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Une Anglaise romantique

Titre original : The Romantic Englishwoman
  • 1975
  • R
  • 1h 56min
NOTE IMDb
6,0/10
1,6 k
MA NOTE
Une Anglaise romantique (1975)
A marriage crisis between a writer and his wife leads her to flee to Germany and eventually return with another man, through whom the writer is going to overcome his writer's block.
Lire trailer2:44
1 Video
54 photos
SatireComedyDramaRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA marriage crisis between a writer and his wife leads her to flee to Germany and eventually return with another man, through whom the writer is going to overcome his writer's block.A marriage crisis between a writer and his wife leads her to flee to Germany and eventually return with another man, through whom the writer is going to overcome his writer's block.A marriage crisis between a writer and his wife leads her to flee to Germany and eventually return with another man, through whom the writer is going to overcome his writer's block.

  • Réalisation
    • Joseph Losey
  • Scénario
    • Tom Stoppard
    • Thomas Wiseman
  • Casting principal
    • Glenda Jackson
    • Michael Caine
    • Helmut Berger
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,0/10
    1,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Joseph Losey
    • Scénario
      • Tom Stoppard
      • Thomas Wiseman
    • Casting principal
      • Glenda Jackson
      • Michael Caine
      • Helmut Berger
    • 23avis d'utilisateurs
    • 17avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:44
    Trailer

    Photos54

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    + 47
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    Rôles principaux21

    Modifier
    Glenda Jackson
    Glenda Jackson
    • Elizabeth
    Michael Caine
    Michael Caine
    • Lewis
    Helmut Berger
    Helmut Berger
    • Thomas
    Michael Lonsdale
    Michael Lonsdale
    • Swan
    • (as Michel Lonsdale)
    Béatrice Romand
    Béatrice Romand
    • Catherine
    • (as Beatrice Romand)
    Kate Nelligan
    Kate Nelligan
    • Isabel
    Nathalie Delon
    Nathalie Delon
    • Miranda
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    • Herman
    • (as Rene Kolldehoff)
    Anna Steele
    • Annie
    Marcus Richardson
    • David
    Julie Peasgood
    Julie Peasgood
    • New Nanny
    Frankie Jordan
    • Supermarket Cashier
    Tom Chatto
    Tom Chatto
    • Neighbour
    Frances Tomelty
    Frances Tomelty
    • Airport Shop Assistant
    Lillias Walker
    Lillias Walker
    • 1st Mealticket Lady
    Doris Nolan
    Doris Nolan
    • 2nd Mealticket Lady
    Phil Brown
    Phil Brown
    • Mr. Wilson
    Marcella Markham
    • Mrs. Wilson
    • Réalisation
      • Joseph Losey
    • Scénario
      • Tom Stoppard
      • Thomas Wiseman
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs23

    6,01.5K
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    Avis à la une

    4SnoopyStyle

    heatless

    Elizabeth Fielding (Glenda Jackson) returns from spa town Baden Baden, Germany where she met gigolo conman Thomas (Helmut Berger). Her husband Lewis (Michael Caine) is having writer's block and imagines all manners of things his wife is doing. Catherine is the hot nanny. Isabel (Kate Nelligan) is Elizabeth's gossiping friend who Lewis hates. Swan (Michael Lonsdale) is tracking Thomas. Then Thomas shows up at the Fielding home.

    The couple never intrigued me. They have limited chemistry. Part of the problem is that the movie starts with them apart. They never really connect for me. Neither is the affair that compelling. There is a coldness to the movie. Maybe it's the intent to show a relationship in trouble. It does it in an uninteresting way.
    5barryrd

    Romance Lacks Focus

    The Romantic Englishwoman did hold my attention with its opulent settings and actors of stature, Michael Caine and Glenda Jackson, but the story left me confused. In the movie, we see an English woman named Elizabeth on holiday in Germany at a hotel resort in Baden-Baden, where she has a brief liaison with a handsome European named Thomas played by Helmut Burger. Elizabeth is an elegantly dressed and beautiful woman played by Glenda Jackson, who is married to a successful writer named Lewis Fielding, played by Michael Caine. On Elizabeth's return to England, her husband becomes aware of her friend and invites him to tea at their family home in England. Much of what follows seems to be orchestrated by Lewis who is seeking material for his novel. The extent of the "affair" between Elizabeth and Thomas is difficult to judge since they seemed to barely get to know one another, except for a quick sexual encounter in an elevator. Burger, as the Thomas character, maintains an air of mystery while in Germany and later in England as he becomes an assistant to Caine's character Lewis, doing typing and other secretarial work, and letting the nanny become infatuated with him. It seems that he has no real line of work although he purports to be a poet. Instead, he is a gigolo who consorts with underworld figures and is a skillful thief snatching another guest's overcoat, or removing in-room meals for hotel guests. The relationship between Elizabeth and Thomas seems to blossom as a full affair when they return to Europe, this time in Monaco. Thomas continues to be followed by underworld characters while sharing the affections of wealthy women. Burger lacks the acting persona to play alongside Jackson and Caine. Kate Nelligan and Michael Lonsdale are in the cast; however, their roles amount to little. Beautiful settings aside, the acting of Jackson and Caine cannot rescue this story, whatever the story is.
    4lasttimeisaw

    The Romantic Englishwoman

    My very first contact with Joseph Losey's canon is this film adapted from Thomas Wiseman's eponymous novel, the reason why I selected this one purely because of its cast, namely for Glenda Jackson, the two-times Oscar winner, whose work has eluded me until now, but the film itself turns out to be a very disappointing misfire.

