

      Played as background music very often throughout the film

      Sung a cappella by Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant

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    FAQ24

    • How long is Bringing Up Baby?Alimenté par Alexa
    • In the scene in which Baby (the leopard) and George (the dog) are "playing" was the leopard really so tame that they trusted that it wouldn't harm the dog?
    • What is 'Bringing Up Baby' about?
    • Is 'Bringing Up Baby' based on a book?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 18 mars 1938 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • L'impossible Mr Bébé
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Arthur Ranch, Malibu, Californie, États-Unis(Exterior)
    • Société de production
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 1 073 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 13 054 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 42 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, and Nissa the Leopard in L'impossible Monsieur Bébé (1938)
    Lacune principale
    By what name was L'impossible Monsieur Bébé (1938) officially released in India in Hindi?
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