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Le monde, la chair et le diable

Titre original : The World, the Flesh and the Devil
  • 1959
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
3,8 k
MA NOTE
Le monde, la chair et le diable (1959)
Official Trailer
Lire trailer2:13
1 Video
50 photos
DrameRomanceScience-fictionDrame psychologiqueScience-fiction dystopique

Un mineur pris au piège d'un effondrement refait surface et, en découvrant que l'humanité a été anéantie par un holocauste nucléaire, il part à la recherche d'autres survivants.Un mineur pris au piège d'un effondrement refait surface et, en découvrant que l'humanité a été anéantie par un holocauste nucléaire, il part à la recherche d'autres survivants.Un mineur pris au piège d'un effondrement refait surface et, en découvrant que l'humanité a été anéantie par un holocauste nucléaire, il part à la recherche d'autres survivants.

  • Réalisation
    • Ranald MacDougall
  • Scénario
    • Ranald MacDougall
    • Ferdinand Reyher
    • M.P. Shiel
  • Casting principal
    • Harry Belafonte
    • Inger Stevens
    • Mel Ferrer
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    3,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Ranald MacDougall
    • Scénario
      • Ranald MacDougall
      • Ferdinand Reyher
      • M.P. Shiel
    • Casting principal
      • Harry Belafonte
      • Inger Stevens
      • Mel Ferrer
    • 66avis d'utilisateurs
    • 51avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    The World, The Flesh and The Devil
    Trailer 2:13
    The World, The Flesh and The Devil

    Photos50

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 45
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    Rôles principaux3

    Modifier
    Harry Belafonte
    Harry Belafonte
    • Ralph Burton
    Inger Stevens
    Inger Stevens
    • Sarah Crandall
    Mel Ferrer
    Mel Ferrer
    • Benson Thacker
    • Réalisation
      • Ranald MacDougall
    • Scénario
      • Ranald MacDougall
      • Ferdinand Reyher
      • M.P. Shiel
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs66

    6,83.7K
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    Avis à la une

    7bkoganbing

    What Kind Of Culture Will They Establish?

    Harry Belafonte is a coal miner trapped in a cave-in. He hears the drilling of the rescue crew which abruptly stops. Belafonte claws his own way to the surface and finds everything abandoned. I mean really abandoned. An Armageddon has occurred when some nation decided to forego the bomb and all that destruction and just use the radioactive byproducts. It gets out of control and wipes out everybody.

    Well, almost everybody. Harry hot wires a car and travels to New York City in search of life in the largest population center. After a while he finds it in Inger Stevens. It looks like another Adam and Eve ready to begin again when Mel Ferrer also shows up. By that time Belafonte has established some kind of contact with some unknown foreign survivors somewhere in the post apocalypse world?

    Of course with two men, two races, and only one woman, things start to look like business as usual for mankind. I was reminded of Neil Patrick Harris's line from Starship Troopers about how we're in it for the species. Will all three of them and anyone else they contact decide we're in it for the species in The World, the Flesh and the Devil?

    Director Ranald McDougall got three good performances out of his small cast. The World, The Flesh And The Devil does ask some thought provoking questions as to whether man is capable of screwing up once again. What kind of culture will they establish and will a Supreme Creator/Deity need to intervene?
    7ksf-2

    end of the world story... good!

    A 32 year old Harry Belafonte is Ralph Burton, survivor of a nuclear holocaust, where humanity has been wiped out. we watch the inter-racial relations in a post-apocalypse world with one woman and two men left alive. Co-stars Mel Ferrer and Inger Stevens. For a long time, Burton runs around New York, trying to find other survivors. We experience the echoes and loneliness that he feels. So many empty streets, papers blowing around. It's forty minutes in before Ralph and Sarah even meet up. Stevens would die real young at 35, by suicide. Theoretically, after several initial attempts. Ferrer had been married to Audrey Hepburn at one point. Directed by Ranald MacDougall, who had directed and written screenplays for some AMAZING films... mildred pierce, we're no angels, but sadly, MacDougall died quite young at 58, of a heart attack, according to wikipedia. He had been president of the Writers Guild. Story by Matthew Phipps Shiel. Pretty good stuff. Race relations were still a pretty big deal in the 1950s, and in some places, they still are a pretty big deal. In so many areas, we take one step forward and two steps back. Film is good! end of the world story, with some racial lessons thrown in.
    8Skragg

