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Le Temps d'aimer et le Temps de mourir

Titre original : A Time to Love and a Time to Die
  • 1958
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 12min
NOTE IMDb
7,6/10
3,9 k
MA NOTE
John Gavin and Liselotte Pulver in Le Temps d'aimer et le Temps de mourir (1958)
On the Russian front in 1944 German Private Ernst Graeber receives a leave and visits his family in Germany but Germany isn't the same country he left behind.
Lire trailer2:46
1 Video
25 photos
DrameGuerreRomance

Sur le front russe en 1944, un soldat allemand, Ernst Graeber, bénéficie d'une permission et rend visite à sa famille en Allemagne, mais le pays n'est pas celui qu'il a laissé.Sur le front russe en 1944, un soldat allemand, Ernst Graeber, bénéficie d'une permission et rend visite à sa famille en Allemagne, mais le pays n'est pas celui qu'il a laissé.Sur le front russe en 1944, un soldat allemand, Ernst Graeber, bénéficie d'une permission et rend visite à sa famille en Allemagne, mais le pays n'est pas celui qu'il a laissé.

  • Réalisation
    • Douglas Sirk
  • Scénario
    • Orin Jannings
    • Erich Maria Remarque
  • Casting principal
    • John Gavin
    • Liselotte Pulver
    • Jock Mahoney
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,6/10
    3,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Scénario
      • Orin Jannings
      • Erich Maria Remarque
    • Casting principal
      • John Gavin
      • Liselotte Pulver
      • Jock Mahoney
    • 27avis d'utilisateurs
    • 29avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 1 victoire et 3 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:46
    Trailer

    Photos25

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    Rôles principaux30

    Modifier
    John Gavin
    John Gavin
    • Ernst Graeber
    Liselotte Pulver
    Liselotte Pulver
    • Elizabeth Kruse
    • (as Lilo Pulver)
    Jock Mahoney
    Jock Mahoney
    • Immerman
    Don DeFore
    Don DeFore
    • Boettcher
    Keenan Wynn
    Keenan Wynn
    • Reuter
    Erich Maria Remarque
    Erich Maria Remarque
    • Professor Pohlmann
    Dieter Borsche
    Dieter Borsche
    • Captain Rahe
    Barbara Rütting
    Barbara Rütting
    • Woman Guerrilla
    Thayer David
    Thayer David
    • Oscar Binding
    Charles Regnier
    Charles Regnier
    • Joseph
    Dorothea Wieck
    Dorothea Wieck
    • Frau Lieser
    Kurt Meisel
    Kurt Meisel
    • Heini
    Agnes Windeck
    Agnes Windeck
    • Frau Witte
    Clancy Cooper
    Clancy Cooper
    • Sauer
    John Van Dreelen
    John Van Dreelen
    • Political Officer
    Klaus Kinski
    Klaus Kinski
    • Gestapo Lieutenant
    Alice Treff
    Alice Treff
    • Frau Langer
    Alexander Engel
    • Mad Air Raid Warden
    • Réalisation
      • Douglas Sirk
    • Scénario
      • Orin Jannings
      • Erich Maria Remarque
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs27

    7,63.9K
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    Avis à la une

    9sbox

    A Simple Soldier

    This film, beautifully shot, is the tale of a simple soldier falling in love, during trying times. The soldier is German. The struggle is World War II. The setting is Berlin.

    1958 was surely a hard year to make such a film. In fact, this film could not be made today. However, this love story was made, with the enemy at the focus. Of course, enemy never crossses the viewer's mind. We are with the protaganist throughout the movie.

