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Deux copines... un séducteur

Titre original : The World of Henry Orient
  • 1964
  • Approved
  • 1h 46min
NOTE IMDb
6,6/10
4 k
MA NOTE
Deux copines... un séducteur (1964)
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Lire trailer2:39
2 Videos
99+ photos
Buddy ComedyComing-of-AgeQuirky ComedyTeen ComedyTeen DramaComedyDrama

A New-York, deux adolescentes, Gil et son amie Val, suivent le pianiste Henry Orient en ville, alors que celui-ci tente de séduire Stella, une femme mariée.A New-York, deux adolescentes, Gil et son amie Val, suivent le pianiste Henry Orient en ville, alors que celui-ci tente de séduire Stella, une femme mariée.A New-York, deux adolescentes, Gil et son amie Val, suivent le pianiste Henry Orient en ville, alors que celui-ci tente de séduire Stella, une femme mariée.

  • Réalisation
    • George Roy Hill
  • Scénario
    • Nora Johnson
    • Nunnally Johnson
  • Casting principal
    • Peter Sellers
    • Tippy Walker
    • Merrie Spaeth
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,6/10
    4 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • George Roy Hill
    • Scénario
      • Nora Johnson
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Casting principal
      • Peter Sellers
      • Tippy Walker
      • Merrie Spaeth
    • 73avis d'utilisateurs
    • 34avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total

    Vidéos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer
    Trailer
    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer

    Photos284

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    Rôles principaux22

    Modifier
    Peter Sellers
    Peter Sellers
    • Henry Orient
    Tippy Walker
    Tippy Walker
    • Val Boyd
    Merrie Spaeth
    Merrie Spaeth
    • Marian Gilbert
    Paula Prentiss
    Paula Prentiss
    • Stella Dunworthy
    Angela Lansbury
    Angela Lansbury
    • Isabel Boyd
    Tom Bosley
    Tom Bosley
    • Frank Boyd
    Phyllis Thaxter
    Phyllis Thaxter
    • Avis Gilbert
    Bibi Osterwald
    Bibi Osterwald
    • Erica Booth
    John Fiedler
    John Fiedler
    • Sidney
    Al Lewis
    Al Lewis
    • Tobacconist
    Peter Duchin
    Peter Duchin
    • Joe Daniels
    Fred Stewart
    Fred Stewart
    • Doctor
    Philippa Bevans
    • Emma Hambler
    Jerry Jarrett
    Jerry Jarrett
    • Doorman
    • (as Jerry Jerrett)
    Jane Buchanan
    • Lillian Kafritz
    Peter Turgeon
    Peter Turgeon
    • Orchestra Member
    William Hinnant
    William Hinnant
    • Doorman
    Colin Romoff
    • Hairdresser
    • Réalisation
      • George Roy Hill
    • Scénario
      • Nora Johnson
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs73

    6,64K
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    Avis à la une

    7gee-15

    It's not about Henry Orient

    If you go into this film expecting to see a lot of Peter Sellers, you will be disappointed. Make no mistake, he's in there and he's very funny but this film is not about his character, a mediocre pianist with a penchant for married women. Rather, it's about two 14-year old girls who are making the awkward transition from childhood to adulthood. One of the girls has an incredible crush on Orient and her friend is helping her worship him from afar. Henry Orient is the catalyst for their transformation when they learn a little too much about his "world".

    The acting is uniformly fine. Sellers' character is a rat but he's so clumsy and foolish you find him endearing. Angela Lansbury, as the coldly selfish mother of one of the girls, is extremely hissable. It's hard to believe that she's the same actress playing the warm, friendly Jessica Fletcher so many years later. Paula Prentiss is very amusing as Orient's exceedingly nervous married girlfriend. Tom Bosley plays Lansbury's kind-hearted husband. One of the final scenes in the film is between him and Lansbury and their daughter and it's a great one. There's a great deal of superficial dialogue but the subtext is unmistakable and it becomes the climax of the film. The best part is the two young actresses playing the girls. I have a fourteen year old daughter and she acts just like they do (almost anyway, she doesn't jump over fire hydrants). Their portrayal of giddy women/children is what the film is really all about.

    Highly recommended.
    gregcouture

    An unexpectedly pleasurable gem!

    I wasn't quite prepared for how much I enjoyed this sophisticated (but certainly not too much so) romp when I caught it during its first-run release. I thought it so well-executed in every department that I was delighted to note that it's now available in a DVD edition with its Panavision widescreen ratio restored. But unfortunately the audio element is so bad (requiring turning the volume way up to even begin to hear the dialogue, and a music score that's mangled beyond belief) that I had to return the disc for a refund. Fortunately Turner Classic Movies recently showed it and the soundtrack was not a problem, making possible a fairly decent high-fidelity VHS recording.

