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My Son John

  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 2h 2min
NOTE IMDb
5,6/10
736
MA NOTE
Van Heflin, Helen Hayes, Dean Jagger, and Robert Walker in My Son John (1952)
Drame

Les Jefferson sont l'image parfaite de la famille idéale américaine, mais leur fils aîné John rentre à la maison après une longue absence proférant des opinions qui les poussent à penser qu'... Tout lireLes Jefferson sont l'image parfaite de la famille idéale américaine, mais leur fils aîné John rentre à la maison après une longue absence proférant des opinions qui les poussent à penser qu'il est peut-être communiste.Les Jefferson sont l'image parfaite de la famille idéale américaine, mais leur fils aîné John rentre à la maison après une longue absence proférant des opinions qui les poussent à penser qu'il est peut-être communiste.

  • Réalisation
    • Leo McCarey
  • Scénario
    • Myles Connolly
    • John Lee Mahin
    • Leo McCarey
  • Casting principal
    • Robert Walker
    • Helen Hayes
    • Van Heflin
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,6/10
    736
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Leo McCarey
    • Scénario
      • Myles Connolly
      • John Lee Mahin
      • Leo McCarey
    • Casting principal
      • Robert Walker
      • Helen Hayes
      • Van Heflin
    • 41avis d'utilisateurs
    • 16avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 5 victoires et 1 nomination au total

    Photos3

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche

    Rôles principaux27

    Modifier
    Robert Walker
    Robert Walker
    • John Jefferson
    Helen Hayes
    Helen Hayes
    • Lucille Jefferson
    Van Heflin
    Van Heflin
    • Stedman
    Dean Jagger
    Dean Jagger
    • Dan Jefferson
    Minor Watson
    Minor Watson
    • Dr. Carver
    Frank McHugh
    Frank McHugh
    • Father O'Dowd
    Richard Jaeckel
    Richard Jaeckel
    • Chuck Jefferson
    James Young
    James Young
    • Ben Jefferson
    Lee Aaker
    Lee Aaker
    • Boy
    • (scènes coupées)
    David Bond
    David Bond
    • College Professor
    • (scènes coupées)
    Gail Bonney
    Gail Bonney
    • Jail Matron
    • (scènes coupées)
    Russ Conway
    Russ Conway
    • FBI Agent
    • (scènes coupées)
    Bill McLean
    Bill McLean
    • Parcel Post Man
    • (scènes coupées)
    Frances Morris
    Frances Morris
    • Secretary
    • (scènes coupées)
    Erskine Sanford
    Erskine Sanford
    • Professor
    • (scènes coupées)
    Irene Winston
    Irene Winston
    • Ruth Carlin
    • (scènes coupées)
    Jimmie Dundee
    Jimmie Dundee
    • Taxi Driver
    • (non crédité)
    Douglas Evans
    Douglas Evans
    • Government Employee
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Leo McCarey
    • Scénario
      • Myles Connolly
      • John Lee Mahin
      • Leo McCarey
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs41

    5,6736
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    Avis à la une

    6Teagarden1256

    Hollywood in the Dark Ages

    Much maligned in its day as one of Hollywood's much too fervent attempts at atonement to the HUAC and McCarthy for having once hired so many communists, this slick Paramount picture made in 1952 remains a social document that reveals the right-wing views some members of the film community held during those dark days. It glorifies an idealized small-town family. Dad (Dean Jagger) is a solid hard-working citizen, a Legioner who finds time to toss around a football with his two blonde athletic sons about to fight the good war in Korea; he's a man who goes to church every Sunday. The flaw in the perfect unit is mother--who else?-- and her curse of too much Mommy love; Helen Hayes, for some reason, too obviously dotes on the son (Robert Walker) who doesn't play football, doesn't go to church, and prefers the company of college professors, yes professors, to his own family. He is, horror of horrors, a practicing self-admitted intellectual.

