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Casablanca

  • 1942
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 42min
NOTE IMDb
8,5/10
638 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
735
126
Ingrid Bergman, Humphrey Bogart, and Claude Rains in Casablanca (1942)
Trailer for the classic drama Casablanca starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman.
Lire trailer2:11
7 Videos
99+ photos
DrameGuerreRomanceDrame psychologique

Un propriétaire de boîte de nuit et cynique doit protéger une ancienne flamme et son mari des nazis au Maroc.Un propriétaire de boîte de nuit et cynique doit protéger une ancienne flamme et son mari des nazis au Maroc.Un propriétaire de boîte de nuit et cynique doit protéger une ancienne flamme et son mari des nazis au Maroc.

  • Réalisation
    • Michael Curtiz
  • Scénario
    • Philip G. Epstein
    • Julius J. Epstein
    • Howard Koch
  • Casting principal
    • Humphrey Bogart
    • Ingrid Bergman
    • Paul Henreid
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    8,5/10
    638 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    735
    126
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Scénario
      • Philip G. Epstein
      • Julius J. Epstein
      • Howard Koch
    • Casting principal
      • Humphrey Bogart
      • Ingrid Bergman
      • Paul Henreid
    • 1.6Kavis d'utilisateurs
    • 219avis des critiques
    • 100Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Film noté 45 parmi les meilleurs
    • Récompensé par 3 Oscars
      • 18 victoires et 12 nominations au total

    Vidéos7

    Casablanca
    Trailer 2:11
    Casablanca
    Casablanca
    Trailer 2:52
    Casablanca
    Casablanca
    Trailer 2:52
    Casablanca
    Which Iconic Movie Characters Should Meet at the 'El Royale'?
    Clip 1:35
    Which Iconic Movie Characters Should Meet at the 'El Royale'?
    Casablanca: Kiss Me
    Clip 0:51
    Casablanca: Kiss Me
    Casablanca: Practice
    Clip 0:52
    Casablanca: Practice
    Shakespeare "Goes Hollywood" With Finn Wittrock
    Video 1:36
    Shakespeare "Goes Hollywood" With Finn Wittrock

    Photos271

    Voir l'affiche
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    Voir l'affiche
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    + 263
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Humphrey Bogart
    Humphrey Bogart
    • Rick Blaine
    Ingrid Bergman
    Ingrid Bergman
    • Ilsa Lund
    Paul Henreid
    Paul Henreid
    • Victor Laszlo
    Claude Rains
    Claude Rains
    • Captain Louis Renault
    Conrad Veidt
    Conrad Veidt
    • Major Heinrich Strasser
    Sydney Greenstreet
    Sydney Greenstreet
    • Signor Ferrari
    Peter Lorre
    Peter Lorre
    • Ugarte
    S.Z. Sakall
    S.Z. Sakall
    • Carl
    • (as S.K. Sakall)
    Madeleine Lebeau
    Madeleine Lebeau
    • Yvonne
    • (as Madeleine LeBeau)
    Dooley Wilson
    Dooley Wilson
    • Sam
    Joy Page
    Joy Page
    • Annina Brandel
    John Qualen
    John Qualen
    • Berger
    Leonid Kinskey
    Leonid Kinskey
    • Sascha
    Curt Bois
    Curt Bois
    • Pickpocket
    Abdullah Abbas
    • Arab
    • (non crédité)
    Enrique Acosta
    • Guest at Rick's
    • (non crédité)
    Ed Agresti
    • Bar Patron
    • (non crédité)
    Arnet Amos
    • French Soldier
    • (non crédité)
    • …
    • Réalisation
      • Michael Curtiz
    • Scénario
      • Philip G. Epstein
      • Julius J. Epstein
      • Howard Koch
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs1.6K

    8,5637.6K
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    Résumé

    Reviewers say 'Casablanca' is lauded for its themes of love and sacrifice, iconic dialogue, and performances by Bogart and Bergman. Its historical significance and quotable lines resonate across generations. Critics commend its direction, cinematography, and the use of "As Time Goes By." However, some find it overrated or slow-paced, suggesting its charm may not universally appeal. Despite mixed opinions, it remains a significant and influential film.
    Généré par IA à partir de textes des commentaires utilisateurs

