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The Matrimonial Bed

  • 1930
  • Passed
  • 1h 9min
NOTE IMDb
5,7/10
306
MA NOTE
Georgie Billings, Marion Byron, Dickie Moore, Vivien Oakland, and Buster Phelps in The Matrimonial Bed (1930)
Comédie

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueLovely Juliet Corton (Florence Eldridge) is sure the dashing coiffeur who just arrived to style her hair is her husband, presumed dead in a railway crash five years earlier.Lovely Juliet Corton (Florence Eldridge) is sure the dashing coiffeur who just arrived to style her hair is her husband, presumed dead in a railway crash five years earlier.Lovely Juliet Corton (Florence Eldridge) is sure the dashing coiffeur who just arrived to style her hair is her husband, presumed dead in a railway crash five years earlier.

  • Réalisation
    • Michael Curtiz
  • Scénario
    • Yves Mirande
    • André Mouëzy-Éon
    • Harvey F. Thew
  • Casting principal
    • Frank Fay
    • James Gleason
    • Lilyan Tashman
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,7/10
    306
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Scénario
      • Yves Mirande
      • André Mouëzy-Éon
      • Harvey F. Thew
    • Casting principal
      • Frank Fay
      • James Gleason
      • Lilyan Tashman
    • 8avis d'utilisateurs
    • 4avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos16

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    Rôles principaux13

    Modifier
    Frank Fay
    Frank Fay
    • Leopold Trebel
    James Gleason
    James Gleason
    • Gustave Corton
    Lilyan Tashman
    Lilyan Tashman
    • Sylvaine
    Beryl Mercer
    Beryl Mercer
    • Corinne
    Florence Eldridge
    Florence Eldridge
    • Juliet Corton
    Vivien Oakland
    Vivien Oakland
    • Susan Trebel
    Arthur Edmund Carewe
    Arthur Edmund Carewe
    • Dr. Fried (credits)
    • (as Arthur Edmund Carew)
    • …
    Marion Byron
    Marion Byron
    • Marrieanne
    Flora Finch
    Flora Finch
    • Vosin
    James Bradbury Sr.
    James Bradbury Sr.
    • August Charbonnier
    Georgie Billings
    • One of Susan's Sons
    • (non crédité)
    Dickie Moore
    Dickie Moore
    • One of Susan's Sons
    • (non crédité)
    Buster Phelps
    Buster Phelps
    • One of Susan's Sons
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Scénario
      • Yves Mirande
      • André Mouëzy-Éon
      • Harvey F. Thew
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs8

    5,7306
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    10

    Avis à la une

    6boblipton

    A French Farce With No Slammed Doors

    Five years before this movie started, Florence Eldridge's husband died in a train crash. Or so everyone thinks. She has subsequently married James Gleason and born a son. Now a hairdresser shows up in the shape of Frank Fay. He looks exactly like Miss Eldridge's husband, and some hypnosis by family friend and physician Arthur Edmund Carewe restore his memories, but obliterates those of the last five years.

    It's a rather stagey production, not requiring more than one set, with everyone thoroughly civilized, perhaps a bit to much for the rather confused and headache-inducing situation. Fay, as the center of the tsimmis, is too mild throughout. Perhaps this sort of well-mannered farce played well in Paris, but the translation by Seymour Hicks (and which he starred in in London) ran only 17 performances. Still, the large and rather distinguished cast in support offers a great deal of interest. They include players like Lilyan Tashman, Beryl Mercer, Vivien Oakland, and Flora Finch. While it's amusing, it's more indicative of the tough transition from silent movies to sound movies than anything else.
    mush-2

    tres gay and sexy pre code farce

    This entertaining and racy early talkie(1930) is a farce about a man with amnesia who thinks he is a chic hairdresser. He is hired to do the hair of a wealthy Paris matron, who it turns out is his actual wife who has since remarried, assuming her husband had been killed. The hairdresser's lost memory is easily recovered in an absurd hypnosis and he demands the restoration of his wife from her new husband. The movie has loads of gay jokes as the hairdresser/ husband played by Frank Fay camps up the hairdresser persona to differentiate himself from the personality of the husband.There are lines like- "I may be a hairdresser but that doesn't mean I hold men's hands" And when he asks what manner of person was he as the hairdresser, he is told, "You were gay, a bit dandified" This is the earliest use of the word gay, with its somewhat current meaning, in the movies, that I can recall, predating "Bringing Up Baby"'s famous line("I went gay all of a sudden") by eight years. There is also a farcical moment when the hairdressers new wife(who makes a belated and not too plausible appearance) catches her husband in bed with what she expects is another woman. She snatches off the covers and exposes her husband with a man. She wails,"What kind of house is this?" There are many entertaining moments with Lilyan Tashman as an aggressive family friend who openly lusts for the hairdresser and Beryl Mercer as the cook who worships her former "Master". The ending is less than satisfying but it is all so silly that it doesn't really matter. Frank Fay does well as the effeminate hairdresser but is less convincing as the rejected husband. He also sings, not very well, a pretty tune that the studio must have been plugging. Worth catching.
    5larrywest42-610-618957

    It's interesting from a historical perspective, maybe

    (I couldn't keep watching past about half-way, so take this with a gram of salt.)

