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Ya, ya, mon général!

Titre original : Which Way to the Front?
  • 1970
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 36min
NOTE IMDb
4,6/10
1,5 k
MA NOTE
Jerry Lewis in Ya, ya, mon général! (1970)
ComédieGuerreBurlesque

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueBrendan Byers is rejected by the army and is unable to fight Hitler.Brendan Byers is rejected by the army and is unable to fight Hitler.Brendan Byers is rejected by the army and is unable to fight Hitler.

  • Réalisation
    • Jerry Lewis
  • Scénario
    • Gerald Gardner
    • Dee Caruso
    • Dick Miller
  • Casting principal
    • Jerry Lewis
    • Jan Murray
    • John Wood
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    4,6/10
    1,5 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jerry Lewis
    • Scénario
      • Gerald Gardner
      • Dee Caruso
      • Dick Miller
    • Casting principal
      • Jerry Lewis
      • Jan Murray
      • John Wood
    • 24avis d'utilisateurs
    • 8avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos51

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    + 44
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    Rôles principaux98

    Modifier
    Jerry Lewis
    Jerry Lewis
    • Brendan Byers III…
    Jan Murray
    • Sidney Everett Hackle
    John Wood
    John Wood
    • Finkel
    Steve Franken
    Steve Franken
    • Peter Bland
    Willie Davis
    • Lincoln
    Dack Rambo
    Dack Rambo
    • Terry Love
    Robert Middleton
    Robert Middleton
    • Colonico
    Kaye Ballard
    Kaye Ballard
    • Senora Messina
    Harold J. Stone
    Harold J. Stone
    • General Buck
    Paul Winchell
    Paul Winchell
    • Schroeder
    Sidney Miller
    Sidney Miller
    • Hitler
    Joe Besser
    Joe Besser
    • Dock Master
    Gary Crosby
    Gary Crosby
    • SS Guard
    Danny Dayton
    Danny Dayton
    • Man in Car
    Kathleen Freeman
    Kathleen Freeman
    • Bland's Mother
    Neil Hamilton
    Neil Hamilton
    • Chief of Staff
    Bob Layker
    • Sergeant
    Art Lewis
    Art Lewis
    • SS Guard
    • (as Artie Lewis)
    • Réalisation
      • Jerry Lewis
    • Scénario
      • Gerald Gardner
      • Dee Caruso
      • Dick Miller
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs24

    4,61.5K
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    Avis à la une

    9yesfan2012

    WB torpedo's a fine movie and a Great Director and Comedian

    Warner Brothers botched the distribution of this movie.Lewis made a movie that was more adult and topical in light of the times.The movie was more plot driven then many of his other directorial efforts.Lewis makes great use of the art of verbal humor,the scene of Byers trying to learn German from a phonograph record.He fractures and mocks the instructor and the sound of the German language.The scene of Byers/Kesselring's meeting with Hitler is one of Lewis's great masterworks of verbal comedy.Byers in disguise at a German checkpoint double talks the guard,then Byers/Kesselring gets the guard to hand him the password and then gives him the password back.Byers great line at the beginning of the movie that "every man has a right to be killed fighting for his country" is pure gold in the light of Vietnam.The comedy gems in the second half of this movie are fast and furious.I think it is the most verbal driven and more adult in it's comic pacing than most lewis vehicles.I think Lewis was going in new directions.WB killed any such future which we can only guess at seeing it all but derailed his career.
    4bkoganbing

    Jerry comes up short

    After Which Way To The Front was released Jerry Lewis ceased making films as a star attraction. With a few funny moments involved, there were more eggs laid at this film than a chicken farm on a slow day. It's not a horrible film but it's definitely not among Lewis's best and in the lower tier of his work.

    Jerry plays one of the richest men in the world who for some reason I can't fathom wants to serve in the ranks. So it rankles him that he's declared a 4-F something around the time that this film came out many young men would have sold their souls for. As he and three fellow 4-Fs Jan Murray, Steven Franken, and Dack Rambo sit and commiserate about their fate Lewis has a brainstorm. He's rich enough, he'll form his own army and equip it. I will say he designs some snazzy uniforms for his troops which also include his butler John Wood and his chauffeur Willie Davis of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

    Those flashback sequences involving Murray, Rambo, and Franken are the best part of the film. Even for an audience in the middle of the Vietnam War, those guys all have excellent reasons for wanting to leave their current situations.

    Unfortunately the rest of the film isn't as good. The guys train on Lewis's palatial estates, get the best chow any army ever had and then decide on their own mission which is based on Jerry Lewis's resemblance to Field Marshal Kesselring. If you believe their account they actually break the stalemate on the Italian front and later participate in the bomb plot against Hitler.

    Hitler was played by Sidney Miller and his scenes with Lewis as Kesselring are taken straight from The Great Dictator. I'm not sure Charlie Chaplin really liked this particular homage.

    A lot of World War II film clichés are dealt with here. The coda to this film with Lewis impersonating one of those bucktooth Japanese that were popular at the time I'm not sure was really needed. Nor was it all that funny.

    Jerry came up short with this film.
    VetteRanger

    Great concept, badly realized

    The idea of a rich man, rejected by the army as 4F, then creating his own military experience, has possibilities. It could be a funny movie.

