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La Femme au gardénia

Titre original : The Blue Gardenia
  • 1953
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 25min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
6,6 k
MA NOTE
Anne Baxter and Raymond Burr in La Femme au gardénia (1953)
The Blue Gardenia: Happy Birthday Nora
Lire clip1:57
Regarder The Blue Gardenia: Happy Birthday Nora
1 Video
29 photos
Film NoirCrimeDramaMysteryThriller

Une téléphoniste se retrouve ivre et à la merci d'un goujat dans son appartement. Le lendemain matin, elle se réveille avec la gueule de bois et la terrible crainte d'avoir commis un meurtre... Tout lireUne téléphoniste se retrouve ivre et à la merci d'un goujat dans son appartement. Le lendemain matin, elle se réveille avec la gueule de bois et la terrible crainte d'avoir commis un meurtre.Une téléphoniste se retrouve ivre et à la merci d'un goujat dans son appartement. Le lendemain matin, elle se réveille avec la gueule de bois et la terrible crainte d'avoir commis un meurtre.

  • Réalisation
    • Fritz Lang
  • Scénario
    • Charles Hoffman
    • Vera Caspary
  • Casting principal
    • Anne Baxter
    • Richard Conte
    • Ann Sothern
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    6,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Fritz Lang
    • Scénario
      • Charles Hoffman
      • Vera Caspary
    • Casting principal
      • Anne Baxter
      • Richard Conte
      • Ann Sothern
    • 94avis d'utilisateurs
    • 35avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    The Blue Gardenia: Happy Birthday Nora
    Clip 1:57
    The Blue Gardenia: Happy Birthday Nora

    Photos28

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux46

    Modifier
    Anne Baxter
    Anne Baxter
    • Norah Larkin
    Richard Conte
    Richard Conte
    • Casey Mayo
    Ann Sothern
    Ann Sothern
    • Crystal Carpenter
    Raymond Burr
    Raymond Burr
    • Harry Prebble
    Jeff Donnell
    Jeff Donnell
    • Sally Ellis
    Richard Erdman
    Richard Erdman
    • Al
    George Reeves
    George Reeves
    • Sam Haynes
    Ruth Storey
    • Rose Miller
    Ray Walker
    Ray Walker
    • Homer
    Nat 'King' Cole
    Nat 'King' Cole
    • Nat 'King' Cole
    Fay Baker
    Fay Baker
    • Switchboard Monitor
    • (non crédité)
    Robert Bice
    Robert Bice
    • Policeman
    • (non crédité)
    Larry J. Blake
    Larry J. Blake
    • Music Shop Clerk
    • (non crédité)
    Lela Bliss
    Lela Bliss
    • Miss Stanley
    • (non crédité)
    Gail Bonney
    Gail Bonney
    • Policewoman
    • (non crédité)
    Edward Clark
    Edward Clark
    • News Stand Dealer
    • (non crédité)
    Papa John Creach
    • Violinist
    • (non crédité)
    Mike Donovan
    • Fingerprint Officer
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Fritz Lang
    • Scénario
      • Charles Hoffman
      • Vera Caspary
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs94

    6,86.6K
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    Avis à la une

    J. Spurlin

    Fritz Lang directed this solid mystery thriller that has our complete attention from beginning to end

    Norah Larkin (Anne Baxter) is a telephone operator who plans to spend her birthday evening alone with her boyfriend - or rather, with his photograph and a letter she just received from him. The real guy is 6000 miles away in Korea. While her two roommates - Crystal (Ann Sothern), a wisecracking divorcée and Sally (Jeff Donnell), a sweet girl with a taste for bloodthirsty mystery novels - are gone, Norah, wearing a black taffeta dress and sipping champagne, reads the letter and blanches. Her sweetheart has dumped her. She ends up spending the rest of her evening with Harry Prebble (Raymond Burr), a wolf who draws girls for a living and ruins them as a hobby. He takes her to the Blue Gardenia and they listen to Nat King Cole as he gets her very drunk on Polynesian pearl divers. The next morning she wakes up with a terrible hangover, but that's the best part. At work she learns of a murderess soon to be called the Blue Gardenia Girl. The label is invented by a newspaper columnist named Casey Mayo (Richard Conte), who hopes to find the femme fatale before the police. What worries Norah is that he and the police may both be looking for her.

