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Le ballet du désir

Titre original : Screaming Mimi
  • 1958
  • Approved
  • 1h 19min
NOTE IMDb
5,8/10
851
MA NOTE
Anita Ekberg in Le ballet du désir (1958)
Film NoirDramaThriller

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueVirginia Wilson saw a man get shot right after he tried to kill her, so she goes to psychiatrist Dr. Greenwood. He falls in love with her and takes over her life, but she insists on continui... Tout lireVirginia Wilson saw a man get shot right after he tried to kill her, so she goes to psychiatrist Dr. Greenwood. He falls in love with her and takes over her life, but she insists on continuing her career as a stripper.Virginia Wilson saw a man get shot right after he tried to kill her, so she goes to psychiatrist Dr. Greenwood. He falls in love with her and takes over her life, but she insists on continuing her career as a stripper.

  • Réalisation
    • Gerd Oswald
  • Scénario
    • Robert Blees
    • Fredric Brown
  • Casting principal
    • Anita Ekberg
    • Philip Carey
    • Gypsy Rose Lee
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    5,8/10
    851
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Gerd Oswald
    • Scénario
      • Robert Blees
      • Fredric Brown
    • Casting principal
      • Anita Ekberg
      • Philip Carey
      • Gypsy Rose Lee
    • 38avis d'utilisateurs
    • 22avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Rôles principaux54

    Modifier
    Anita Ekberg
    Anita Ekberg
    • Virginia Wilson aka Yolanda Lang
    Philip Carey
    Philip Carey
    • Bill Sweeney
    • (as Phil Carey)
    Gypsy Rose Lee
    Gypsy Rose Lee
    • Joann 'Gypsy' Masters
    Harry Townes
    Harry Townes
    • Dr. Greenwood aka Bill Green
    Linda Cherney
    • Ketti
    Romney Brent
    Romney Brent
    • Charlie Weston
    Red Norvo
    Red Norvo
    • Red Yost
    • (as The Red Norvo Trio)
    Red Norvo Trio
    • Red Norvo Trio
    Al Bain
    Al Bain
    • Newspaper Vendor
    • (non crédité)
    Steve Benton
    • Police Officer
    • (non crédité)
    George Blagoi
    George Blagoi
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (non crédité)
    George Boyce
    • Waiter
    • (non crédité)
    Paul E. Burns
    Paul E. Burns
    • McGuffin
    • (non crédité)
    John Cason
    John Cason
    • Herb
    • (non crédité)
    G. Pat Collins
    G. Pat Collins
    • Detective Guerney
    • (non crédité)
    Heinie Conklin
    Heinie Conklin
    • News Vendor
    • (non crédité)
    Jeanne Cooper
    Jeanne Cooper
    • Lola Lake in Photo
    • (non crédité)
    Dennis Cross
    • Plainclothesman
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Gerd Oswald
    • Scénario
      • Robert Blees
      • Fredric Brown
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs38

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    Avis à la une

    dougdoepke

    A Towne Tour-de-Force

    How did I miss this drive-in special back in 1958 when I hit those passion pits weekly. Yeah, it's lurid to the max, but it's also got some kinky touches carefully hidden during the Age of Ike when sex was summed up by Debbie and Eddie. Note the not-so-subtle innuendo that Lee's character has more interest in the cigarette girl than in handsome stud Carey. And what is that s&m chain doing on Ekberg's wrists as she writhes around during her so-called stage act, which we get to see not once but twice as though we may not have believed it the first time around. Then too, what's with Towne's kinky doctor who can't seem to decide just which of Ekberg's startling features he's most interested in. And finally, how did this bit of bizzaro escape the confines of a respectable studio, Columbia, and the co-producing team of Brown and Fellows. Say what you will, despite the sleaze, this low-budget piece of 50's movie-making has more inherent interest than 90% of its bigger contemporaries.