    In short, this is an important film of significant value. Not because it is about history, but because it is about the redeeming quality of humanity, even if displayed in the setting of our onetime enemy.
    7jandesimpson

    A strange marriage of warfilm and Hollywood romanticism

    The films of Douglas Sirk have been variously described as "masterpieces" and "tosh". I think the answer lies somewhere in between. Certainly the series he made at the peak of his career for Universal International in the 'fifties are romantic melodramas of a superior kind. Although photographed in gaudy chocolate-box colours with soundtracks overladen with scores drenched in aural syrup and with sometimes the most outlandish of plots - "Magnificant Obsession" for instance - they have, beneath their surface glitter, a hard edged observation of an affluent American society struggling to come to grips with moral values - "All that Heaven Allows" and "Imitation of Life" are particularly good examples. But, interesting as these film are, it is the odd man out, a film set not in America at all but in Germany and the eastern front in the closing stages of the Second World War, "A Time to Love and a Time to Die", that, in spite of its not inconsiderable unevenness, could well be his most lasting legacy. Its most striking feature is that, notwithstanding its vastly different territory, it remains a Sirk film stylistically. The director almost seems to be signing his signature with the shot of pink blossom against the opening and closing credits. Although the outer sections of a German unit under shellfire on the eastern front are the very stuff of warscape recreation at their near best, it is the long central passage where the young German soldier - surprisingly well played by John Gavin - returns on leave to his heavily bombed town, that is the most Sirkian. Here, between devastating airaids, the hero forms an idyllic romantic attachment to a vaguely remembered friend from childhood followed by a whirlwind courtship. Amazingly for the last night of his leave the couple find, amidst all the devastation, an untouched house for the consumation of their marriage, where they are tended by a kindly frau who brings them a bottle of wine from the cellar. At this point the airaid is only glimpsed through the window. At an earlier point in the leave the couple dine in an unbelievably stylish restaurant, although here at least Sirk has the honesty to interrupt the proceedings with a pretty devastating direct hit which leaves one diner running is a sea of flames. If I have reservations about some of the romantic trappings of the scenes in Germany, I have none about the intense realism of the scenes on the eastern front. Would that the film was all on this level.
    10The_Ringo_Kid

    An excellent film that is really not just a war film nor just a romance film.

    I'm not one to watch really any film that seems to have romance in it set during war. However, the first time I watched this movie, I was really amazed at how well it was done as well as the most excellent cast for a movie and the realism that it showed. Also, I do not care for films with much romancing in it however, I liked this film and how the romance between a German Soldier and some Fraulein; was shown.

    Young German soldier returns to a devastated hometown on leave from the Eastern Front. First he tries to locate his family after discovering their home was destroyed on some bombing raid. Whilst looking for family, he runs into an old professor of his as well as his daughter. During his time on leave, he falls in love with this girl and they eventually get married. Also, the professor had been arrested for some reason and was shucked away to some interrogation center - which really was a Concentration Camp. Sometime later in the movie, this soldier discovers the professors fate.

    During his leave, this soldier befriends and teams up with another soldier--who is also looking for a loved one. Don DeFore excellently plays that soldier. Also in the film in memorable roles include: Keenan Wynn as a rich German Corporal, Jock Mahoney as Steinbrenner, a "crack" machine-gunner who is in Gavin's (Graebers) platoon, as well as a very young Dana "Jim" Hutton, as a young German soldier in Graebers platoon.

    I do not want to spoil what happens at the end of this movie but will say that Graeber gets sent back to his platoon somewhere on the Eastern Front.

    This movie is so good that it really deserves to be released on DVD. It is in color and the sound is excellent.
    kullthevalusian

    Germans were humans too.....

    ...in this time of generalizations and terminally low attention spans (not to say inexistent historical memory) people who have been the hollywoodesque cartoonish image of all 1930/40s Germans to be goose-stepping-order-barking-black-uniformed-ss-genocidal-murders could have their insight skills sharpened a bit more by this movie directed by Detlef Sierck (his real name). Actually lots of people in the 3rd Reich must have felt like Sierck himself, who obviously loved his fatherland but hated the Nazis and the way they tried to rape and pervert the very idea of the 'german nation' to their twisted ends...and those who were not lucky enough to expatriate like he did would have lived like the protagonists of this drama, suffering through an unwanted war having to witness both the cruelty of the regime AND the devastations from the war that the regime forced upon its people (the political prisoners forced to clear rubble from the air raids is a TELLING scene indeed!). The only thing that upset me a bit was the censorship forced on the filmmaker which in several scenes has to resort to silly 'visual tricks' to 'avoid' showing swastikas (a tube blocking our sight over the Military Police gorget in one of the first scenes, the queer angle at which a NSDAP member crosses our p.o.v. in the restaurant scene so we can't see the front of his armband)....now think a bit...if a catastrophe strikes and leaves this movie the ONLY proof of semi-historical value regarding WW2 the historians of the future will be oblivious of the centrepiece of nazi imagery...how STUPID is that???

