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The Boy Friend

  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 17min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
3,8 k
MA NOTE
Twiggy in The Boy Friend (1971)
When the leading lady of a low-budget musical revue sprains her ankle, the assistant stage manager is forced to understudy and perform in her place, becoming a star and finding love in the process.
Lire trailer2:50
1 Video
88 photos
ComédieComédie musicaleRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen the leading lady of a low-budget musical revue sprains her ankle, the assistant stage manager is forced to understudy and perform in her place, becoming a star and finding love in the p... Tout lireWhen the leading lady of a low-budget musical revue sprains her ankle, the assistant stage manager is forced to understudy and perform in her place, becoming a star and finding love in the process.When the leading lady of a low-budget musical revue sprains her ankle, the assistant stage manager is forced to understudy and perform in her place, becoming a star and finding love in the process.

  • Réalisation
    • Ken Russell
  • Scénario
    • Ken Russell
    • Sandy Wilson
  • Casting principal
    • Twiggy
    • Christopher Gable
    • Max Adrian
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    3,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Ken Russell
    • Scénario
      • Ken Russell
      • Sandy Wilson
    • Casting principal
      • Twiggy
      • Christopher Gable
      • Max Adrian
    • 69avis d'utilisateurs
    • 28avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Nommé pour 1 Oscar
      • 4 victoires et 4 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:50
    Trailer

    Photos88

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    Rôles principaux27

    Modifier
    Twiggy
    Twiggy
    • Polly
    Christopher Gable
    Christopher Gable
    • Tony
    Max Adrian
    Max Adrian
    • Max
    Bryan Pringle
    Bryan Pringle
    • Percy
    Murray Melvin
    Murray Melvin
    • Alphonse
    Moyra Fraser
    Moyra Fraser
    • Mme. Dubonnet
    Georgina Hale
    Georgina Hale
    • Fay
    Sally Bryant
    • Nancy
    Vladek Sheybal
    Vladek Sheybal
    • De Thrill
    Tommy Tune
    Tommy Tune
    • Tommy
    Brian Murphy
    Brian Murphy
    • Peter
    Graham Armitage
    Graham Armitage
    • Michael
    Antonia Ellis
    Antonia Ellis
    • Maisie
    Caryl Little
    • Dulcie
    Anne Jameson
    • Mrs. Peter
    • (as Ann Jameson)
    Catherine Willmer
    Catherine Willmer
    • Catherine
    Robert La Bassiere
    • Chauffeur
    • (as Robert La'Bassiere)
    Barbara Windsor
    Barbara Windsor
    • Hortense
    • Réalisation
      • Ken Russell
    • Scénario
      • Ken Russell
      • Sandy Wilson
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs69

    6,83.7K
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    Avis à la une

    chris-1124

    Some films age superbly

    Russell's homage to the twenties has aged better than most of his films because the tone is so right. The orchestration is period-perfect, and the costumes (by Russell's then-wife, Shirley) are astounding. Likewise the amazing sets echo the designs of Clarice Cliff, Lucy Atwell and a host of others. Twiggy is that rare star, a model who made a great transition to film, and she's supported by a Who's Who cast of English performers, especially bad girl Antonia Ellis, who went on to star in the British stage version of 'Chicago'. To cap it all, the film works on three distinct levels, the backstage musical, the onstage drama and the fantasy version. Some lines have even become catchphrases. Sandy Wilson, the original show's author, wrote a sequel called 'Divorce Me, Darling', which parodied the thirties. Some prints are shown without the 'Woodland Pastoral' dance sequence.
    GJF118

    Fun Musical; not frequently seen

    Twiggy (modeling phenomenon of '60's swinging London) showed a surprising capacity for acting, singing and dancing as an understudy thrown into subbing for an injured star in a run-down production of .... the Boy Friend. The realistic depiction of a touring production on the skids contrasts with the Hollywood-extravaganza version of the show as seen in the imagination of a Hollywood director sitting in the audience. Wonderful performances from Tommy Tune and Glenda Jackson (small hobble-on as the injured star). The film is sweet and not frequently seen.
    9TheLittleSongbird