    I expect cult director Gerd Oswald is responsible for taking up the challenge and turning what could have been a routine crime drama into a genuine curiosity piece. Just watch his direction of the movie's centerpiece, and I don't mean Ekberg's Amazonian proportions-- in fact, her best scenes are those standing around looking comatose. No, this is familiar character actor Harry Towne's masterpiece. He was always good at slightly off-center characters, but here he out-does himself, delivering a masterfully kinky performance that really defies description. I've seen nothing quite like it in years of movie watching. Just what is going on inside those many tormented expressions. Watch the scene where he stands outside the colloquy between Carey and Ekberg when she must decide where her allegiance lies. Note the subtle array of emotions that react to what is being said. He could have just stood there and picked up his paycheck, but he didn't. Instead he created one of the more interesting obsessions to appear on the big screen in some time. I hope there's a special place in Hollywood heaven for unsung actors like Towne who deliver so much and get back so little. Anyhow the movie remains an interesting piece of esoterica, even if the title likely drove away more people than it brought in.
    5hitchcockthelegend

    Miss Sweden and Scooby Doo.

    Screaming Mimi is directed by Gerd Oswald and adapted to screenplay by Robert Bless from the novel written by Fredric Brown. It stars Anita Ekberg, Phillip Carey, Gypsy Rose Lee and Harry Townes. Music is by Mischa Bakaleinikoff and cinematography by Burnett Guffey.

    A woman becomes mentally unbalanced after a failed knife attack by a psychotic and has to spend time in a sanatorium. Whilst there she becomes the object of her psychiatrist obsessions.

    Great Dame With A Great Dane!

    A curio psychological film noir with horror leanings, Screaming Mimi is just a tad too nutty for its own good. It's also weighed down by a non performance from Ekberg, who you find is purely in the piece to tantalise via her voluptuous body, and also by a colourless performance by Carey. Yet it's a fascinating movie, a sort of car crash piece of cinema that you can't take your eyes away from!

    Psycho Schematic.

    It's all very lurid, sexy and bonkers, the sort of picture where alcoholic accompaniments would most likely improve the viewing experience tenfold. The characters inhabiting this world are a strange bunch, which is fun, whilst when you got entertainment establishments called Gay "N" Frisky and El Madhouse, you just know we are trawling through an off kilter city of sin and carnal desires. Unfortunately Oswald and Bless seem confused about what to do with all the provocative possibilities, rendering the narrative as confused and at times lifeless.

    Rose Lee is great though as she flits between manipulator and sultry proprietor, as is Townes, who underpins the whiff of mania running through the pics veins. Guffey and Bakaleinikoff offer up solid tech work, and the jazzy strains provided by Red Norvo are most welcome. It really should have been a great movie though, such promise in story and set-ups, but sadly it ends up as a faux Freudian potboiler. 5/10
    carolynpaetow

    Scintillating Anita

    Bodacious, gloriously-maned Ekberg and her magnificent dog Devil (dubbed a great dame and a Great Dane)are the goodies in this fifties pop-psych piece with its is-she/isn't-she-crazy scenario. Looking like a gorgeous amazonian goddess (purportedly only 5'7" without heels), the mighty Ekberg makes all the human males in her orbit look mousy and malleable as she sashays from loony bin to gin den, her emotions and motivations as mysterious as the titular statuette around which it all revolves. The movie has an offbeat tone and texture and a tendency to unbalance the viewer with the unexpected:

    asylum-escapee Ekberg doing her shackled-slave dance routine in El Madhouse nightclub; Gypsy Rose Lee putting the blame on Mame in an awkward, abortive fringe-dress shimmy; the famed stripster's shacked-up status with a cute little hipster. Fans of such censor-bound lesbian depictions should love this cinematic morsel, as will devotees of no-budget noir!
    7bmacv

    Late noir oddly recalls haunting cheapies of a decade earlier

    Somehow surmounting a creaky script rooted in some crackpot psychiatry, Screaming Mimi creates a somnambulistic, doom-laden mood that keeps you watching, bemused. And that's not easily explained.

    The director, Gerd Oswald, was one of the lesser expatriates from Germany, a pedestrian workman who the year before helmed Crime of Passion, a jejune noir starring Barbara Stanwyck, Sterling Hayden and Raymond Burr; it's hard to extinguish the sizzle in that kind of cast, but Oswald did a pretty fair job of it.