    Avis à la une

    10Dockelektro

    Now I finally know why this one is one of the best

    Probably the most legendary movie of all time, I finally got to see it, it was a great hole in my movie-viewing history. And finally I got to understand why a classic movie like this has made its mark in history. The intricate political plot comes first, and sets the movie on a melting pot of the second world war, where everyone hopes and dies for an opportunity to reach the USA via Lisbon. This would provide sufficient material for hundreds of movies, but enter Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, magnificent cinematography, role model storytelling, a perfect supporting cast, some of the best dialogue ever commited to celluloid and Dooley Wilson singing THAT song, and history was made. More than 60 years of jaw-drops are sufficient to give the sceptics a good reason to make them understand that this is probably the greatest classic movie of all times, and one of the best ever made in the past, present and future.
    Doylenf

    As time goes by, it's still one of the all-time greats...

    While my personal Bogey favorite is still his Sam Spade in 'The Maltese Falcon', his cynical nightclub owner, Rick, in 'Casablanca', is also a standout. Rather than some "off the cuff" comments, I'll quote instead from my article on Claude Rains (from March 2000 issue of CLASSIC IMAGES) that pretty well sums up the film:

    "It was 1943's 'Casablanca', bustling with melodramatic wartime intrigue, that really put him (Claude Rains) in the forefront as one of the screen's smoothest character actors, almost--but not quite--stealing the film from Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, as the uniformed Captain Louis Renault who investigates the goings-on at Rick's notorious cafe.

    Nobody associated with the film guessed that it would become a screen classic, least of all its director, Michael Curtiz, the prolific WB director to whom it was just another assignment. It went on to win the Oscar for Best Film of 1943 with an award for Curtiz' taut direction.

    Oddly enough, the film's memorable airport ending was written and conceived just shortly before filming wrapped up, with neither Bergman nor Bogart knowing whether or not she would leave him for husband Paul Henried. Wartime audiences loved the film. Sydney Greenstreet, Conrad Veidt, Victor Francen and Peter Lorre all gave sterling performances and Rains was again nominated for Best Supporting actor."

    And by the way, I disagree with a former comment indicating the black and white photography of this film was primitive as compared to today's. Incredible nonsense!! As a matter of fact, the film's black and white cinematography was nominated for an Oscar!

    Ingrid Bergman was at the peak of her radiant beauty in this one--and Bogey was firing on all six cylinders. Great chemistry!

    As time goes by, we still have 'Casablanca'...
    9gleslie-53203

    One of the greatest

    Personally The Third Man is the best film ever, but this is up there. As innovative as Citizen Kane was, I'm gonna put this one ahead of it.

    But in one way this film beats all others - the dialogue. Yes, the cinematography is great, the acting is second to none, but how many eternal lines of dialogue came from this? 'Here's looking at you, kid,' 'This is the beginning of a beautiful friendship,' 'We'll always have Paris,' 'Round up the usual suspects,' 'The problems of three little people don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world,' 'I'm shocked to find out that gambling is going on,' 'Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine'.

    As much as I prefer a happy ending, I'm gonna go ahead and say the ending felt perfect. It had to go that way. I think I'll end by saying Humphrey Bogart just might be the most watchable actor in cinematic history.
    10slokes

    The Fundamental Things Apply...

    "Casablanca" remains Hollywood's finest moment, a film that succeeds on such a vast scale not because of anything experimental or deliberately earthshaking in its design, but for the way it cohered to and reaffirmed the movie-making conventions of its day. This is the film that played by the rules while elevating the form, and remains the touchstone for those who talk about Hollywood's greatness.

    It's the first week in December, 1941, and in the Vichy-controlled African port city of Casablanca, American ex-pat Rick Blaine runs a gin joint he calls "Rick's Cafe Americaine." Everybody comes to Rick's, including thieves, spies, Nazis, partisans, and refugees trying to make their way to Lisbon and, eventually, America. Rick is a tough, sour kind of guy, but he's still taken for a loop when fate hands him two sudden twists: A pair of unchallengeable exit visas, and a woman named Ilsa who left him broken-hearted in Paris and now needs him to help her and her resistance-leader husband escape.