    So much fun and quite unique for a movie musical

    While not among my personal favourite musicals or films, The Boy Friend was immensely entertaining in almost every sense and certainly unlike any movie musical we've seen before. The dog scats on your spats joke would have been better left out because it did wear thin and it was more tasteless than funny. But actually that is the only thing in The Boy Friend that came across as that to me, particularly for a director like Ken Russell who has been known to resort to excess and have material that people can be easily offended by. Russell always was a controversial director who fascinated a lot of people and repulsed others, no matter what you thought of him there is no denying that his directing and style was unique. So how does Russell's direction fare here? Brilliantly actually(for an unlikely choice of director for a musical), the style he brings is extravagant as can be seen in the sets, lighting and costumes that burst with primary colours and the purposeful and interesting camera shots(sweeping and a case of awkward working in its favour) showing a virtuoso at work. The spectacle is big and very eye-catching but, despite how this sounds, for Russell while not restrained as such it's not excessive either. The musical numbers are all delightful and always catchy whether in a humorous or emotional way, and they're staged with a Busby Berkeley influence that is always engaging and over-the-top to a delicious degree. Where else in a musical would you find leprechauns in a world of mushrooms, nurses pushing their patients in kaleidoscopic circular fashion in wheelchairs, aeroplane dancing in the snow and swimmers in the ocean in identical attire? The Grecian Nymph fantasy and the nymphs being led off to save the day by Tommy Tune are also great touches that provide plenty of amusement. Despite all this visual spectacle, The Boy Friend is surprisingly also brilliantly written, the satire is sharp and the backstage intrigue is intriguing and insightful. You do have to love Maisie's ad-libbing and attempts at seduction as well, and there's a fair share of emotional impact too, at the end Polly is very easy to root for. The story may sound clichéd and concept-wise it is but execution-wise it was surprising at how unconventional and breaking-new-ground the storytelling was and it's all done with fun as well as non-stop charm and nostalgia. The cast really give their all, even if Christopher Gable's acting and singing doesn't impress as much as his excellent dancing. The best being Twiggy who is charming to the hilt, Antonia Ellis who will leave you in hysterics with her ad-libbing and seduction attempts and Russell regular/favourite Glenda Jackson whose hilarious performance is one that is not easily forgotten in the long run. Barbara Windsor is always great value too. All in all, a fascinating and immensely enjoyable movie musical unlike any other that you've seen before. It's not for everybody, like Russell himself it will delight numbers of people- where I fit in- and perplex others, both viewpoints of which are totally understandable. 9/10 Bethany Cox
    MichaelCarmichaelsCar

    Musical farce, Ken Russell style

    Despite whatever intoxicated tangents Ken Russell has embarked on in some of his other works, 'The Boy Friend' is a particularly enchanting anomaly for this director. Working loosely from Sandy Wilson's Broadway musical 'The Boyfriend,' Russell's screenplay relegates Wilson's original work to a mere production-within-a-production -- 'Noises Off'-style, as it were. Set in1920's London, the owner of a decaying theater company in the East End realizes that a big-shot Hollywood director, Cecil B. DeThrill, has dropped in to watch a performance, and he instantly regrets thrusting the young Assistant Stage Manager, Polly (played by Twiggy), onto the stage to fill the shoes of the show's star (Glenda Jackson, in an uncredited cameo), who's laid up in the hospital after getting her foot stuck in a tramline while en route to the performance. As with 'Noises Off,' the movie is a farce dealing with a potentially disastrous stage performance, although the backstage drama is more interwoven with the onstage production itself, so that the play dominates the duration of the film while serving as a window onto the backstage chaos.

    The members of the theatre company are vain and starved to impress DeThrill, bitterly upstaging one another and overreaching for the Hollywood bigwig's attention. Amidst them, of course, is Twiggy's Polly, humble, nervous and in love with leading man Tony, who may or may not be carrying on an affair with one of the company's coquettish young actresses. Her feelings, at any given moment -- ranging from adoration to heartbreak, based upon what she half-observes -- dictate the course of her onstage performance and her ad-libs.