    Very well-made drama

    I've seen many actors play the "last man on earth," and NO ONE ever played the part as believably as Harry Belafonte. There's his reaction when he's listening to those radio messages ; his shouting at the whole world to come back (I'm paraphrasing this) : "Where did you all go? What did I do?" ; his trying to live alone with the mannequins ; singing to himself ; his reaction when he finds out there's someone else ; his line when Mel Ferrer threatens him : "Is this World War IV ?" And Inger Stevens was extremely good in it, including her big argument with him, telling him she can live alone, with its almost funny little faux pas : "I'm free, white and 21." And Mel Ferrer, whose character (if I'm correct) was more arrogant in a GENERAL way than he was a bigot, seemed very right for that part. People have complained about the faulty science and similar things, but to me, those things pale alongside the actors and characters. One science fiction guidebook had a great line about this "last three people on earth" movie : "Well, at least one of them can sing."
    7brujay-1

    Belafonte on Ferrer's possible racial bias: No, the only thing he has against me is that I'm younger than he is. I can understand that.

    In the '50s the nuclear holocaust was never far from the popular imagination. This picture is one of many fictional efforts to show what might have happened.

    By being trapped in a Pennsylvania mine, Belafonte is one of the very few people on earth (as far as we know from the film, only three) to escape annihilation. He manages to get out of the mine on his own (the first of many plot contrivances), goes to New York City and finds it depopulated, except for Inger Stevens, who eventually comes out of hiding. It's mostly a picture about loneliness. As much as we may resent the jostling masses in our midst, what if they were gone?

    Actually, it spurs a fantasy, too. Imagine that you had the pickings of all of New York to yourself, and imagine that you were a handyman who could rig up generators and the like, and imagine that you found a comely woman to keep you company. Could be worse.

    But we are asked to ignore too much in the picture, the fact that only one person in all of the city survived, the fact that not a single rotting body is shown on the streets, the fact that the shortwave transmissions Belafonte regularly monitors show that the rest of the world is empty, too (except, eventually, for Mel Ferrer, who was sailing during the nuclear blasts)-- all a bit too much. The film tries too hard to be an allegory when it should have been good, logical science fantasy.

    Nevertheless, TWTF&TD is well worth a watch.
    5macabro357

    The black...the white...and the blond...

    Harry Belafonte emerges from a mine after an accident and discovers that the world is deserted, except for Inger Stevens and Mel Ferrer.

    Some kind of nuclear war has taken place and there are few survivors. No dead bodies, no rotting corpses. No physical body traces of any kind.

    Some people have said that Ferrer played a bigot in this film, but I didn't see much of that at all since the main conflict between Belafonte and Ferrer is based more on lust than anything else.

    But since this is 1959, we can't show interracial love onscreen because many parts of the country would wind up banning the film, so MGM and Belafonte keep the lust toned down and mostly implied. The viewer should just look at it in the context of the times that it was made in, and not try to apply 2003 standards to something filmed over 40 years ago.

    The deserted lower Manhattan streets including Times Square look pretty cool. They must have filmed them on an early Sunday morning in order to keep any traffic disruption to a minimum.

    And the ending resorts to a preachy "The Beginning" stamped across the screen as the three of them walk down a deserted Manhattan street. I guess only goodwill comes next, huh?

    If you want to see a better "end of the world" flick from the same period, then check out the Arch Oboler's rarely-seen FIVE (1951) or Stanley Kramer's ON THE BEACH, made during the same year as this one. I thought they were done better.

    5 out of 10 for clearing out New York in time.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      To film the striking images of a deserted New York City, the cast and crew had to start filming at dawn in order to capture the city before the early morning rush. This gave them no more than an hour or two per day in which to film the sequence.
    • Gaffes
      Although only three people are left alive in New York City after an atomic event, there is not even one dead body. Even an evacuation could not have been this complete in one of the most populated and congested cities in the world. This is also noticeable in the empty turned-over buses and the fact that there is not even a dead dog or cat to be seen. However, on the tape at the radio station, the radio announcer says that New York had been completely evacuated so there wouldn't be any bodies.
    • Citations

      Benson Thacker: I have nothing against negroes, Ralph.

      Ralph Burton: That's white of you.

    • Crédits fous
      As the film's final credits cut-in, the film states "The Beginning" rather than "The End."
    • Connexions
      Featured in Out of this World Super Shock Show (2007)
    • Bandes originales
      I Don't Like It Here
      (uncredited)

      Written by Harry Belafonte and Ranald MacDougall

      Sung by Harry Belafonte

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    FAQ22

    • How long is The World, the Flesh and the Devil?Alimenté par Alexa
    • What is 'The World, the Flesh and the Devil' about?
    • Is 'The World, the Flesh and the Devil' based on a book?
    • Where have all the dead bodies gone?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 1 mai 1959 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Mundo, carne y deseo
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Manhattan, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis
    • Sociétés de production
      • Sol C. Siegel Productions
      • HarBel Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 1 659 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 35min(95 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Mixage
      • 4-Track Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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