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La Valse de l'empereur

Titre original : The Emperor Waltz
  • 1948
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 46min
NOTE IMDb
6,0/10
2 k
MA NOTE
Joan Fontaine, Bing Crosby, Roland Culver, and Richard Haydn in La Valse de l'empereur (1948)
ComedyMusicalRomance

Dans l'Autriche-Hongrie d'avant guerre, un commis voyageur américain s'ingénie à intéresser l'empereur François-Joseph. Malheureux en affaires, il trouve l'amour auprès d'une jolie veuve de ... Tout lireDans l'Autriche-Hongrie d'avant guerre, un commis voyageur américain s'ingénie à intéresser l'empereur François-Joseph. Malheureux en affaires, il trouve l'amour auprès d'une jolie veuve de la cour.Dans l'Autriche-Hongrie d'avant guerre, un commis voyageur américain s'ingénie à intéresser l'empereur François-Joseph. Malheureux en affaires, il trouve l'amour auprès d'une jolie veuve de la cour.

  • Réalisation
    • Billy Wilder
  • Scénario
    • Charles Brackett
    • Billy Wilder
  • Casting principal
    • Bing Crosby
    • Joan Fontaine
    • Roland Culver
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,0/10
    2 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Billy Wilder
    • Scénario
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
    • Casting principal
      • Bing Crosby
      • Joan Fontaine
      • Roland Culver
    • 27avis d'utilisateurs
    • 13avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 2 Oscars
      • 2 victoires et 3 nominations au total

    Photos14

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    Rôles principaux42

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    Bing Crosby
    Bing Crosby
    • Virgil Smith
    Joan Fontaine
    Joan Fontaine
    • Johanna Augusta Franziska
    Roland Culver
    Roland Culver
    • Baron Holenia
    Lucile Watson
    Lucile Watson
    • Princess Bitotska
    Richard Haydn
    Richard Haydn
    • Emperor Franz-Josef
    Harold Vermilyea
    Harold Vermilyea
    • Chamberlain
    Sig Ruman
    Sig Ruman
    • Dr. Zwieback
    Julia Dean
    Julia Dean
    • Archduchess Stephanie
    Bert Prival
    • Chauffeur
    Alma Macrorie
    • Inn Proprietress
    Roberta Jonay
    • Chambermaid
    John Goldsworthy
    • Obersthofmeister
    Harry Allen
    • Gamekeeper
    • (non crédité)
    Gene Ashley
    • Tyrolean Man
    • (non crédité)
    Franco Corsaro
    Franco Corsaro
    • Spanish Marques
    • (non crédité)
    Paul De Corday
    • Hungarian Officer
    • (non crédité)
    Cyril Delevanti
    Cyril Delevanti
    • Diplomat
    • (non crédité)
    Doris Dowling
    Doris Dowling
    • Tyrolean Girl
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Billy Wilder
    • Scénario
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs27

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    misspaddylee

    The Mystery of "The Emperor Waltz"

    The mystery is that it took me so long to succumb to the charms of this musical. There are few writer/directors I admire more than Billy Wilder and few entertainers I enjoy more than Bing Crosby. I don't know what I expected when they got together, but I guess it wasn't "The Emperor Waltz". Initial disappointment was erased on a recent viewing.

    Our story is set in the long ago Austria of Emperor Franz Josef and concerns the love affair between a haughty widowed countess (Joan Fontaine) and a brash American salesman (Crosby). Ditto her purebred poodle and his mutt. There is a lot of talk about class differences and bloodlines and, through the years, this has been my major gripe with the script. Perhaps at the time in the late 40s Bracket and Wilder felt the need to make some sort of a statement, but it's a tad heavy handed and detracts from the fun - and there is fun.

    The musical numbers are presented wittily. For "In Dreams I Kiss Your Hand" Bing sings, then brings in a piano, then two policemen pick up violins and then the domestic staff starts to dance. When our countess swoons after a few boo-boo-boo's, you know it's all in fun. The uninspired humorist often remarks when watching a musical "where did the orchestra come from?". In the enchanting "The Kiss in Your Eyes", there is no need to ask as an entire village puts bow to string to accompany this most stirring of love songs.

