Paul, un jeune avocat conservateur, épouse la vive Corie. Leur relation très passionnée se termine en vaudeville dans un appartement situé au cinquième étage sans ascenseur à New York.Paul, un jeune avocat conservateur, épouse la vive Corie. Leur relation très passionnée se termine en vaudeville dans un appartement situé au cinquième étage sans ascenseur à New York.Paul, un jeune avocat conservateur, épouse la vive Corie. Leur relation très passionnée se termine en vaudeville dans un appartement situé au cinquième étage sans ascenseur à New York.
- Nommé pour 1 Oscar
- 8 nominations au total
- Harry Pepper
- (as Herbert Edelman)
- Delivery Man
- (as James F. Stone)
- Drunken Neighbor
- (non crédité)
- Bum in Park
- (non crédité)
- Store Clerk
- (non crédité)
- Policeman with Drunk
- (non crédité)
- Hotel Maid
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The comedy's premise reminds me of one of those WWII madcaps, where wartime conditions prompt an unlikely couple into quick marriage and barebones apartment. The idea's rich in comedic material so no wonder it keeps coming back. On their honeymoon, stodgy lawyer husband (Redford) is overwhelmed by sexy free-spirited wife (Fonda). She can't get enough kissy-face or sex, while he struggles between lawyerly duties and a burgeoning libido. Meanwhile, she oozes over their cramped apartment, six long flights up, while he's too smothered over to object. Things bumble along until complications take their toll.
I love it when goofy neighbor Boyer takes the married couple and Fonda's straight-laced mother (Natwick) to a run-down Albanian eatery. It may be seedy on the outside but on the inside it's a vibrant bohemian paradise. Of course, Fonda and Boyer are in their element, real swingers, while the two conventional types can barely endure. In fact, Redford's quiet discomfort as he sits at the noisy round table amounts to a triumph of low-key expression. And catch it when the belly dancer smothers his unhappy face in her ample breasts. Edelman also scores as the drooping telephone guy. It's like, time and again, he's having to climb Mt. Everest with a heavy load. In fact, the movie milks that 6-long-flights-up, but still gets laughs from a sweaty cast. I can imagine what the auditions were like.
Anyway, the movie's first two-thirds is full of such inventive comedic moments that had me thinking "real classic". But then, much too abruptly, Fonda's sparkly role shifts and the prevailing mood goes with it. Same thing with Redford's conventional personality. That is, he goes from stodgy to goofy and she goes from ditzy to crabby. In short, they suddenly swap roles in unconvincing fashion, even for what is now a serio-comedy. In my book, the change over is too clumsily handled to maintain comedic momentum, and a potential classic is lost. Nonetheless, on balance, the movie's still lively entertainment, full of bright moments, and worth catching up with.
(In passing- I suspect the moral to the story, if such can be said, is that without some common ground even the best offbeat relationship can't last.)
I lived in a walk-up apartment in Manhattan (fifth floor!)and had to quit smoking so I wouldn't have to have an oxygen tank installed on each floor in order to just make it home every night. I enjoyed reading the 'trivia' section about this movie and find it very interesting that the French version had to change the running joke to the 9th floor; since they are also infamous for smoking, one wonders why elevators were not more popular.
Boyer is priceless as an eccentric bohemian. Everyone is inspired by the script and delivers his or his best performance. Simon makes happiness seem possible, because he knows where it's hiding.
This is a very contrived, sitcom-ish plot, but the cast carries it well. Although Redford has remained a great star for forty years, his films have been very hit or miss; here he is well cast, and he plays expertly. During this period of her career, Fonda was very much the perky girl-next-door with a slight sex-kitten spin, and she too is fun to watch. But the real winners here are Charles Boyer, as their eccentric neighbor, and particularly Mildred Natwick, as Fonda's mother. Natwick excelled at playing disconcerted matrons, and this is perhaps the best of the many fine, memorable variations of the type she offered during her long and very enjoyable career. BAREFOOT IN THE PARK won't go down in history as a great film, nor will change your point of view. But it is tremendously good fun, a film I've enjoyed every time time I've seen it--and that is a good many. Recommended; you'll enjoy it.
Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesRobert Redford loathed wearing a suit and tie all day, which was required for his character. During breaks between filming, he wore western boots and a black cowboy hat.
- GaffesBloomingdales calls to say the furniture won't be delivered. The phone was installed only minutes earlier, so Bloomingdales would not have the number to call.
This is not a Goof; Bloomingdale's (or anyone else) would, in fact, know the number to call. The phone number is assigned at the same time that one signs up for service. Nobody has to wait until the day of installation to know what their number is; it isn't up to the installer.
- Citations
Ethel: I had to park the car three blocks away. Then it started to rain so I ran the last two blocks. Then my heel got caught in a subway grating. When I pulled my foot out, I stepped in a puddle. Then a cab went by and splashed my stockings. If the hardware store downstairs was open, I was going to buy a knife and kill myself.
- ConnexionsEdited into The Kid Stays in the Picture (2002)
- Bandes originalesBarefoot in the Park
Written by Neal Hefti and Johnny Mercer
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Descalzos en el parque
- Lieux de tournage
- 111 Waverly Place, Greenwich Village, Manhattan, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(the Bratters' apartment)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 2 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut mondial
- 361 $US