Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueYoung American woman reunites with her estranged divorcée mother living chic, carefree life in Paris. She falls for Harvard football star on vacation, but his conservative parents disapprove... Tout lireYoung American woman reunites with her estranged divorcée mother living chic, carefree life in Paris. She falls for Harvard football star on vacation, but his conservative parents disapprove of the demimonde lifestyle of the two expatriates.Young American woman reunites with her estranged divorcée mother living chic, carefree life in Paris. She falls for Harvard football star on vacation, but his conservative parents disapprove of the demimonde lifestyle of the two expatriates.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Marjorie Rambeau
- Diane Winters (replaced by Pauline Frederick)
- (scènes coupées)
Armand Kaliz
- André de Graignon (replaced by Albert Conti)
- (scènes coupées)
Ann Dvorak
- Parisian Party Girl
- (non crédité)
Sandra Ravel
- Louise - Parisian Party Girl
- (non crédité)
Leo White
- Parisian Party Boy
- (non crédité)
Polly Ann Young
- Parisian Party Girl
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Fast-paced soaper set in Paris during an era in which `nobody cares' what you do. Upon the death of her father, an innocent `nineteen' year-old blonde Joan Crawford seeks out and is reunited with her divorced expatriate mother. The mother comes to realize that a chance at a renewed relationship with her daughter is worth more than a long-standing relationship with the Frenchman who has been paying her way for years. Mother and daughter move in together.
Complications with the boyfriend a Harvard football man from a good American family. The kids fall hard for each other but when his parents see the kind of mother and friends she has well there is the dickens to pay. A more sour looking pair would have been hard to find. Joan looks great (but not 19) in this movie and does a good job at being aghast when she finds out the truth about her mother.
Joan plays a girl whose world is to: make virtue of vice, never take anything seriously, and always be amusing. Yet she rebels against her mother's behavior. Will the daughter reconcile with and accept her mother for who she is? Can the sourpusses ever forgive the scandalous behavior of a fallen woman? Does a woman need a man before she is really happy (will those darn kids get together in the end)? Or will Joan run off instead and seek fulfillment elsewhere? These questions and more are answered in the dramatic conclusion of `This Modern Age.'
Complications with the boyfriend a Harvard football man from a good American family. The kids fall hard for each other but when his parents see the kind of mother and friends she has well there is the dickens to pay. A more sour looking pair would have been hard to find. Joan looks great (but not 19) in this movie and does a good job at being aghast when she finds out the truth about her mother.
Joan plays a girl whose world is to: make virtue of vice, never take anything seriously, and always be amusing. Yet she rebels against her mother's behavior. Will the daughter reconcile with and accept her mother for who she is? Can the sourpusses ever forgive the scandalous behavior of a fallen woman? Does a woman need a man before she is really happy (will those darn kids get together in the end)? Or will Joan run off instead and seek fulfillment elsewhere? These questions and more are answered in the dramatic conclusion of `This Modern Age.'
This Modern Age (1931)
** (out of 4)
Fair soap opera from MGM has Valentine Winters (Joan Crawford) going to stay with her mother (Pauline Frederick) and quickly falling in love with a rich man (Neil Hamilton) from a good family. Valentine realizes that this man could give her all she wanted in life but he and his family objects to her friends and especially her mother. The factory known as MGM serves great for fans today because it means their favorite stars were pumping out a number of films each year unlike today where you get one if you're lucky. With so many films being pumped out it's really no shock that most of them would be forgotten today had it not been for the fact that they featured a legend. THIS MODERN AGE is a rather predictable melodrama but it remains interesting thanks in large part to Crawford who is dashing as ever. The story itself is a pretty weak one as the girl must pick between money or her mother. This plays out in a way you pretty much see coming from a mile away and I certainly doubt that anyone is going to be shocked by the ending. The entire premise of nobody caring about what happens was an interesting setting but there simply wasn't enough done with it. This atmosphere does lead to some eye rolling bits including a drunk driving scene, which ends in an accident but it's all played for laughs, which certainly doesn't sit too well today. Crawford easily steals the film as the innocent girl who just likes to have fun. The legend perfectly handles every aspect of the performance and she manages to mix it up well with the supporting cast. Both Frederick and Hamilton are good in their parts as well. Fans of Crawford will certainly want to check this one out but a better screenplay certainly would have helped things.
** (out of 4)
Fair soap opera from MGM has Valentine Winters (Joan Crawford) going to stay with her mother (Pauline Frederick) and quickly falling in love with a rich man (Neil Hamilton) from a good family. Valentine realizes that this man could give her all she wanted in life but he and his family objects to her friends and especially her mother. The factory known as MGM serves great for fans today because it means their favorite stars were pumping out a number of films each year unlike today where you get one if you're lucky. With so many films being pumped out it's really no shock that most of them would be forgotten today had it not been for the fact that they featured a legend. THIS MODERN AGE is a rather predictable melodrama but it remains interesting thanks in large part to Crawford who is dashing as ever. The story itself is a pretty weak one as the girl must pick between money or her mother. This plays out in a way you pretty much see coming from a mile away and I certainly doubt that anyone is going to be shocked by the ending. The entire premise of nobody caring about what happens was an interesting setting but there simply wasn't enough done with it. This atmosphere does lead to some eye rolling bits including a drunk driving scene, which ends in an accident but it's all played for laughs, which certainly doesn't sit too well today. Crawford easily steals the film as the innocent girl who just likes to have fun. The legend perfectly handles every aspect of the performance and she manages to mix it up well with the supporting cast. Both Frederick and Hamilton are good in their parts as well. Fans of Crawford will certainly want to check this one out but a better screenplay certainly would have helped things.
