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IMDbPro

Fièvre blonde

Titre original : Value for Money
  • 1955
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 30min
NOTE IMDb
5,9/10
300
MA NOTE
Diana Dors in Fièvre blonde (1955)
ComédieRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA wealthy young man from Yorkshire visits a London nightclub and meets a performer. She decides to take him for every penny he is worth, and he lets her.A wealthy young man from Yorkshire visits a London nightclub and meets a performer. She decides to take him for every penny he is worth, and he lets her.A wealthy young man from Yorkshire visits a London nightclub and meets a performer. She decides to take him for every penny he is worth, and he lets her.

  • Réalisation
    • Ken Annakin
  • Scénario
    • Derrick Boothroyd
    • R.F. Delderfield
    • William Fairchild
  • Casting principal
    • John Gregson
    • Diana Dors
    • Susan Stephen
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,9/10
    300
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Ken Annakin
    • Scénario
      • Derrick Boothroyd
      • R.F. Delderfield
      • William Fairchild
    • Casting principal
      • John Gregson
      • Diana Dors
      • Susan Stephen
    • 13avis d'utilisateurs
    • 1avis de critique
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos28

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    + 20
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    Rôles principaux63

    Modifier
    John Gregson
    John Gregson
    • Chayley Broadbent
    Diana Dors
    Diana Dors
    • Ruthine West
    Susan Stephen
    Susan Stephen
    • Ethel
    Derek Farr
    Derek Farr
    • Duke Popplewell
    Frank Pettingell
    Frank Pettingell
    • Mayor Higgins
    Charles Victor
    Charles Victor
    • Lumm
    Ernest Thesiger
    Ernest Thesiger
    • Lord Dewsbury
    Hal Osmond
    Hal Osmond
    • Mr. Hall
    Jill Adams
    Jill Adams
    • Joy
    Joan Hickson
    Joan Hickson
    • Mrs. Perkins
    James Gregson
    • Oldroyd
    Donald Pleasence
    Donald Pleasence
    • Limpy
    John Glyn-Jones
    • Arkwright
    • (as John Glyn Jones)
    Leslie Phillips
    Leslie Phillips
    • Robjohns
    Ferdy Mayne
    Ferdy Mayne
    • Waiter
    Charles Lloyd Pack
    • Mr. Gidbrook
    George Benson
    • Trombonist
    Ronnie Stevens
    Ronnie Stevens
    • Compere
    • Réalisation
      • Ken Annakin
    • Scénario
      • Derrick Boothroyd
      • R.F. Delderfield
      • William Fairchild
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs13

    5,9300
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    Avis à la une

    6CinemaSerf

    Value for Money

    "Chayley" (John Gregson) comes from good Yorkshire stock where thrift and prudence are the order of the day. That attitude is thrown to the wind, though, when on a visit to London he encounters the glamorous and charming nightclub entertainer "Ruth" (Diana Dors). Now she knows when she is onto a good thing, as soon has this poor lad hook line and sinker. Despite his upbringing, and the ghost of his father warning him of the coming dangers, he is powerless - he is addicted to her, and soon she has come to his town, they are engaged, and she is looking for a nice big house. Can he see reason before it's too late? Is she really quite such a gold-digger? For the first half hour, when it's just the two at the top of the bill, then the film - and the dialogue - work quite well. You can see her manoeuvring the vulnerable but proud young man and it looks like both are having fun. For the rest of this, though, it really is just a bit of a stereotype-fest that runs through the joke as quickly as she would run through his inheritance. It's always good to see Ernest Thesiger (the doting "Lord Dewsbury)" and there are a few lively cameos but not enough to sustain this after about an hour when the writing is on the wall for a rather tame solution that lets it all fizzle out. The moral might be, though - always check your restaurant bill!
    9stewart-mccartney

    Rags and Riches and Rugby League

    Filmed partly on location in the West Yorkshire town of Batley (given the name Barfield in the film), you know what you are going to get as soon as you watch that Salvation Army band marching up the cobbled market place in the drizzle and soot. Good fun for those of us who live in the town spotting the landmarks. Batley's a lot cleaner now, and the buildings are sandstone again instead of black - it still rains a bit though.

    Chaley (John Gregson) owns a rag mill, the economy of the town for much of the twentieth century being based on recycling rags into reconstituted cloth known as either 'Shoddy' (now used as an adjective), or 'Mungo'. And he does what all Rugby League fans do once a year, and that's head south for the sport's Challenge Cup Final. Taking the local stories into account, the weekend trip is as traditional as ever, involving a lot of beer, food and going to clubs and pubs - and the final itself of course.

    However, it's not usual for one of the girls in a club to follow you back north in the hope of parting you from your money - and that's when the fun starts in 'Value for Money', especially if you already have a girl back home who's 'sweet on you'.

    Good-natured comic shenanigans follow that pulls the legs of stereotypical northerners and southerners alike. Luckily, the twain shall meet after a few plot twists and turns, and it all works out right in the end.

    Note - Fifty years after the film was released, people in the town still sometimes refer to Batley as Barfield, and you can here the name being shouted from the terraces at Mount Pleasant (Batley RLFC's ground) on many occasions.

    Eh, it's grim 'oop north.
    8erizia

    Just wait till I get you home

    A number of (I presume, younger) reviewers regard this film with some distaste, citing dated regional and gender stereotypes.