    Down with censorship I say, either sexual, political, intellectual et al...
    7TheLittleSongbird

    All love on the western front

    While not liking every film Douglas Sirk did (my recent viewing of 'Magnificent Obsession' for example really underwhelmed me, sorry to anybody who disagrees and they undoubtedly exist), he was an interesting director and one of the most interesting when it came to melodramas which he specialised in. His melodramas are not for all tastes definitely, with some working much better than others, but at his best (i.e. 'Imitation of Life') his films were brilliant.

    'A Time to Love and a Time to Die', a title that some people are going to love and others are going to hate (even if it is an over-the-top one it is generally a poetic one in my view and pretty much sums up what the film is about), may not be one of Sirk's best. Having said that, while it is not perfect by any stretch, it is one of his most interesting with the subject matter for example and also one of his most underrated and deserving of more credit than it does.

    It isn't without problems in my view. It does run a little too long and it makes the film occasionally drawn out, the romance occasionally slows things down a bit. Some of the dialogue is rather soapy and could have had more punch, at least it is not as unintentionally camp or as sentiment-heavy as some of Sirk's other films.

    Did feel generally that debuting John Gavin, once you try to get over the fact that he is not remotely believable as a German, didn't do too badly a job, but inexperience does show initially where he doesn't always look comfortable.

    Mostly he plays his role with authority and pathos and Liselotte Pulver is both fetching and affecting as his love interest. Their chemistry is charming. Keenan Wynn and Charles Regnier are memorable in support, the whole cast in fact give everything they've got and make characters that sound on paper cliched and potentially sketchy interesting and certainly more plausible than those in other Sirk films, the conflict having tension too. 'A Time to Love and a Time to Die' looks great and is especially lavishly and not too glossily shot. Miklos Rozsa's score is sweeping and haunting.

    Sirk's direction has the sensitivity and passion that was missing in 'Magnificent Obsession' and the war scenes are staged very powerfully without being cluttered. While the script is not perfect it is sincere on the whole and as said it is not camp and sentimental. Furthermore, 'A Time to Love and a Time to Die' is an emotionally powerful film without being manipulative or over-sentimentalised, the war scenes are harrowing and poignant. The ending is shocking and really did appreciate that it didn't go the too pat route like other Sirk films did.

    Overall, interesting and powerful film that deserves more credit than it does. 7/10

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    Romance

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The film was banned in Israel and the Soviet Union because of its uncommon, compassionate portrayal of Germans during WWII.
    • Gaffes
      Keenan Wynn uses pounds instead of kilos to describe Don DeFore's wife's weight. Later Don DeFore also uses pounds instead of kilos when he mentions his wife having lost weight since he last saw her.
    • Citations

      Ernst Graeber: You're more lovely every time I see you. Only this time, you look like the next time.

    • Crédits fous
      Actor Karl Ludwig Lindt is credited in opening credits but not in the closing credits.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Le 5ème commando (1971)
    • Bandes originales
      A TIME TO LOVE
      (uncredited)

      Music by Miklós Rózsa

      Lyrics by Charles Henderson

      Performed by uncredited blonde in cabaret scene

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    FAQ18

    • How long is A Time to Love and a Time to Die?Alimenté par Alexa
    • Midwest Premiere Happened When & Where?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 16 janvier 1959 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
      • Russe
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • A Time to Love and a Time to Die
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Hopfenohe, Grafenwöhr, Bavaria, Allemagne(Russian village in ruins)
    • Société de production
      • Universal International Pictures (UI)
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 50 623 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 12min(132 min)
    • Mixage
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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