    Wilson's play deals trivially with class divide, and it's interesting to note how the company's performers, all unrefined East Enders, play on their slanted notion of the upper-class. The actresses Russell has cast have a particular big-eyed, blinking appeal, the wider their shark-like onstage smiles, the greater the underhandedness being masked. The farcical elements are well-played, and Russell's signature brand of calculated bawdiness is appropriate for this context.

    The brightest element of the movie, however, is Twiggy. Here, she is endearing and delicate, charmingly unsophisticated in an Eliza Doolittle fashion. Her performance in 'The Boy Friend' is unusually pure and sympathetic for something found in a Ken Russell film, and in a way, her character's predicament can be seen as a metaphor for Twiggy's appearance in this film. She is commanding through her gentle submissiveness, standing radiantly apart from the gloss of what surrounds her. Russell's strategy in establishing Twiggy's Polly as a most sympathetic protagonist seems to be directing her to perform, onstage, in the most naturalistic way possible, while every other member of the company performs in alternately forced, unnatural, and ham-fisted manners (pandering to DeThrill, of course, but at times reaching bizarre extremes of unnaturalness).

    Unfortunately, for much of the film, Twiggy is completely swallowed by Ken Russell's extravaganza, in which he either pays homage to or simply satirizes Busby Berkeley with quite glorious (but characteristically excessive) widescreen tableaux. He has his entire library of tricks on hand, expressed in 'fantasy' sequences, in which an American flag backdrop dominates the entire frame in one instance, and a black & white movie projected onto a screen, positioned squarely in the center of the frame, itself turns into a Berkeley-style number. Another fantasy sequence, shot in a rustic outdoor environment, is ugly and dated, and does not fit with the rest of the film. It should have been excised.

    Like most of Russell's films, 'The Boy Friend' looks and sounds great. The movie is often a joy to watch, particularly in its first hour. As much as I admired its visuals and the tight rhythms of its wit, I found myself longing, after it ended, for more of Twiggy's warmth and less of Russell's technical virtuosity. Still, a most enjoyable movie.
    ceichler-1

    A Visual Treat

    "The Boy Friend" is an exciting adaptation of Sandy Wilson's stage-born play which Ken Russell has elevated into the status of a grand musical.Although Mr. Russell's excesses have worked/failed in other productions (I still adore "The Music Lovers", this one has a complete menu that satisfies this viewer. Top-notch cast (Twiggy, Tommy Tune and others and elevates the viewer into a three world dimmension: the actual show, the backstage goings on and Mr. Russe's projection into the Busby Berekely world of film going. Visuals are splendid. JuST A WONDERFUL FILM!!

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Though much more lighthearted than most of his films, according to Ken Russell, this was the most difficult film he ever made.
    • Gaffes
      The pips on the large dice costume the dancers wear are not marked as proper dice would be. This costume's die shows 3, 4, 5, 6 on each side of the body (front, right, back, left). However on a proper die, opposite sides always add up to 7. (eg, if the front side shows 3, the rear side should show 4, not 5.)
    • Citations

      Mme. Dubonnet: [singing] I am so good, At spreading mirth and joy

      Percy: But it's no good, With such a sulky boy

      Maisie, Fay, Dulcie, Nancy: I try, To play the game the other fellows all choose

      Percy: The other fellows all choose

      Maisie, Fay, Dulcie, Nancy: I sigh, Because you always refuse

      Mme. Dubonnet: What is a girl to do, With such a boy as you? I've got those

      Percy, Mme. Dubonnet, Maisie, Fay, Dulcie, Nancy: Dreary, Weary, You-Don't-Want-To-Play-With-Me Blues

    • Crédits fous
      Ken Russell's Talking Picture
    • Versions alternatives
      CBS edited 38 minutes from this film for its 1975 network television premiere.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Omnibus: Russell's Progress (1971)
    • Bandes originales
      All I Do is Dream of You
      Music by Nacio Herb Brown

      Lyrics by Arthur Freed

      Performed by Twiggy

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Boy Friend?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 14 avril 1972 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Boyfriend
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Theatre Royal, Portsmouth, Hampshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Sociétés de production
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Russflix
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 2 300 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 17min(137 min)
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.35 : 1

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