    Humphrey Bogart is Rick and Ingrid Bergman is Ilsa, in roles that are archetypes in film lore. They are great parts besides, very multilayered and resistant to stereotype, and both actors give career performances in what were great careers. He's mad at her for walking out on him, while she wants him to understand her cause, but there's a lot going on underneath with both, and it all spills out in a scene in Rick's apartment that is one of many legendary moments.

    "Casablanca" is a great romance, not only for being so supremely entertaining with its humor and realistic-though-exotic wartime excitement, but because it's not the least bit mushy. Take the way Rick's face literally breaks when he first sees Ilsa in his bar, or how he recalls the last time he saw her in Paris: "The Germans wore gray, you wore blue." There's a real human dimension to these people that makes us care for them and relate to them in a way that belies the passage of years.

    For me, and many, the most interesting relationship in the movie is Rick and Capt. Renault, the police prefect in Casablanca who is played by Claude Rains with a wonderful subtlety that builds as the film progresses. Theirs is a relationship of almost perfect cynicism, one-liners and professions of neutrality that provide much humor, as well as give a necessary display of Rick's darker side before and after Ilsa's arrival.

    But there's so much to grab onto with a film like this. You can talk about the music, or the way the setting becomes a living character with its floodlights and Moorish traceries. Paul Henreid is often looked at as a bit of a third wheel playing the role of Ilsa's husband, but he manages to create a moral center around which the rest of the film operates, and his enigmatic relationship with Rick and especially Ilsa, a woman who obviously admires her husband but can't somehow ever bring herself to say she loves him, is something to wonder at.

    My favorite bit is when Rick finds himself the target of an entreaty by a Bulgarian refugee who just wants Rick's assurance that Capt. Renault is "trustworthy," and that, if she does "a bad thing" to secure her husband's happiness, it would be forgivable. Rick flashes on Ilsa, suppresses a grimace, tries to buy the woman off with a one-liner ("Go back to Bulgaria"), then finally does a marvelous thing that sets the whole second half of the film in motion without much calling attention to itself.

    It's not fashionable to discuss movie directors after Chaplin and before Welles, but surely something should be said about Michael Curtiz, who not only directed this film but other great features like "Captain Blood" and "Angels With Dirty Faces." For my money, his "Adventures Of Robin Hood" was every bit "Casablanca's" equal, and he even found time the same year he made "Casablanca" to make "Yankee Doodle Dandy." When you watch a film like this, you aren't so much aware of the director, but that's really a testament to Curtiz's artistry. "Casablanca" is not only exceptionally well-paced but incredibly well-shot, every frame feeling well-thought-out and legendary without distracting from the overall story.

    Curtiz was a product of the studio system, not a maverick like Welles or Chaplin, but he found greatness just as often, and "Casablanca," also a product of the studio system, is the best example. It's a film that reminds us why we go back to Hollywood again and again when we want to refresh our imaginations, and why we call it "the dream factory." As the hawker of linens tells Ilsa at the bazaar, "You won't find a treasure like this in all Morocco." Nor, for that matter, in all the world.
    jwpeel-1

    Of all the classics in all the films in all the world, this is the best!

    This is a film that MUST belong in every video collection in the U.S. is not in the world. The stories about it's making are legendary from the constant rewrites to the apocrypha of casting stories.

    What is amazing to me, and the reason I believe it holds audiences almost spellbound in successive viewings, is the connection with the horrors of World War II was almost every single cast member. Sidney Greenstreet had lost a son in combat, and a number of the cast members fled Europe to escape the ravages of a Hitler regime. Even the evil Nazi character Major Strasser (played with relish by Conrad Veidt) had left Nazi Germany to escape almost sure internment and possible death in a concentration camp. Here was a man who was a legend in German film history as the murdering somnambulist (a possible warning about the Nazi soldiers to come?) and because of the vicious anti-Semitism and racism of the Germany of the '30s and '40s, we in America and in Hollywood were given a great gift.

