Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA young man in the jungles of Venezuela meets a strange girl of the forest and falls in love with her.A young man in the jungles of Venezuela meets a strange girl of the forest and falls in love with her.A young man in the jungles of Venezuela meets a strange girl of the forest and falls in love with her.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
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ANTHONY PERKINS, AUDREY HEBURN and LEE J. COBB are never able to flesh out their characters. Hepburn seems oddly miscast in a role requiring very little of her talent. Perkins does slightly better but again is hampered by a weak role that tries to give him a few heroics but fails to ignite any sparks with Hepburn or any of his co-players. Lee J. Cobb has the most substantial character to play and does it well enough.
The whole film seems like a low point in the careers of all involved despite gorgeous Technicolor photography and an interesting background score. No wonder the public stayed away.
The foolish ending with Perkins and Hepburn voicing some tired clichés about finding love is cringe-worthy.
Summing up: A true misfire for all concerned.
Rima shows up as a shadowy figure about a half-hour into the film and doesn't speak until about ten minutes later. Leave it to Hepburn to exhibit any sort of conviction in such an impossible role. Looking ethereal if a little too styled and coiffed (even without Givenchy) and sounding entirely too Euro-cosmopolitan, she still exudes Rima's innocence while discovering the darker secrets of her past. The rest of the cast is not as lucky. Anthony Perkins, a year away from "Psycho", is irritatingly unctuous as Abel when he is not simply confounded by his heroic role. His low point has to be the ridiculous scene when he sings a love song to Rima as he strums his guitar. And where exactly did the guitar come from? Familiar character actors show up in the oddest roles. Lee J. Cobb, heavily made up as a cross between Uncle Jesse Duke and Santa Claus, turns in yet another ham-fisted performance as Nuflo, and Henry Silva is cast as another exotic as the ultimately nefarious tribal leader. Nehemiah Persoff has a small bit at the beginning as a greedy trader, while Sessue Hayakawa, of all people, has a mostly silent role as the tribal leader. Adding to the artifice is the obvious use of soundstages and matte shots to replicate the jungle, and the ending is pure Hollywood sappiness. This is a curio for Hepburn fans.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesOne of the first films (if not the first) to be shot using Panavision's Auto Panatar lenses that eliminated what was called "anamorphic mumps" in the wide-screen CinemaScope process where in close-ups an actor's face would widen horizontally. This innovation won Panavision its first Academy Award. Each lens cost $11,000 ($94,000 in 2017).
- GaffesSouth American Indians having driven Rima up a tall tree set it on fire and flames are seen in the tree tops but only the tree and brush at its base burns, not the rest of the forest.
- Citations
Abel: [sings to Rima] They say that love is a fragile thing, a linnet's wing / a magic ring made of gold / They say that love is a bird in flight, a gleam of light / a star too bright to behold / Tell me, tell me, tell me, o child of the moon / Is it as they say? Must love slip away too soon? / Tell me, Rima, where are the meadows of June? / Speaking with her eyes, softly she replies: / I know a place where green mansions are, as near or far / As any star up above / And in this land of eternal spring, where hummingbirds can learn to sing / Green grow the mansions of love.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Forecast (1945)
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- La flor que no murió
- Lieux de tournage
- Kaieteur Falls, Guyane(Background for opening credits)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 3 288 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée
- 1h 44min(104 min)
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1