NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
1,8 k
MA NOTE
Un apprenti barbier en cavale pour meurtre se fait passer pour un enfant de 12 ans pour voyager à moitié prix.Un apprenti barbier en cavale pour meurtre se fait passer pour un enfant de 12 ans pour voyager à moitié prix.Un apprenti barbier en cavale pour meurtre se fait passer pour un enfant de 12 ans pour voyager à moitié prix.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Peter Adams
- Desk Clerk
- (non crédité)
Heather Ames
- Girl in Lobby
- (non crédité)
Bobby Barber
- Union Station Newsstand Clerk
- (non crédité)
James Burke
- Pullman Conductor
- (non crédité)
Robert Carson
- Tailor
- (non crédité)
Hans Conried
- François
- (non crédité)
Richard H. Cutting
- Hotel Guard
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
I was watching this movie and suddenly thought it seemed very familiar!! I then realized it was a re-making of the 1942 movie "The Major and the Minor" starring Ginger Rogers! There is a sub-plot that is different,but many of the scenes are identical except for the fact that now it is Jerry Lewis playing a 12 year old boy instead of Ginger as a 12 year old girl.Another pairing of Lewis and Martin-lightweight but enjoyable.
With a bit of James Bondesque finale, climax. This is one Jerry Lewis feature with many musicals, as Esther Williams' features were, but with comedy and gags galore. I feel that Frank Tashlin's movies with Lewis were a bit different though. It is efficient, funny, with I repeat more musicals as usual for Lewis, thanks to Dean Martin. Ray Burr as the heavy is an excellent choice.
I'll never get tired of watching this movie!
Jerry Lewis is everything in this movie, from a goofy barber assistant to a spoiled little brat to a suave and sophisticated young man.
All the funny bits will never be old to me, they still put me in stitches even after I've watched the film umpteen times.
My favorite part is the choir scene...
If you haven't seen it, don't be a ninny and get the movie for yourself! You won't regret it!
I'm glad I still have my good old copy of this wonderful classic.
Jerry Lewis is everything in this movie, from a goofy barber assistant to a spoiled little brat to a suave and sophisticated young man.
All the funny bits will never be old to me, they still put me in stitches even after I've watched the film umpteen times.
My favorite part is the choir scene...
If you haven't seen it, don't be a ninny and get the movie for yourself! You won't regret it!
I'm glad I still have my good old copy of this wonderful classic.
7tavm
With this movie, Martin & Lewis have a reunion with a couple of co-stars from their first feature-My Friend Irma: Diana Lynn, Jane Stacy in that and its sequel, is not only Dean's girl here but also a crush of Jerry's. And Hans Conried plays Jer's barber mentor, Francois. Then there's a couple of cameos from other of M & L's flicks-Nancy Kulp, from The Caddy, as a lady with a "12"-year-old son and Bobby Barber, from Money from Home, as a newsstand clerk. With that out of the way, I'll just say the plot of a jewel robber (Raymond Burr) trying to get the diamond out of Jerry's coat pocket-which the latter doesn't know about-as Jer tries to pass himself off as a minor in order to get a half-fare train ticket with him ending up at a girls school where Martin and Lynn teach is perhaps the most ridiculous story yet for the boys' movies but darned if I didn't find myself constantly laughing anyway! As usual, plenty of Lewis' mugging and doing impersonations provide plenty of fun entertainment along with Martin's smooth crooning on many romantic ballads. And seeing the latter get constantly hit and bumped into by his partner just adds to the fun. So despite the many nonsense shenanigans, I heartily recommend You're Never Too Young.
The best Martin-Lewis collaboration is, to me, Hollywood OR BUST, but this one is not so far behind.
It has some hilarious spoofs of Chaplin's GREAT DICTATOR (the sequence where Mussolini and Hitler are on a barber's chair); NORTH BY NORTHWEST (the sequence in the train where Lewis is in Lynn's room), and of THE MAJOR AND THE MINOR, but, above all, Lewis is in great form playing an 11-year-old kid on the run from murderer and diamond thief Raymond Burr (fresh from playing the evil Thorwald in Hitchcock's REAR WINDOW the previous year).
I reckon Martin was a better actor than Lewis, but his part is less eye-catching. He sings two or three songs, but they are not the best in his career repertoire - quite forgettable, in fact - which does not do him any favors. One sequence where he is supposed to conduct a choir and Lewis takes over pretty much symbolizes Lewis' upper hand throughout YOU ARE NEVER TOO YOUNG.
Diana Lynn is attractive enough in her part, Burr is quite good as the heavy, and the rest of the cast is hardly perceptible.
Taurog's direction is purely commercial with some great action sequences, especially the final ski and boat chase; color photography is quite good for a 1955 low budget movie; and the script is good enough to keep you interested.
A well deserved 7/10.
It has some hilarious spoofs of Chaplin's GREAT DICTATOR (the sequence where Mussolini and Hitler are on a barber's chair); NORTH BY NORTHWEST (the sequence in the train where Lewis is in Lynn's room), and of THE MAJOR AND THE MINOR, but, above all, Lewis is in great form playing an 11-year-old kid on the run from murderer and diamond thief Raymond Burr (fresh from playing the evil Thorwald in Hitchcock's REAR WINDOW the previous year).
I reckon Martin was a better actor than Lewis, but his part is less eye-catching. He sings two or three songs, but they are not the best in his career repertoire - quite forgettable, in fact - which does not do him any favors. One sequence where he is supposed to conduct a choir and Lewis takes over pretty much symbolizes Lewis' upper hand throughout YOU ARE NEVER TOO YOUNG.
Diana Lynn is attractive enough in her part, Burr is quite good as the heavy, and the rest of the cast is hardly perceptible.
Taurog's direction is purely commercial with some great action sequences, especially the final ski and boat chase; color photography is quite good for a 1955 low budget movie; and the script is good enough to keep you interested.
A well deserved 7/10.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesActress Diana Lynn appeared in the original film, "The Major and the Minor," as Lucy, the science-obsessed teenage sister of Pamela (Ginger Roger's on-screen nemesis). Thirteen years later, Diana Lynn starred in that film's remake, "You're Never Too Young," this time as Nancy Collins (a female version of the role originally played by Ray Milland).
- GaffesThe respectable Mrs. Brendan's Private School for Girls keeps a bottle of scotch in the unlocked public medicine cabinet.
- Citations
Bob Miles: Why don't you straighten up?
Wilbur Hoolick: Oh, I am straightened up. It's just that my shoulders are stupid.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- You're Never Too Young
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 7 480 000 $US
- Durée
- 1h 42min(102 min)
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