    I think that they need to relax a bit.

    The film is a comedy that pokes fun on males, females, northerners and southerners alike.

    Beautifully photographed and well acted, but really not to be taken seriously.

    Two scenes stand out.

    Firstly when the errant husband's return from their jolly in the capital and the wives await.

    The camera pans along the coach as one by one the male passengers wipe the condensation from the window and view the reception committee.

    Dramatic irony at its finest, followed by a wide panoramic shot as each emerging man is seized by the collar and frog marched away like naughty children, with the attending threat:Wait till I get you home!

    The second is the scene later that day when Chayley proclaims to Ethel that Ruthin is the most "beautiful woman he has ever seen" ;followed by reassuring his fiance that She (Ruth in) is not for me. She is an ideal placed upon a pedestal.

    One does not have to be Einstein to figure out what the reaction will be.

    Enjoy John Gregson as the hapless Chayley, Diana Dors in her dazzling prime with great support from the ever excellent and sadly underrated Susan Stephen.

    And wallow in world long gone.
    8Brucey_D

    Bluebeard of Barfield

    This is a gentle comedy that meanders along in a fairly charming and harmless way. It isn't one of the best comedies of this period but it features a good cast, is nicely directed and is beautifully shot.

    Gregson's accent is not that of a Batley (Barfield) resident but whether he could have managed it or not, the real thing might have been too much for most UK audiences leave alone those in the rest of the world.

    The film portrays a few stereotypes; the Yorkshire folk who are pretty straightforward but 'careful' with money and those in London, many of whom are little better than two-faced thieves by comparison. They could easily have gone further, but they went far enough as it was. I found the interjections of Chaley's deceased father rather funny, but not that much else was any more than pleasantly amusing. The scenes in which Diana Dors (real name 'Fluck', which was understandably changed "should one of the bulbs go out when my name is in lights") appears in public and generates a major stir are probably quite realistic; at the time she was a star/sex symbol on the up (amongst other things there were 3-D nude photos of her published the previous year) and this film was one of five she did that was released in 1955.

    If you like Britsh comedies of the period, have a local connection to Batley, or are a big Gregson or Dors fan, this should certainly be seen. For others it is still well worth viewing just for Unsworth's excellent photography and as something of a period piece.
    5Prismark10

    Loose change

    Diana Dors was billed as the British Marilyn Monroe. A few years before her death I saw her opening an arcade in the Isle of Man. By that time she had ballooned in weight but she still could bring out the crowds. I was only a kid so did not really know what all the fuss was about.

    In Value for Money, Dors plays glamourous singer and actress Ruthine West who gets enticed up to Batley to open a children's play area.

    The cause for her relocation from chic London is Chayley Broadbent (John Gregson) who has inherited his father's textile fortune. Like his later father Chayley is a miser who watches the pennies. His long suffering fiancée Ethel, a local journalist wants Chayley to go to London to enjoy himself and find a purpose away from his father's penny pinching ways. He finds Ruthine in a show instead and instantly falls in love with her.

    So Chayley, Ruthine and Ethel are in Batley. Ruthine hates the grim Yorkshire industrial town but likes Chayley's money. Ethel hangs around patiently for Chayley to come to his senses.

    Value for Money is a colourful light romantic comedy, with a couple of nice musical numbers.

    Chayley is a shallow fool who is always hearing his late father's muttering about not driving a hard enough bargain. It is a bit of froth and fun. Dors does look slim and sexy. It is a mildly entertaining movie with dated views on women.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Third feature film of Donald Pleasence.
    • Citations

      [at the mill, before Broadbent's funeral, the employees are speculating on the size of his estate]

      Mr. Hall: How much d'you think he's left?

      Duke Popplewell: Well, if he'd been in shoddy, I should have said about...

      Duke Popplewell: [whispers, confidentially] ... a hundred and fifty thousand.

      Duke Popplewell: But seeing as how he were only a rag merchant...

      Duke Popplewell: [whispers, confidentially] ... not more than forty thousand.

      Mr. Hall: Get away with you! I bet it's not a penny less than...

      Mr. Hall: [whispers, confidentially] fifty thousand.

      Duke Popplewell: No, never!

      Mr. Hall: Eh, Limpy?

      Limpy: I'm with the family. I'm not saying anything. But...

      [Limpy checks that he can't be overheard]

      Limpy: ...I'll wager young Chayley'll double it before his turn comes to lie there.

    • Crédits fous
      Opening credits prologue: BARFIELD, YORKSHIRE, IS NO BEAUTY. ITS PRIDE ARE ITS "RAG AND SHODDY" WOOL TRADES

      IT FIRMLY BELIEVES THAT WHERE THERE'S MUCK THERE'S MONEY

      IT HAS PLENTY OF BOTH
    • Connexions
      Featured in Remembering John Gregson (2019)
    • Bandes originales
      Toys for Boys
      Music by John Pritchett

      Words by Peter Myers and Alec Grahame

      Arranged and Danced by Paddy Stone Irving Davies

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 28 septembre 1956 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Value for Money
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Batley, West Yorkshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Sociétés de production
      • J. Arthur Rank Organisation
      • Group Film Productions Limited
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 1h 30min(90 min)

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