    Fritz Lang directed this solid mystery thriller that has our complete attention from beginning to end. A good script and good performances are accentuated by Fritz Lang's camera and his usual sharp eye for detail and way of creating mounting dread.
    8bkoganbing

    Cinderella Murder

    In The Blue Gardenia, Anne Baxter's feeling low and depressed because her GI fiancé in Korea has given her the brushoff. Against her better judgment she goes out with Raymond Burr, full time artist and full time wolf. A few Polynesian Pearl Divers in the local bar which might have been spiked and Anne's not doing so good. But good enough to hit Burr with a fireplace poker and somehow make her way home like Cinderella with both shoes missing.

    George Reeves taking a break from Superman plays the Los Angeles homicide detective gets a little unwanted help from Richard Conte, a Walter Winchell like newspaper columnist who's no doubt thinking of the black dahlia murders in LA a few years because a Blue Gardenia's been left at the crime scene and Nat King Cole both sang it live and on record in the film.

    In the meantime Baxter's mood swings are being noticed by her roommates Ann Sothern and Jeff Donnell. And Conte's got his own investigation going into the Blue Gardenia murder. It all makes for one interesting and murky film in the tradition of Fritz Lang.

    Anne in a sense does a reprise of her Oscar winning performance from The Razor's Edge as a woman being trapped in tragedy. She blamed herself for her family's death in The Razor's Edge and she may or may not have killed Burr. The only difference is that an arrest might lead to an expiation of sin of a sort.

    Fritz Lang made a specialty in harassed and harried protagonists getting themselves into some real jackpots whether it was Henry Fonda in You'll Only Live Once, Edward G. Robinson in Scarlett Street and The Woman In the Window, and we can even count Peter Lorre in M. These are people who in fact were guilty. For the first time however Lang's harried protagonist is a woman and Anne gives a great performance.

    One scene I really loved is one with Almira Sessions as a brain dead housekeeper who finds Burr's body and then proceeds to clean up the crime scene. After all as she explains to Reeves this is her job and what she's paid to do. The fact she's destroyed all forensic evidence doesn't seem to impress her in the slightest.

    On the other hand had she done like a normal person would have and not touched anything, the forensics would have cleared the whole thing up and we wouldn't have a movie.
    dougdoepke

    Not Among Lang's Best

    The first part is rather cute. Sothern, Baxter, and Donnell play off one another really well as three girl buddies living together. Of course, viewers like me also have to get used to Raymond Burr as a lover-boy. After so many years as a movie heavy and TV's Perry Mason that takes some getting used to. But the lighter part ends when Burr turns up dead and Baxter thinks she did it. At that point, things turn more mysterious and psychological.

    Baxter is easy to look at as she assumes the central role of conflicted woman. More importantly, Baxter the actress wisely avoids her sometimes tendency to over-emote. But the movie's remainder is only mildly suspenseful as Baxter tries to deal with her supposed guilt. Did she really bonk Burr on the head with a poker since she was too drunk to know. And who can she turn to for help. Newspaperman Conte appears helpful, but maybe he's just interested in a big story. And what about Superman's George Reeves as a detective with a moustache, no less.

    There are some interesting visuals as one might expect from an artist like director Lang. Nonetheless, the overall result could have been helmed by a dozen lesser directors than the maker of Metropolis (1927) and Woman in the Window (1944). All in all, the movie's an interesting time-passer. But for fans of the German director like myself, it's nothing special.
    7secondtake

    A strong, crime tinged, imperfect melodrama

    Blue Gardenia (1953)

    The likable Richard Conte makes a great news reporter here, and Anne Baxter as the woman in trouble is pitch perfect. In fact, Baxter's two sidekicks are also right on, Jeff Donnell (a woman, really sharp) and Ann Southern. It's a good story, a little forced, but with lots of atmosphere at the right times (including a scene with the real Nat King Cole playing and singing).

    What holds the movie back is a mixture of basic story line, which lacks velocity and credibility equally, and direction, which doesn't heighten what is really strong here. That is, a great cast, and some great situations (including murder). Fritz Lang, the director, is accountable, of course, for some judgements that let things loosen up too much, and for the cute but abrupt ending. There are some characters that got developed in the beginning that don't get a chance to blossom. If we just focus on the two leads (no counting Raymond Burr, who has a brief and different kind of presence), there is a chemistry not quite clicking. Nice, regular guy Conte and slightly sophisticated Baxter don't quite match up, even though both are convincing individually.