    This wasn't. Lewis' vision of the comic bits has no sense of timing. It moves along at a snail's pace, and includes myriad supporting scenes that just aren't funny. Each scene has a punch line, but most of them were a waste of film. Evidently, firing a mortar and then blandly declaring "We just blew up a Texaco station" just doesn't pack the comedic punch it used to.

    Jerry stammering gibberish was barely tolerable in his early days. In this film, it just looks tired.

    While the film is set in 1943, hair styles, colloquial expressions, mores, costuming, and just about everything else are firmly rooted in the late 60s.

    To get picky, the freeze frame method of ending scenes, as used in this film, is just odd.

    I actually got pained looks from my wife when I held on past the first twenty minutes hoping that it would eventually get to the "good part". Twenty-two minutes after that I finally gave in and stopped watching this mess.
    1planktonrules

    Completely unfunny....

    "Which Way to the Front?" is a hugely disappointing films...even for die-hard Jerry Lewis fans. I personally WANTED to like the movie, as ever since I got to see Lewis in person a few years ago, I have really come to respect and enjoy his films. But no matter what I think of the guy, I cannot in good conscience give this film a positive review because it makes the biggest mistake of any comedy...it's simply not funny. Additionally, the film is set in WWII and looks as if Lewis didn't even bother trying to make the film look as if it was set in the 1940s. The hair, clothing and sets look straight from 1970!

    The film COULD have been funny. It seems that the richest man in the world, Brendan Byers (Lewis) wants to fight in WWII but has been declared 4-F. So, he decides to create his own tiny commando unit and he and his men plan on kidnapping a German Field Marshall who looks exactly like Byers. Each member of the team seem about as manly and menacing as a cannoli and one guy (played by baseball star Willie Davis) is black...and they go behind enemy lines dressed as German soldiers.

    I mention that it COULD have been funny. The biggest supposed laughs are when Jerry pretends to be the German Field Marshall---and this mostly just consists of him screaming. It looks like a 7 year-old's idea of what a German SHOULD sound like. As for the Japanese, late in the film Jerry dons big teeth and does an impression that is not only racially offensive but cheap and unfunny. But with no real laughs and the men dressed in what look like 1970 Armani uniforms of orange and bright blue, it just comes off as bizarre and ill-conceived. Even Lewis' worst comedy, "Cracking Up" has ONE hilarious scene (aboard the discount airline)..."Which Way to the Front" has nothing...absolutely nothing that will elicit a laugh in anyone. I truly think that if the audience had no idea who Lewis was, they'd think this movie wasn't even supposed to be a comedy! A film best skipped...especially by Lewis fans. It's so unfunny I can understand why Jerry didn't make another starring vehicle for a decade following this one (aside from the never released and reportedly god-awful, "The Day the Clown Cried").
    Michael_Elliott

    One of the Worst Comedies Ever Made

    Which Way to the Front? (1970)

    BOMB (out of 4)

    Insanely awful film has Jerry Lewis playing Brendan Byers III, the richest man in the world. He gets drafted to join WWII but he fails his physical and becomes a 4-F. When he can't get into the war he decides to start his own Army with various other 4-F's and soon they are going after Hitler.

    WHICH WAY TO THE FRONT? would turn out to be the last Jerry Lewis film to see a theater for a decade. This here is without question the worst film I've seen from Lewis and it even managed to be worse than his comeback films HARDLY WORKING and CRACKING UP. With three incredibly awful movies, it makes me wonder how bad THE DAY THE CLOWN CRIED if Lewis was willing to keep that movie on the shelf yet release these three.

    Why did WHICH WAY TO THE FRONT? deserve a BOMB rating? I will admit that it's actually better made than many Lewis movies but this film was completely worthless to me because I didn't laugh a single time. Usually Lewis is very forceful in regards to his comedy style but that's not the case here. The comedy is much more laid back but that doesn't mean it's any funnier. The entire film is just very poorly paced and lacks any laughs. In fact, there really wasn't a single scene where it seemed like they were even going for laughs.

    I'm really not sure what Lewis and company were thinking when they made this turkey. There's really not a single funny moment throughout the incredibly long 96 minute running time. Just check out the scene where Lewis is messing around with Hitler to see how bad the comedy fails. WHICH WAY TO THE FRONT? is without question one of the worst comedies ever made but it does succeed at many many other bad Lewis films appear better than they actually are.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      Final film of Joe Besser.
    • Gaffes
      The entire movie is an anachronism. Set in WW2, people have 1970 hair styles, and clothing. A woman is seen in a mini skirt.
    • Citations

      Adolf Hitler: Did you know that last year more people died from cigarette smoking than from bombings?

      Brendan Byers III: What will you do about that, Führer?

      Adolf Hitler: Increase the bombings!

    • Connexions
      Featured in To Be Takei (2014)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Which Way to the Front??
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    • Supposedly George Takei regrets participating in this film. Is this true?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 2 décembre 1970 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Which Way to the Front?
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • Jerry Lewis Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

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    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 402 134 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      1 heure 36 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Jerry Lewis in Ya, ya, mon général! (1970)
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    By what name was Ya, ya, mon général! (1970) officially released in India in English?
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