    Everyone in this film is fabulous, but it is the chemistry of Rick (Bogart) and Ilsa (Bergman) been truly holds the film together. When I saw this film almost frame by frame in the limited book series of classic films that were produced in the late 1960s, I was stunned by the subtlety of facial expressions that conveyed so much of Rick Blaine's character by a marvelous actor Humphrey Bogart. There is a reason why he was named the actor of the century.

    While every person in the film becomes a real flesh and blood presence, the story of Rick and Ilsa is the center of this cinema feast.

    I must confess that I have seen this picture so many times that I can recite every single line in the movie to the consternation of my wife who can't watch it with me anymore.

    The line that sticks out the most for me, and which against cheers from New Yorkers whenever it plays in the theater. It is when Bogart says to the Nazis seated at his table, "There are parts of New York I wouldn't advise you to invade." And what makes this line so memorable is that Humphrey Bogart did indeed star in another motion picture for Warner Brothers where that very thing formed the basis for the script. That movie was "All Through The Night." I love this movie too, and I'm not even a New Yorker.

    There have been many attempts to revisit "Casablanca," but only the original makes you really feel what it was like to live through "The Good War" in a faraway place like Casablanca in French Morocco.

    Even though such trickery as midget airport workers, fog machines and cardboard cutout airplanes were utilized, this film convinces through its beautiful story with many layers, and characters that are so well realized.

    If you've never seen this movie before, shame on you and see it immediately. If you only seen it once, I believe you will come back to it more than once. This is just about the most perfect film ever made and it is a miracle that that is so considering that there were so many hands in the pie. (Excuse me for my mixing my metaphors. It's late, and I get emotional just thinking about this classic film masterpiece.)

    Play it again and again and again and again, Sam.

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

    Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

    See the complete list of Oscars Best Picture winners, ranked by IMDb ratings.
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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Many of the actors who played the Nazis were in fact European Jews who had fled Nazi occupation.
    • Gaffes
      (at around 37 mins) When Rick is getting drunk he ask Sam, "It's December 1941 in Casablanca, what time is it in New York?" After Sam replies, "My watch stopped," he goes on to say, "I'll bet they're asleep in New York. I'll bet they're asleep all over America." However, Rick is not referring to the actual time (noted by giving a month and year rather than a time) and is actually making reference to, in pre-Pearl Harbor America, most Americans are "asleep" when it comes to the war and fighting the Axis powers. This is an intentional attempt at a poetic reference, not a statement of fact.
    • Citations

      Rick: Of all the gin joints, in all the towns, in all the world, she walks into mine.

    • Versions alternatives
      As late as 1974, the references to an extra-marital affair were banned in Ireland. The Irish cut got rid of two important sequences. First, after Ilsa tells Rick that she had left him after finding out that Viktor was still alive, the embraces and dialogue that followed were cut. Second, the emotional dialogue at the end of the film from Ilsa's line "You're saying that only to make me go" to Rick's line "What I've got to do, you haven't any part of". This led to Irish audiences' being bemused by the relationship between Rick and Ilsa, and often interpreting Rick's final speech beginning "I'm no good at being noble" as a reflection on the debilitating effects of war.
    • Connexions
      Edited into 77 Sunset Strip: The Secret of Adam Cain (1959)
    • Bandes originales
      La Marseillaise
      (1792) (uncredited)

      Written by Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle

      Arranged by Max Steiner

      Played during the opening credits

      Sung by Madeleine Lebeau and others at Rick's

      Variations played often in the score

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    FAQ23

    • How long is Casablanca?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Was Ronald Reagan originally cast as Rick?
    • What exactly are "letters of transit"?
    • Is the character Victor Laszlo's name mispronounced?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 23 mai 1947 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Sites officiels
      • Facebook
      • Warner Bros.
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Allemand
      • Italien
      • Russe
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Everybody Comes to Rick's
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Waterman Drive, Van Nuys, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(airport runway)
    • Société de production
      • Warner Bros.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 950 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 4 219 709 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 181 494 $US
      • 12 avr. 1992
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 4 731 471 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 42min(102 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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