    The Technicolor filming is sumptuous and truly befitting the operetta-like sensibility of the movie.

    Joan Fontaine is every inch the royal lady, looking lovely in her costumes and easily handling the comic and dramatic portions of the script. A nice transition from her young, vulnerable characterizations to the more confident females she portrayed in the 50s.

    Early in the film Bing Crosby tends to shout his way through Virgil, but his character is a lone fish out of water with no kibitzing pal such as a Hope or Fitzgerald. Once he starts to sing - well, like the Countess, it is easy to fall for the go-getting salesman.

    Lucile Watson is a delight as a dowager princess with a penchant for storytelling and for our Countess' profligate father played in fine style by Roland Culver.

    The top performance comes from Richard Hadyn as Emperor F-J himself. Unrecognizable under the whiskers and make-up, and foregoing his famous nasally precise delivery, Mr. Hadyn gives us a very interesting Franz-Josef. A petulant, funny, irritating, thoughtful and memorable character. You will pinch yourself to remind you of who you are watching.

    I heartily recommend this musical of much charm. Mystery solved.
    9pzanardo

    An underrated gem, a true hidden treasure

    "The Emperor Waltz" is an underrated jewel, a true hidden treasure by the great Billy Wilder. The basic idea of the movie is authentic comic genius, Wilder's trade-mark superb wit: two parallel funny love stories, a canine one, of a dog with a blitch, and a human one, of the straightforward American guy Virgil (Bing Crosby) with the haughty Austrian Countess Johanna Augusta Franziska (Joan Fontaine), the respective masters of the pets.

    Virgil is a commercial traveller: his stubborn attempts to sell gramophones to (no less a person than) the Emperor Franz-Josef are irresistibly comic. And then the Countess' blitch is the predestined partner of the Emperor's dog, and so she needs to be treated with extreme care (including sessions of psychoanalysis): all the hopes of the over-noble but impoverished family of the Holena von Shwartzemberg-Shwartzemberg lie in her paws... But it's all too funny to be described: see the movie and enjoy yourself.

    The funny, gently mocking reconstruction of the Austrian Court and of its rituals at the beginning of the 20th century is stunning. The delightful subtleties are uncountable: see the gentry play lawn-tennis, and the footmen in white gloves who present the tennis-balls on a silver tray...

    All the actors make an excellent job, and there are no words to praise enough Richard Haydn as Emperor Franz-Josef. The cinematography, in bright, cheerful colors, is accurate and evocative. The costumes and the locations are magnificent. The film was intended to be a musical: however, we find in it just a pair of nice songs and a rather short ballet. I consider it a further merit of the movie: I'm not much fond of musicals.

    I highly recommend "The Emperor Waltz", a praiseworthy issue of Wilder's magic wit and talent.
    7ryancm

    A delight-surprise

    What a nice delightful film this turned out to be. I'm in my musical phase of movies, and while this really cannot be classified as a true "musical", it does have a couple on nice songs and a short dance sequence. I guess you could classify this as a "quasi-musical". Anyway, the story is fun with the typical Billy Wilder political overtones that do not detract from the plot line. The scenery is great, as is Bing Crosby and Richard Haydin. Joan Fontaine is fine in what is asked of her. The real stars are the two dogs. Their scenes are delightful, as is the film. While there is a tad of dramatics at the end, it all turns out fine as expected. Would have like to have the fade-out of the two dogs cuddling up. See this one for a royal treat.
    6planktonrules

    Lightweight but enjoyable.

    "The Emperor Waltz" is a surprisingly lightweight film considering it was directed by Billy Wilder. This is the same director who'd just won Oscars for "The Lost Weekend" and "Double Indemnity". And, while he also made some great comedies (such as "Some Like it Hot"), "The Emperor Waltz" is surprisingly lightweight--particularly since Wilder's Oscars came just a few years before this film. You'd have thought he would have merited a more prestigious project.