    This piece of fluff is obviously based on a stage play, and perhaps it suffers most from the lack of a live audience.

    The other reasons it seems decidedly lacking in humor are probably:
    • 95 years of cultural change
    • difficulty connecting with the upper-class
    • the idiotic drawing room comedy contrivances*
    • all characters are 1-dimensional stock characters


    So, while it's interesting to see what a presumably popular stage play was like a century ago (and realize that some current ones are no cleverer), I cannot recommend it as entertainment.

    * Besides every character being completely unable to read any other character, the whole "Finding out the truth suddenly will kill him so let's put him in a situation with multiple characters who will obviously do that" is just lazy writing.
    4JohnSeal

    So-so bedroom farce

    This stagey adaptation of a French play is fairly creaky but still provides the occasional chuckle as Frank Fay essays a double role as a husband missing with amnesia for five years. When he turns up on his 'widow's' doorstep one day as a trendy hairdresser, complications ensue. Harvey Thew's screenplay has a decent number of double entendres but is surprisingly restrained with the homoerotic subtext--especially when Fay is discovered in bed with James Gleason! Nicely though somewhat statically directed by Michael Curtiz, The Matrimonial Bed also features some nifty set design and a few memorable shots in silhouette.
    7AlsExGal

    Warner Bros. pre-code is a bit different from the others I've seen

    Everyone else commenting on this film prior to myself did so between Dec 30, 2003 and early January 2004. That would lead me to believe that everybody saw it on TCM during that timeframe - and not before and not since. That's a shame, since it is a very unusual and unique precode. So, when WHV says there is no real demand for many of their precodes on DVD they should remember that it might be because few people have ever seen them.

    This film is a French farce, but the pace and dialogue are very characteristically pre-code Warner Bros. Leading man Frank Fay is unremembered today, and he had a meteoric rise to fame courtesy Warner Bros. and matching meteoric fall courtesy the public's response to his films. Watching him today I just think he was given the wrong kind of roles. I think he pulled the part off of the amnesiac hairdresser very convincingly with just the right balance of comedy and pathos. It is quite touching when he realizes that he has been considered dead for five years and that his wife is lost to someone else whom he strongly dislikes and he sings "their song" to her just once more in an attempt to woo her back. However, Mr. Fay was not a dashingly handsome man, and I think the fault lies at the feet of the Warners for trying to turn him into a musical comedy version of Clark Gable. The absolutely most tiresome part of this film is all of the women in the film who knew Fay's character before his "death" in the train wreck declaring "What a man! What a man!" whenever they look at his portrait. There are title cards at various points in the film declaring the exact same thing just in case the audience forgets what a desirable hunk of man Fay is supposed to be.

    Lilyan Tashman lends strong support as the first wife's current best friend and also as the lover of Trebel (Fay) the hairdresser, not knowing he has a previous identity. The catty rivalry between Tashman and the wife's maid (Marion Byron) is priceless pre-code stuff if only we could forget who they are fighting over (Fay) - it is too much of a suspense of belief. James Gleason still has some color in his hair as he plays the second husband of Trebel/Noblet's first wife, one who greatly resents all of the "What a man!" comments. Here he shows what made him one of the great character actors of the 30's and 40's.

    P.S. did anyone else notice that when Fay and Gleason finally have a showdown and strip down to their underwear to duke it out that they are wearing exactly the same underwear?? It is as strange as the elephant with the question mark painted on it in "Manhattan Parade", another Warner Bros. precode that has had only a few airings on TCM as far as I know.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The English version of the play, by Seymour Hicks, opened on Broadway in New York at the Ambassador Theatre, 219 W. 49th St., on 12 October 1927 and had 13 performances.
    • Gaffes
      When Dr. Beaudine first arrives and greets Juliet, a moving shadow of the boom microphone is visible on the wall behind them.
    • Citations

      Marrieanne: Be careful or you'll fall!

      Corinne: For such a charming man! I would be quite willing to fall.

    • Crédits fous
      Arthur Edmund Carewe is billed as Dr. Fried in the credits, but actually plays Dr. Beaudine.
    • Connexions
      Version of Mr. What's-His-Name? (1935)
    • Bandes originales
      Fleur D'Amour
      (1930) (uncredited)

      Music and Lyrics by Sidney D. Mitchell, George W. Meyer and Archie Gottler

      Played during the opening credits and as background music often

      Played on piano and sung by Frank Fay

      Reprised by Frank Fay singing, with background music

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 2 août 1930 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Matrimonial Kiss
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Warner Bros.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 208 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 9min(69 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White

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