    The two young actresses who played the very natural but entirely madcap duo who precipitate most of the plot's ins-'n-outs are completely charming and they are supported by an extraordinarily well-chosen cast of top-notch professionals. Angela Lansbury, never an actress to shrink from the somewhat less savory aspects of a character she's playing, strikes just the right note as a socialite whose maternal instincts are close to non-existent. I do remember wishing that Paula Prentiss had been given more to do, but I suppose getting mistaken for Jayne Mansfield (in one of the film's funnier sequences) wasn't something to be sneezed at. As the film's title character, Peter Sellers wasn't permitted by director George Roy Hill to unbalance the proceedings. And it certainly seems that scenarist Nora Johnson had inherited more than a modicum of her father Nunnally's professional good taste. This one is a treat for all but the dyspeptic and the excessively demanding.
    9jacksflicks

    This was also the Sixties

    The sixties became The Sixties around the time of this film, 1964. There was a time, believe it or not, when kids played grown-up, instead of the other way around, as is the case today. Two cute girls are venturing from childhood to youth, in a benign Manhattan. They have a crush on a pianist-Lothario who happens to be Peter Sellers. You can imagine the complications - and the hilarity.

    What makes this film so appealing is the way it portrays adolescent awakening as a completely unsordid and sweet experience. Yes, there is pathos, when the two discover how adults have turned their world into Henry Orient's world.

    Although the cast is sterling all around, Tom Bosley is a standout as father to one of the girls, who helps put things to rights.

    If the Kennedy assassination and Vietnam are cultural watersheds, then this film is a refreshing antidote; it gives the lie to the glib put-downs of the era by the current generation.
    9charlie_bucket

    Halcyon Days

    George Roy Hill is a perhaps neglected name in any 'top ten' list of great directors we are likely to see, but his filmography speaks for itself, with a number of quiet classics among a few heavyweight top 100 films--all within a somewhat small oeuvre. Each of these classics shows to good effect Hill's marvelous aesthetic moods and attention to detail, combined with absolutely expert casting, obtaining winning performances from all of the principles, with superior character acting from the secondaries.

    Peter Sellers is actually something of a secondary in this one as the title role, but his portrayal of Henry Orient is so ludicrous and wonderful that he steals the show every time he's on screen. He was really something. Sellers plays it very large here, as a pretentious, NYC-based, avant-garde pianist of meagre talent--a charlatan, egoist, and ersatz Lothario who cultivates a faux-Euro accent but slides back into his 'native' Brooklyn (Sellers is probably the greatest accent-mimic ever) jargon every time he gets rattled, who has Paderewski hair that he continuously primps, and who entices women who've actually fallen for his schtick by hurling continuous salvos of romance-novel drivel at them until they (hopefully) relent.

    Oddly, although it is made plain and obvious in the dialogue that Henry Orient is more or less a hack, and although Sellers plays his usual skillful physical shenanigans, I found that the pianist on the soundtrack played the piano quite well, despite the ridiculous material. There's a hilarious, gushing theme that is edited into almost every scene that Henry is in. His mannerisms during the piano concerto and the ostentatious buffoonery from scene to scene show Sellers in his element, and he never misses the chance to exploit the full range of available comedic ingredients in any moment to the utmost. Every time I watch him cross his arms to play two notes four octaves apart at the end of the concerto, and he does the little wiggle of the finger as if he's depressing the string on a violin to get vibrato out of it, I let out a belly laugh. I never get tired of that.

    The two protagonists (or rather, Sellers's perceived antagonists) are played with mesmerising enthusiasm by the two adolescent leads. Tippy Walker is particularly radiant in this movie as the talented, attention-starved, sensitive, hyperkinetic Val, who develops a crush on Henry. Her pixie features, infectious retainer-filled smile, and wide-eyed, bubblegummy girlishness shine on, and share honors with Sellers for scene-steal appeal. She plays off the hurt, pouty ingenue angle beautifully too. Her counterpart, Merrie Spaeth, is no slouch either, although she had the disadvantage here of having the 'straight man' role. No matter! They don't compete for space at all (the scene-stealing qualities of Ms Walker notwithstanding),and they get equal attention and equally precocious dialogue, with the simpatico theme being so stressed as to tell us purposely that they are equal partners through and through.

    Ultimately the film leaves me feeling bittersweet, partially through nostalgia--Hill's 1963 NYC is beautiful--but also because the movie has that theme of fleeting innocence in the face of oncoming adolescent desire. George Roy Hill's great movies have a sparkle to them, and this qualifies as one of the quieter greats. In any case, as time buries this one, those halcyon days of youth go with it, but the legacies of Sellers and Hill should mark it for at least cult-status immortality, which by proxy should give the girls their deserved legacy too.
    gregorybnyc

    Paula Prentiss, Paula Prentiss, Paula Prentiss

    I loved this hilarious movie as a teenager and own the video of it

    as an adult. The story of two young girls who sweetly stalk a

    concert pianist, played with insane panache by Peter Sellars, is

    one of the nicest coming-of-age movies of that era. Set in New

    York, her is a surprisingly sophisticated and gentle comedy you'll

    enjoy over and over again.