    Bing Crosby stars as Virgil Smith--a traveling salesman who is trying to make a sale to Emperor Franz Josef of the Austria-Hungarian Empire!!! This is utterly ridiculous and you just have to turn off your brain to enjoy much of the film--such as the notion of his falling in love with a Countess, the Emperor and Virgil having an informal conversation as well as a dog that is receiving psychotherapy! Yes, it's all very silly and Joan Fontaine and Bing Crosby do make a hilariously mismatched couple. Yet, despite the film's many shortcomings, it IS entertaining. A bit brainless...but entertaining. Certainly no even close to either actor's best but kind of cute.

    By the way, buried under all that makeup and facial prosthetics is Richard Hayden--believe it or not!
    theowinthrop

    Alte Wien, 1901

    This is not a great Billy Wilder film, but any film he's involved in is worth looking at. Like Orson Welles, even when he's below par in his work he's ahead of the pack. Here Wilder is going back to his roots - he came from Austria, and just left it before the Nazi seized control (I think two aunts of his died in concentration camps). Wilder knew what the highbound, tradition controlled court and government of Austria Hungary was like, with it's unofficial racism towards Jews and Slavs. Only Hungarians (by force) got equal treatment to the Austrians in the government and army. If Jews did well in the professions or business they were hated for it. Only Erich von Stroheim would have had a similar idea of the truth, but he looked elsewhere at the sordidness of the court - at it's sexual peccadillos.

    But the film is not successful in capturing that image. It comes closest when Richard Haydn (as the old Emperor Franz Joseph - possibly his best straight acting job/though his performance as a sadistic nobleman in FOREVER AMBER is close to it)tells Bing Crosby why the marriage between him and Joan Fontaine would fail. Fontaine would soon be pining for those fine aristocratic experiences and events that she would never be able to go back to once she married a commoner. Haydn compares aristocrats to snails - serene and haughty in their little shells, but remove them from their shells and they die. It may be wrong here (the movie ends with Crosby and Fontaine united), but in reality it hasn't always worked. Look at the tradition bound Windsor family and their marriage fiascos.

    Oddly enough, just as Wilder failed in his attempt to make a film about the Austro-Hungarian Empire Max Ophuls made the classic Viennese romance of that period - A LETTER FROM AN UNKNOWN WOMAN, starring Fontaine and Louis Jordan. It was not on the scale of THE EMPEROR WALTZ, but it is better remembered and enjoyed, and gave Fontaine a memorably tragic character. If one wants to get a glimmer of the zeitgeist of old Wien see the Ophuls movie. And if not that see a British film starring Lili Palmer, BEWARE OF PITY, which also captures the neurosis of the upper classes in that age. As for THE EMPEROR WALTZ, watch it for Haydn's fine performance, Crosby's singing and comic moments (when he turns a phonograph into a 19th Century berry juicer, which is a lovely little scene), and Roland Culver's social plotting. You'll find these all quite enough to enjoy the movie.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Billy Wilder began shooting this film in 1946, soon after winning an Oscar for Le Poison (1945). That film's great critical reception (and unexpected box-office success) gave Wilder more power and he spent a lot of time and money on this musical (which was his first color film). He was very dissatisfied with the result, however, and the release of the film was extensively delayed, perhaps for re-takes--Wilder liked to say he was hoping to delay its release as long as possible. It opened in Britain a month before its American debut, most unusually, and was a critical and box-office flop. In 1969, he told an interviewer, "I never want to see it again". His next film, La scandaleuse de Berlin (1948), opened in America only three months later.
    • Citations

      Princess Bitotska: The Lafuentes have more of everything. In fact, most of their children were born with eleven fingers.

    • Connexions
      Referenced in Saturday Night Live: Melanie Griffith/Little Feat (1988)
    • Bandes originales
      The Kiss in Your Eyes
      Music by Richard Heuberger (uncredited)

      English Lyrics by Johnny Burke

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Emperor Waltz?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 décembre 1949 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Emperor Waltz
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada
    • Société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Budget
      • 4 070 248 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 46 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Joan Fontaine, Bing Crosby, Roland Culver, and Richard Haydn in La Valse de l'empereur (1948)
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    By what name was La Valse de l'empereur (1948) officially released in India in English?
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