Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAn ambitious factory girl meets a handsome, wealthy lawyer, but he's interested in her as a mistress, not a wife.An ambitious factory girl meets a handsome, wealthy lawyer, but he's interested in her as a mistress, not a wife.An ambitious factory girl meets a handsome, wealthy lawyer, but he's interested in her as a mistress, not a wife.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires au total
- Wally Stuart
- (as Skeets Gallagher)
- Ambrose - Wally's Butler
- (non crédité)
- 'League of Nations' Heckler
- (non crédité)
- 'Answer That One' Heckler
- (non crédité)
- Man on Merry-Go-Round
- (non crédité)
- Monsieur Lavell - Party Guest
- (non crédité)
- Signor Martini - Party Guest
- (non crédité)
- Undetermined Secondary Role
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- Waiter
- (non crédité)
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (non crédité)
- Party Guest
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Joan Crawford may not be the world's most likeable actress but you'll not be able to tear your eyes from her in this. Her character is beautifully written with a naturalness that's fairly uncommon in 1931. She is unusually honest with an authenticity you'd associate with films made decades later but she is still most definitely a person who could only exist in the early thirties.
What also makes this so much better than some of its contemporaries is the high class direction. Although not one of Hollywood's best known directors these days, Clarence Brown was an astonishing filmmaker. A few months earlier he had made another of 1931's best films: A FREE SOUL. There's no stagey acting with a static cast awkwardly reading their lines in order. Brown makes everything flow just right. Watching this, something made so well, you'll wonder so many early talkies were so utterly terrible.
The story centres on Crawford's character Marian who decides to quit the humdrum of factory life in a nameless nowhere for the big city. She's not the usual sweet and innocent pure young thing about to get corrupted by a callous cynical millionaire: she knows exactly what she needs to do and she wants to do that. The only way for a girl like her to survive in the big city, she is told, is to hook a man, a rich man. This is exactly what she sets out to do and although it's not smooth sailing, she finds a good sugar daddy (and a young one) in the form of Clarke Gable, who himself is on top form. His character is not the lazy stereotype rich man so often seen in early talkies. He and also loveable anti-hero Wallace Ford are both as complex and layered as anyone in a modern film.
Overall, the naturalistic acting, imaginative direction and properly written characters make this picture entertaining, insightful and fun.
Excellent photography makes the best of the stars and Adrian's dressing of Joan. Notable train sequence in beginning of film has the poor Joan facing the possibility of the good life if she is willing to defy convention and joint those "inside the car." Gable teaches her how to act and she becomes a refined, but kept, woman. He refuses to marry her for all the "right" reasons but in the end, Joan is affected by society's opinion of women in her station.
Grandstand speech sequence at the end of the film is a bit too unbelievable but my wife was moved to tears when she saw it. One of Joan's better films. Recommended.
A wonderful Joan Crawford film not to be confused with her second, completely unrelated, also wonderful movie of the same title (yes) from 1947. This one, to be sure, also stars Clark Gable, and it dates from the years when Gable and Crawford had an intermittent, steamy affair. The chemistry is good, the filming excellent (and sometimes breathtaking), and the overall story a lively pre-code, Depression-era tale of succeeding.
But success at what cost? That's the key. You love Crawford's rise, and her methods are sincere even if not as sweet and homespun as the first scene would imply. It's not that she's corrupted, but that she discovers the excitement of the big city, and the truth that there really is sincerity there as much as in the little town she came from.
Gable represents every girl's dream, of course. He's suave, warm, funny. And rich. Their interactions are natural throughout, and the pace lively (as most of the famous pre-Code films are).
The filming is excellent, including a somewhat famous long take of Crawford, near the beginning, watching a train slowly amble by as a parade of different scenes unfolds through each window. It's worth seeing just for that scene alone (if you like great cinematography, and the aura of old Hollywood).
Clarence Brown is the uncredited (!) director here, and he's terrific. See "A Free Soul" made at the same time for another (even better) film showing off his ability to make dialogs crisp and true. (He's more famous for his many movies with Garbo, but he did a slew with Crawford.)
If you think there is a predictability here, you're going to be partly wrong. See this one, not because it's a classic, but because it's very very good, and forgotten. You will have trouble finding a good version, however. The one I found was on iTunes and it was so terrible (harsh tones, highlights so washed out you couldn't see their faces in many scenes) I don't recommend it. (I wrote to complain and got a quick refund, an apology, and a promise to look into it. I don't know if that fixed the problem, however, in Spring 2014.) Anyway, find a good copy somehow. Do it.
Strong (for 1931), short (71 minutes) pre-Code drama. The script is sharp and believable, the direction good and there are some incredibly lavish settings. Also Crawford and Gable are just great in their roles and both of them look incredibly beautiful. There was a brief part at the end that I didn't buy, but that didn't destroy the picture at all. Well worth seeing for anybody, but a definite must for Crawford and Gable fans.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first of two films with this title Joan Crawford appeared in. The second was La possédée (1947), for which she received an Oscar® nomination. This makes Crawford the only star to appear in two completely different films with identical titles.
- Citations
Marian Martin, aka Mrs. Moreland: You don't own me. Nobody does. My life belongs to me.
Al Manning: You'll make one fine mess of it.
Marian Martin, aka Mrs. Moreland: It'll still belong to me.
Marian's mother: Don't, Marian, you frighten me when you talk like that.
Marian Martin, aka Mrs. Moreland: If I were a man it wouldn't frighten you! You'd think it was right for me to go out and get anything I could out of life, and use anything I had to get it. Why should men be so different? All they've got are their brains and they're not afraid to use them. Well neither am I!
- ConnexionsFeatured in MGM Greatest Moments: A Video Sampler (1987)
- Bandes originalesHow Long Will It Last?
(1931) (uncredited)
Music by Joseph Meyer
Lyrics by Max Lief
Sung by Joan Crawford in French, German and English
Played as part of the score throughout
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Possessed?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Possessed
- Lieux de tournage
- Philharmonic Auditorium, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Political Rally)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 16 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.20 : 1