    There is some talent behind the scenes here worth mention, especially cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca, who has done a whole slew of great small movies with astonishing visuals. Lang uses him well, though with a studied restraint that almost implies this was a throwaway effort. It comes between two of his greatest American movies, however: Clash by Night and The Big Heat. It's worth a look, a good movie not quite a noir by usual measures, but filled with intrigue and a little touch of welcome romance.
    8krorie

    Blue Gardenia, Now I'm Alone With You

    One thing this film has going for itself is atmosphere. Making it all seem relevant is the featured song, more than just a theme, an integral part of the movie, sung by the enchanting man with the melodious voice, Nat "King" Cole, who makes a much too brief appearance as the piano man in the club called The Blue Gardenia.

    Besides the hypnotic melody, the interplay among the three room mates, Norah Larkin (Anne Baxter), Crystal Carpenter (Ann Sothern), and Sally Ellis (Jeff Donnell), represents the apex of this enjoyable Fritz Lang outing, not as dour as many of his films, wrapped in Sturm und Drang, tended to be. If "The Blue Gardenia" is to be classified at all, it would possibly be labeled lighter Noir.

    Of the interplay between the room mates, Ann Sothern as Crystal with her biting wit and mock delivery, is the highlight. On the other hand, both Crystal and Jeff Donnell as Sally are sounding boards (sort of a Greek chorus) for troubled and tormented Anne Baxter as Norah.

    In one of his final roles as a heavy, Raymond Burr as Harry Prebble shows the viewer what a versatile actor he could be. As womanizer, woman-hater Harry Prebble, he convincingly conveys to the audience the loathsome qualities of such a creature. Sex is power and domination, an ego enhancer, not pleasurable or loving in any way except to provide sweet loving lies to permit the conquest. Norah Larkin gives in to this sexual predator in a moment of weakness following the receipt of a Dear John letter from her sweetheart overseas. Prebble, true to form, proceeds to get Norah drunk at The Blue Gardenia as a prelude to seduction. In the process of attempting to woo her with words in his apartment, Prebble becomes more forceful when Norah revives long enough to realize Prebble's true intentions. When she awakes in the morning she finds Prebble dead. Norah has only a hazy recollection of a poker being swung and a mirror shattering. All else is blank.

    Assigned to the investigation is Police Capt.Sam Haynes (George Reeves of TV "Superman" fame, showing all the earmarks of a great actor before being typecast on television), who seeks to wrap the case up quickly by apprehending the mystery lady who was seen with Prebble at The Blue Gardenia just before his death. A newspaper reporter, Casey Mayo (Richard Conte), sees a chance for a big story that might jump start his career as a journalist. The media begins to tout the mystery lady as the tantalizing "Blue Gardenia."

    "The Blue Gardenia" has all the marks of a great murder mystery in the tradition of "Laura," written by the same person, Vera Caspary. But for some reason, lack of money, lack of time, Fritz Lang wraps the entire project up much too soon. The ending is so abrupt that it appears thrown together as if in the middle of a scene the director yells out, "Wrap it up," and leaves the set. Yet, that's the only major flaw in the film. Otherwise, watch and enjoy.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Director Fritz Lang and cinematographer Nicholas Musuraca developed a revolutionary dolly for the camera that allowed for sustained tracking shots and intimate close-ups while shooting this film. Lang preferred the practice of tracking into a close-up shot of an actor as opposed to cutting to a close-up in editing. He believed the tracking close-up captured more of the actors' intimacy and emotions.
    • Gaffes
      Perhaps unaware that his hands on the keyboard are visible in the mirror behind him, Nat 'King' Cole plays a strikingly different piano arrangement of "Blue Gardenia" than the one heard.
    • Citations

      Sally Ellis: I didn't like Prebble when he was alive. But now that he's been murdered, that always makes a man so romantic.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Noir Alley: The Blue Gardenia (2017)
    • Bandes originales
      Blue Gardenia
      Written by Bob Russell and Lester Lee

      Performed by Nat 'King' Cole

      Arranged by Nelson Riddle

      [Nat King Cole performs the song at the Blue Gardenia during Norah and Harry's date, then the song is played frequently in the movie thereafter]

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Blue Gardenia?Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is 'The Blue Gardenia' about?
    • Is 'The Blue Gardenia' based on a book?
    • How does the movie end?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 12 mars 1954 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Blue Gardenia
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Motion Picture Center Studios, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Blue Gardenia Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 25 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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