    Needless to say, we eventually learn that any spoiled child brought up this way cannot be up to good. Despite this silly propogandist view of the true values of decent American life, the film is very well directed by the great Leo McCarey, excellently acted by all the leading players. Robert Walker, in his last film, is particularly effective as the non-athletic son with heretic (read unAmerican) views. If the film had been made a decade or so later, his secret would have been that he was gay, but as this is 1952, the sin is political.
    6AlsExGal

    Heavy handed anti-commie propaganda all of the way

    In the beginning we see all of the Jeffersons -sans the titular John - going to church in their small town, getting ready to send their two sons off to Korea. These are the good sons, the literally blue eyed blonde haired sons in their uniforms going off to war, with the church symbolically behind them as the priest is the one to drive them off to join up with their regiments. Hey. Have I just wandered into a Nazi propaganda film, because so far it sure seems like it! Didn't Sam Goldwyn make "The North Star" just nine years before telling us how great and friendly those Russians were? And that Stalin, he was just a big lovable father figure...in 1943 that is.

    John is given a big build up before he even physically enters the scene. He is a big intellect. His brothers were the football players, he was the student. Dad is suspicious of John and thinks he looks down on them. Mom is still seeing him as a little boy, and sometimes it gets downright creepy. You almost feel like if John died and she lived we'd have the reverse of Hitchcock's "Psycho" playing out as John would be the stuffed one sitting in a rocker. John is also treated as some sort of supernatural threat that only mother love and the Catholic church can defeat. The truth unfolds as though the son has been found out to be a vampire, one of the walking dead. Rosaries and crosses and talk of God thus repel him.

    There also seemed to be quite a bit of Bruno ("Strangers on a Train") in John Jefferson, especially with cigarette in hand, conversing with dear old Mom: Oh you know how father is, etc. He just preferred a gray flannel suit to a silk dressing gown, and communism to homosexuality. Besides the dark shadow of Marxism-Leninism hovering over the Jefferson household, there is the dark shadow of mom's menopause. Mother Jefferson does seem very subject to mood swings, even before she starts to suspect John's secret. That's why the doctor gave her those three times a day pills. I think Helen Hayes played this role very well, with just the right tone of confused mother love, and a little bit of pixilation. But maybe it would have been better if her two All-American sons had actually sent her back an opium pipe from their government-sponsored trip to Korea rather than a kimono, and the necessary contents to fill it. Mom could have mellowed out a bit. Who sends their mom a kimono anyways?

    Leaving aside the Communist element, this film is similar to ones like All My Sons and others of the deep, dark, family secret genre. Usually it's the old man who is hiding something from his cheerily normal family. This time it's the son who has the secret. That sets up all those claustrophobic, dark, gloomy scenes between the three in their somewhat spooky house. And while it's overlong and overwrought, that's the saving grace of this film. There's a certain pedestrian reality to this aspect of the movie that's separate from all the Red Scare guff. I was hoping John would come through with a few more anti-clerical shafts at the expense of the priest, but you can't have everything.

    If you want to see a similar film from the same era, see John Wayne's "Big Jim McLain". That one has a lot more action, Wayne style, but still makes the same basic claim. Loyal all-American guys and gals are physically attractive and good at sports and genuinely well liked. The ones that are likely to be seduced by Communism lack athletic ability and may be overly intellectual, making them prime targets for being philosophically enslaved by their Soviet masters. However, in trying to fight the Soviet menace, the authorities use tactics similar to those they say that they are fighting, such as faking a car accident, impersonating Joe average, and then smooth talking their way into the home of the unknowing parents so they can get them talking and maybe get some clues, which FBI agent Van Heflin does. Yet somehow, being Heflin after all, he manages to remain charming throughout.

    This had to have been an A-list production for Paramount, because of the very talented cast. You have Academy award winning Helen Hayes and Van Heflin, Dean Jagger as John's father playing it a bit over the top, and finally Frank McHugh in a more serious role than I was accustomed to seeing him in, but still with a touch of that comic wit he displayed over at Warner Brothers in the 30'sand 40's. I'd recommend it because the mass hysteria of the red scares may be 65 years in the past, but this film gives us a good record of how it affected the film industry. I'm giving a 6/10 more for historical value and being a snapshot in time.