I hated this movie. A blonde Joan Crawford plays a girl whose father died so she wants to meet her estranged mother. Well, Moms is a trashy old broad living it up in Paris on some French guy's dime. So Joan comes to Paris and very quickly finds she likes her mother's lifestyle and friends. She gets into a drunk driving accident thanks to the douchebag her classy mom set her up with. Then stuffy Neil Hamilton shows up and helps pull the two of them from the wreck. This is all treated very lightly. Anyway, Joan and Neil start to date but Neil's parents don't approve of her friends. I could go on but it's all very tedious and who cares. This is a stinker. What an unlikable group of characters. Everybody dresses nicely and enunciates all their words ever so properly yet I couldn't help but need a bath after watching them! At least Joan looks nice. Avoid this unless you're an avid Crawford fan.
I wonder if Joan Crawford disliked Jean Harlow's career boom. In This Modern Age, Joan wears a platinum wig and prances around like a party girl, but she's really innocent and only interested in a wedding ring, much like Jean's character in The Girl from Missouri.
Joan's mother is Pauline Frederick, and since she's a divorcee and has a well-known relationship with Albert Conti, she has a bit of a bad reputation. She wants Joan to have a fair shot in life, but this film is a far cry from Stella Dallas. Joan attracts the high-class Neil Hamilton and worries that his parents won't approve of her. This isn't the best mother-daughter drama to come out of the 1930s, and while Joan looks very pretty, I won't choose to watch it again. I'll stick with Stella Dallas when I want a good cry.
Joan's mother is Pauline Frederick, and since she's a divorcee and has a well-known relationship with Albert Conti, she has a bit of a bad reputation. She wants Joan to have a fair shot in life, but this film is a far cry from Stella Dallas. Joan attracts the high-class Neil Hamilton and worries that his parents won't approve of her. This isn't the best mother-daughter drama to come out of the 1930s, and while Joan looks very pretty, I won't choose to watch it again. I'll stick with Stella Dallas when I want a good cry.
Two stars of different generations combine their talents in This Modern Age which does not prove to be all that modern even for 1931. Pauline Frederick and Joan Crawford are mother and daughter in this MGM film and it's about a reunion that brings out a few issues and unpleasant truths. In later years it would be Joan cast as the mother with a past.
In her flapper years Crawford is looking forward to a trip to Paris where she will reunite with Frederick after many years separation. Along the way she meets All American Harvard football player Neil Hamilton and his straightlaced parents Hobart Bosworth and Emma Dunn.
But later on she meets two male acquaintances of Frederick, drunken playboy Monroe Owsley who might have been cast her instead of Crawford's good friend William Haines. It's very much a Haines type role. And there's this friend of Mom's the titled Albert Conti. They're very good friends indeed.
A great deal of Puritan moralizing is offered in This Modern Age. In the end it all works out for the lovebirds.
A really creaky old time vehicle, This Modern Age is palatable for today's audiences by the performances of Crawford and Frederick.
In her flapper years Crawford is looking forward to a trip to Paris where she will reunite with Frederick after many years separation. Along the way she meets All American Harvard football player Neil Hamilton and his straightlaced parents Hobart Bosworth and Emma Dunn.
But later on she meets two male acquaintances of Frederick, drunken playboy Monroe Owsley who might have been cast her instead of Crawford's good friend William Haines. It's very much a Haines type role. And there's this friend of Mom's the titled Albert Conti. They're very good friends indeed.
A great deal of Puritan moralizing is offered in This Modern Age. In the end it all works out for the lovebirds.
A really creaky old time vehicle, This Modern Age is palatable for today's audiences by the performances of Crawford and Frederick.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAccording to JOAN CRAWFORD: THE ESSENTIAL BIOGRAPHY, Joan Crawford "wore her hair that color (blonde) because the actress who was originally to play the part of the mother, Marjorie Rambeau (who'd played her mother in La pécheresse (1931)) was a blonde. When Rambeau became ill, the part was recast with a brunette actress, Pauline Frederick, whom Joan greatly admired. Joan's scenes had already been shot, and the difference in hair color was not reason enough to reshoot them. Besides, there was no reason why a brunette mother couldn't have a blonde-haired daughter - or maybe she was just into peroxide."
- GaffesAt the 56 minute mark, Val is talking to Tony in her new apartment. The sound of a telephone rings once, but Val continues talking and does not notice. It's obvious the phone was not supposed to have rung, since it was not a part of the story.
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Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 354 162 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 8min(68 min)
- Couleur
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