Florence et Chet Keefer ont eu un mariage difficile. Alors qu'ils sont en pleine audience de divorce, le juge les encourage à se souvenir des bons moments qu'ils ont passés, dans l'espoir qu... Tout lireFlorence et Chet Keefer ont eu un mariage difficile. Alors qu'ils sont en pleine audience de divorce, le juge les encourage à se souvenir des bons moments qu'ils ont passés, dans l'espoir que le mariage puisse être sauvé.Florence et Chet Keefer ont eu un mariage difficile. Alors qu'ils sont en pleine audience de divorce, le juge les encourage à se souvenir des bons moments qu'ils ont passés, dans l'espoir que le mariage puisse être sauvé.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
- 3 victoires et 2 nominations au total
- Newhouse
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- Undetermined Secondary Role
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- Party Guest
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- Spec
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- Benny
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- Man Writing on Chalkboard
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- Musician
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- Eddie
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- Undetermined Secondary Role
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Avis à la une
The story is told in a series of well-staged vignettes in flashback as they recount the facts of their troublesome marriage to a divorce court judge (MADGE KENNEDY), who ends up believing that the two of them still love each other and can be taken off the docket for the next day's hearing.
The ups and downs of the marriage are mostly due to the financial strain and the macho behavior of a man who has the need to be the breadwinner but feels he can't support his wife and children the way he'd like to on his post office salary. Ray is excellent at suggesting the moods of a man who misunderstands many a situation because he can't see beyond the money angle. A very revealing scene at a butcher shop where the butcher talks common sense about the realities of life, is a fine piece of writing and beautifully played.
Both Holliday and Ray shine in what is almost a two-character film, especially in the second half--and their arguments have the ring of truth in them, with money and temperament being the strain that seems to be the root cause of their problems.
A touching film, serious at times but basically a romantic comedy directed with great skill by George Cukor (who said he could only direct women?). Ray does a masterful job in his breakthrough film.
Summing up: Highly recommended. Clever screenplay by Ruth Gordon and Garson Kanin.
Any film with Judy Holliday is worth watching and the (then) novice Aldo Ray both showed their acting chops. I am sure many moviegoers were wiggling rather uncomfortably in their theater seats reflecting on their own marriages and the silly fights that were relevant on screen to their own life experiences.
This film may be seventy (70) years old now but the trials and tribulations of millions of married and/or cohabitating partners could learn from the film The Marrying Kind.
I give the film a quality 6 out of 10 IMDB rating.
Time has completely forgotten this truly masterful piece of cinema art. 'Marrying Kind' starts out as a screwball comedy, evolves into gentle and then starker realism, takes a drastic turn towards tragedy, only to try and find its way back. Veteran director Cukor invited all sorts of trouble with this extremely challenging format, with a drama very obviously inspired by King Vidor's ground-breaking late silent 'The Crowd'.
It is a virtuosic and deeply, deeply affecting film, as written by Garson Kanin, directed with an almost uncanny ear for dialogue by the underrated Cukor, and acted by newcomer Aldo Ray and the ever-brilliant Judy Holliday. The ending to this film testifies to an unexpected emotional maturity in Hollywood in the early 50's, and the transfer is perfect.
I daresay nobody with an open mind is ever liable to forgot this film, and remember, before you start moaning about the mixing of genres, Life does its own mixing of tears and laughter every day to every single one of us. In that respect no film ever was more organic than this one!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesGeorge Cukor recommended that star Aldo Ray go to ballet school because he walked too much like a football player.
- GaffesIn his narration of his marriage, Mr. Keeefer states they took an apartment in Peter Cooper Village when they first married. That housing development opened in 1947 but the film takes place in 1950 and by that time they were married much longer than 3 years.
- Citations
Judge Anne B. Carroll: You know, counselor, there's an old saying, there are three sides to every story: yours, his, and the truth.
- Crédits fousAt the film comes to the classical "The End" over the final shot of the two main characters in background, instead of the usual fade-out, Columbia Pictures added the advertisement: "You have just seen our New Personality - ALDO RAY - Please watch for his next picture." In the background, a short sequence of Aldo Ray speaking (no dialogue heard - simply the remaining ending score) in a bedroom setting seen in the movie.
- ConnexionsFeatured in 100 Years of Comedy (1997)
- Bandes originalesDolores
(uncredited)
Music by Louis Alter
Lyrics by Frank Loesser
Performed by Judy Holliday while playing a ukulele
Meilleurs choix
- How long is The Marrying Kind?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- De la misma carne
- Lieux de tournage
- 339 Greenwich St, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(A.L. Bazzini Co. - where Flo goes back to work)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 32min(92 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1