    This was on Turner Classic Movies about six years ago, just once. Other than buying the rather pricey DVD, the only other way I know to see it is Amazon Prime, where it is free per view, which is how I saw it today.
    5jjnxn-1

    What a weird movie

    Somewhat paranoiac drama looking at the perceived communist threat in the 40s and 50s. Overwrought in both direction and performance-Helen Hayes in particular seems on the very verge throughout the film. Walker died suddenly during the making of the film and his performance was completed by cobbling together outtakes from Strangers on a Train and the use of a stand-in in some scenes, its easy to pick out most of the these and it cast an odd melancholy pall over the picture. More of an interesting artifact of a troubled time in US history than a good example of film making. McCarey could be an exceptional director who made many fine films and possessed a few Oscars but he is decidedly off his game here. A strange experience.
    robertshort_3

    In its way, a historical document.

    In its way, this film is a historical document (albeit a misguided one), and certainly a product of its time. Made at the height of the infamous red scare, "My Son John" is so fervent in its anti-Communist message that it becomes somewhat fascinating as a piece of social history.The film has become famous (or perhaps more correctly notorious) as propaganda; despite the sometimes; overwrought script, the film is not without a talented cast. The great theatrical actress Helen Hayes, in one of her relatively rare movie appearances, is really very good as the mother, as is Dean Jagger as the father, and Robert Walker is fine as the son who is the object of his parent's suspicions. (Walker actually died before filming was finished, so some scenes were shot with a double or prepared with footage from Walker's earlier film "Strangers On A Train", or re-written to exclude Walker's character or requiring his presence.)

    In response to another reviewer, who wondered who had actually seen this film - I saw it a couple of times on Canadian television, once in the 1970's, and the last time in December, 1990. To my knowledge, it hasn't been shown on Canadian TV (at least in my viewing area) since that time.

    Update: The film was released on DVD and blu-ray in 2015.
    Rik-19

    Have people who rated this movie actually seen it?

    People who were watching movies before the days of VCR might remember this one. As of July 17, 2004, 49 IMDb users had rated this film that's been unavailable anywhere except at special museum showings. As of February 18, 2009, 130 IMDb users have rated it. How many of them have actually seen MY SON JOHN(?) Any how many rated it based on its notoriety?

    I'd like to hear from those people who've seen it. Recent or otherwise. Where did you see it?

    You don't have to tell me how ridiculously bad it is. Some movies are just forgettably bad, but this is one nobody forgets. I've yet to talk to anyone who thought it was good, but I wouldn't mind hearing from anyone who feels that way.

    I haven't cast a vote because I haven't seen it, but I sure would like to. Does anyone know where I can buy it on DVD?

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Parts of the film were rewritten after actor Robert Walker (John Jefferson) died during production. Several scenes use a double shot from behind, and others recycle footage of Walker from L'inconnu du Nord-Express (1951). The final scene, where a recording of John delivers an anti-communist speech, is lit with a halo around the tape-recorder.
    • Citations

      Dan Jefferson: John!

      John Jefferson: Oh, Father, let's not go into it any more.

      Dan Jefferson: Now I've, I've got another subject for you.

      Dan Jefferson: As your father, you and I are going to have a talk, a good talk, away from your Mother. And it's about you, son.

      John Jefferson: Well, if you'd enjoy it, Father...

      Dan Jefferson: Well, I don't know whether you will. But as I told you, we're alert. And we ARE alert.

      John Jefferson: You just said that.

      Dan Jefferson: Yes, and you sound to me like, like one of those guys that we should be alert about.

      John Jefferson: One of those guys?

      Dan Jefferson: I just said that you sounded like one, I didn't say that you... 'cos if thought that you really were, you know, I'd take you out in the backyard and I'd give it you, both barrels.

      John Jefferson: No trial, huh?

      Dan Jefferson: Nah, you're off on the wrong slant. And you know what I'm talking about. Cos as your father, I want to know where you're headed.

      John Jefferson: Well, I can help you there. I'm headed for the bathroom, wash my hands and clean up for dinner.

    • Connexions
      Edited from L'inconnu du Nord-Express (1951)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is My Son John?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 8 avril 1952 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mi hijo John
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Manassas, Virginie, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Rainbow Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 1 000 000 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 2min(122 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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