    In Screaming Mimi, he was saddled with the sort of rounded-up cast that doesn't incite box office stampedes. Anita Ekberg, - the Swedish bombshell with the storied bosom - proves oddly affecting in the numbed-out role she's called on to play. And society stripper Gypsy Rose Lee supplies a welcome bit of sass as proprietress of a nightclub called El Madhouse. But the male leads emerged from the La Brea tar pits of Hollywood anonymity. Philip Carey passes as sort of a poor man's Gary Merrill (that is to say, absolutely penniless), while Harry Townes, an even more faceless actor, makes up the roster.

    The plot? Ekberg, an exotic `dancer' who writhes about suggestively in an act with bondage overtones, is visiting her sculptor-stepbrother on the California coast when she's almost knifed by an escapee from a nearby asylum, whom the brother promptly shoots dead. In consequence, Ekberg winds up in the selfsame asylum where her smitten shrink (Townes) arranges her release and, in a development reminiscent of The Blue Angel or Sunset Boulevard, leaves his post to manage her career (as `Yolanda Lang').

    Then one night she's stabbed (again), but her vicious great dane wards off the attacker. Carey, a columnist whose curiously broad beat includes night clubs and crime in the night, grows intrigued, and stumbles onto the fact that both Ekberg and an earlier victim possessed strange statuettes called Screaming Mimis....

    It's a jumble, all right, but it manages to hold some interest. A large part of the credit must, by default, fall to top-notch cinematographer Burnett Guffey, by far the most talented factor in the movie. (He films one scene in the light from a flashing neon sign, alternating between a two-shot and daringly long intervals of pitch blackness.) The movie shares a restive, oneiric quality with certain low-budget noirs from a decade earlier, that again compelled more attention than they deserved. Go figure.
    5Doylenf

    Anita Ekberg out of her depth as a femme fatale...

    ANITA EKBERG almost sleepwalks through her role of a disturbed woman who somehow finds herself in the midst of murder and mayhem in SCREAMING MIMI ('58), the title referring to a statue that is some sort of fetish that turns up at every killing. Miss Ekberg is also a statue here, towering above most of the cast except for PHILIP CAREY, the handsome male lead who shares one thing in common with Anita--he's a lifeless presence.

    It's hard to get involved with these characters, especially since the story itself is a murky enough affair with some psycho-babble underpinnings in the convoluted storyline. On the plus side, the B&W photography of rainswept streets and dark shadows is impressive and the production aspects aren't too shabby.

    GYPSY ROSE LEE manages to be lively enough as a nightclub proprietress, but her shimmy to "Put the Blame On Mame" is a pretty sorry attempt at the song made famous by Rita Hayworth.

    The story starts out on a promising note, but quickly becomes an inept psychological thriller under Gerd Oswald's routine direction and moves toward a conclusion that lacks whatever punch it might have had because much of the disclosed information was already revealed.

    This is an easily forgotten item that capitalizes solely on ANITA EKBERG's physical charms which are an eyeful for male fans but her acting is sub-par for a story that requires much more from an actress than mere physical presence and an overly generous bosom. She was much more fortunate a few years later to find herself in "La Dolce Vita". As for PHILIP CAREY, his stone-faced approach to acting doesn't help matters here.

    Summing up: Hopelessly confusing and dull, when it should have been tight and suspenseful.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      A large part of the score, including the main title theme, is from Leonard Bernstein's score to Sur les quais... (1954).
    • Gaffes
      When Yolanda returns to performing, there is no scar nor sign of any wound on her midriff.
    • Citations

      Bill Sweeney: How tall are you, Yolanda?

      Virginia Wilson aka Yolanda Lange: With heels or without?

      Bill Sweeney: With anyone. Me, for instance.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Aweful Movies with Deadly Earnest: Screaming Mimi (1966)
    • Bandes originales
      Put the Blame on Mame
      (uncredited)

      Written by Doris Fisher and Allan Roberts

      Sung by Gypsy Rose Lee

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    FAQ

    • How long is Screaming Mimi?
      Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 8 août 1958 (Finlande)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Sites officiels
      • Streaming on "Mushroom Clouds and Romance" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Rob W" YouTube Channel
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • La locura de Mimí
    • Société de production
      • Sage Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 19 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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