    Sellars's clueless, womanizing virtuoso never strikes a false

    comic note. He's wildly inventive, never more so than in his

    scenes with the gorgeous Paula Prentiss as the way-too-nervous

    object of his lust. Playing a married woman who is flattered by his

    attentions, Prentiss manages to look glamorous and on the verse

    of a nervous breakdown all at once. Why this spectacularly gifted

    comic actress didn't make it to the top is a mystery to me.

    Angela Lansbury's socialite bitch of a mother is another one of her

    classic nasty lady roles. Nobody can look down her nose with the

    authority of Lansbury. Yes she got found acceptance and respect

    on Broadway and on television, but she was a first-rate character

    actress on screen too.

    Tom Bosley is sympathetic as Tippy Walker's father and Phyllis

    Thaxter exudes motherly warmth as Mary Spaeth's divorced Mom.

    The Walker and Spaeth should have had futures as screen

    actors. Alas, it was not to be. But they are delightful as the young

    girls on the verse of womanhood, with a terrific crush on an

    undeserving idol.

    Nora and Nunnelly Johnson's script (he of course, a Hollywood

    legend) wrote a sharp, funny and observant screenplay that is

    respectful of teenagers and the adults. George Roy Hill is not a

    great director, but when given good material, he rises to the

    occasion as he does here. A real gem.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The character of Henry Orient was inspired by real-life concert pianist Oscar Levant. Nora Johnson, who wrote the novel on which the movie was based (and co-wrote the screenplay with her father, Nunnally Johnson), said that she and a friend had a crush on the rather homely Levant when they were schoolgirls.
    • Gaffes
      When Mrs. Gilbert pours Mr. Boyd a drink at her home, the "scotch" foams slightly. Real booze doesn't do that; its ubiquitous stand-in, cold tea, does.
    • Citations

      [Val induces a fantasy about Gil's divorced parents]

      Val Boyd: Think your Dad will ever come back?

      Marian Gilbert: Why can he? He's married and has a couple of kids.

      Val Boyd: But how do you know he's happy?

      Marian Gilbert: He's crazy about her.

      Val Boyd: I know, but just suppose he suddenly realized his second marriage was a tragic mistake. His eyes are opened at last, and he knows now that your mother is the only woman he's ever loved in his whole life.

      Marian Gilbert: I don't think there's much chance of that.

      Val Boyd: So there's nothing to do but tell her the truth... the scond wife I mean. He's simply got to go back to the only woman he's loved in his whole life. Good-bye, second wife.

      Marian Gilbert: You think that's really possible?

      Val Boyd: Well, he's got no other choice. He can't go living a lie, can he? He's got to go back to his one true love.

      Marian Gilbert: Maybe, during Christmas.

      Val Boyd: Chirstmas Eve maybe.

      Marian Gilbert: About 6:00.

      Val Boyd: You and your mother are all alone trimming the tree, when suddenly the doorbell rings.

      Marian Gilbert: I'd be the one to go and answer it.

      Val Boyd: But you'd be wondering 'who on earth it could be,' because you weren't expectign anyone. He'd open the door, and he'd be standig there simply loaded with presents. And before you could say anything, he'd say, 'Shhhh,' because he wants to surprise your mother. At first, he'd give you a big hugh, just as tight as he could.

      Marian Gilbert: And them Mom would come down wondering who it was, beause she'd be wondering why she didn't hear anybody say anything.

      Val Boyd: And for a long time, they'd just stand there and stare at each other not saying anything.

      Marian Gilbert: They wouldn't have to.

      Val Boyd: [sighing mid-sentence] And then he'd take her in his arms, and rain kisses on her upturned face, and they'd just... love each other to death right there at the front door.

    • Crédits fous
      introducing MERRIE SPAETH as "Gil" TIPPY WALKER as "Val"
    • Connexions
      Featured in L'univers du rire (1982)
    • Bandes originales
      Henry Orient Concerto
      Music by Ken Lauber (as Kenneth Lauber)

      Conducted and orchestrated by Ken Lauber (uncredited)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The World of Henry Orient?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 20 mars 1964 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Italien
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • La vie privée d'Henry Orient
    • Lieux de tournage
      • The Brearly School, 610 E. 83rd Street, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(School bus drop-off at end of opening credits)
    • Société de production
      • Pan Arts
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 46 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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