    Speaking of the cast, Glenda Jackson has her charismatic dignity in almost every scene although regularly shoehorned between Berger's perpetual snug grin and Caine's perpetual sullen stare, and eventually cannot save the film from the mire of a psychological drama swamped with behavioral absurdities and non-consistent narrative. The fierce-looking wife with a bob cut and perfectly trimmed fringes, who is discontent with her middle-class lifestyle (her writer husband has immersed into the writer's block when writing a film script and becomes paranoid about her adultery in her solo trip to Baden-Baden), tries her luck to elope with a self-claimed German poet (whose real identity is only hinted by smuggling small-time drugs and cruising of elderly lonely-hearts), whom she has met before in Baden- Baden, but is there a fling between them in their previous encounter? The film never answer the question, a corny exploit being overused here.

    Richard Harley's lyrical string score has stolen the thunder since more often than not, I am very much a visual observer than a sonic perfectionist. Also I quite prefer the slowly panning camera in carefully constructing a hunter and prey game in the beginning part in Baden- Baden to the dreadful and ostentatious meandering in the labyrinth of feigned sentimentality, claiming inane quips like "Englishwoman is the most romantic" (Berger's German accent is a major buzz-killer), I hope someone else could be fortunate enough to fully digest all the hocus-pocus and be grateful towards this ill-fated film adaption.
    6dmgrundy

    An Exercise in Style

    Glenda Jackson's frustrated bourgeois housewife, having gone to the spa town of Baden-Baden for unspecified reasons, maybe or maybe doesn't have a brief affair with Helmut Berger's young gigolo. In town on a botched drug deal, Berger operates through a combination of what we might term freelancing: as a car or drug smuggler but, it seems, principally as a gigolo whose opening line is that he's a "poet". Meanwhile, back in British suburbia, Jackson's husband, writer Michael Caine abandons plans to work on a novel to begin a screenplay based on his jealous imaginings of his wife's Baden-Baden sojourn. When Berger telephones Caine to announce that he's an admirer of his work and turns up (literally) "for tea", the stakes are set for the triangle to play out, with the added drama in the final third of Berger's drug connections, among them the poker-faced, and sadly under-used, Michael Lonsdale, turning up in a kind of lugubrious pursuit.

    During the 1960s and 70s, Joseph Losey reinvented himself from a filmmaker of social problem pictures and taut, gritty noirs, to an arthouse director, with mixed results. In some cases-notably his collaborations with Harold Pinter, 'Accident' and 'The Go-Between'-formal innovations-particularly Alain Resnais-style temporal ambiguity-were closely allied to a dissection of the British class system. In others, such as the camp classics 'Boom!' or 'Secret Ceremony', it's not clear exactly *what's* going on-and not necessarily in a good way. Essentially, what we watch is a set of variations on a theme, more or less successfully rendered. Take the use of flashbacks and flashforwards: longer or shorter inserts of scenes whose relation to the main narrative is not immediately revealed, used particularly good effect in the late '60s/early '70s Pinter collaborations 'Accident' and 'The Go-Between'. In 'The Romantic Englishwoman', the flashbacks/forwards centre on an incident that occurs near the start of the film: the moment Jackson and Berger take a lift together in their hotel and may or may not initiate a sexual relationship. This incident is a way to explore the boundaries between action and desire, and various real or imaginary pairings of the heterosexual couple and a third partner. What happened in the lift in Baden-Baden? From whose perspective do we see this?

    As the film goes on, though, not much done is to expand these initially intriguing ideas. The film couldn't easily be called either a feminist or an anti-feminist film: Caine's obnoxious outburst at Jackson's friend, a visiting gossip columnist, for repeating feminist statements about female homemaking roles, is clearly absurd, yet, like Jeanne Mourea's Eve, Jackson's dreams of liberation from marriage can occur only through another man, offering no real possibility of sociability outside the heterosexual contract. We thus simultaneously watch the playing out of male jealousy and of Jackson's "romantic" desire for escape--the doomed template of much melodrama. Too often, though, the film simply *presents* this double-bind, offering little other perspective on what we already know. The flashback-flashforward structure insists on the claustrophobic way in which its characters play out pre-ordained social roles, yet it has little to say *about* such roles, apart from telling us that they exist. The result: a film that ultimately feels "cold", dead, an exercise in style.
    6MOscarbradley

    Glenda walks off with the movie

    It may be regarded as minor Losey but it's by no means dismissable and is set once again amongst the Upper Crust and the Hoi Polloi. "The Romantic Englishwoman" of the title is Glenda Jackson, (superb as always), married to novelist Michael Caine, (not at his best here). She's bored by the life she is leading which is no life at all really and he's got writer's block and has turned to writing for the cinema. It begins in Baden Baden where she's gone 'to find herself' and where she meets cocaine smuggling gigolo Helmut Berger, (much too prissy to be a convincing love interest). When she returns to England Berger follows her, landing on her doorstep where Caine welcomes him with open arms planning to make him a character in the film he is writing.

    It was adapted by Thomas Wiseman and Tom Stoppard from a novel by Wiseman and there is nice streak of dark, and at times very funny, humour running through it though you would be hard pressed to call it a comedy. It wasn't well received when it came out and hasn't been much seen since. Ultimately it's Glenda's film reminding us just how good an actress she could be in a well-written role, here making mincemeat of her co-stars.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Sir Dirk Bogarde turned down the role of Lewis Fielding.
    • Gaffes
      When the Glenda Jackson character first arrives back from abroad and wanders around her home, the camera crew can be seen reflected in the glass of a picture on the wall.
    • Citations

      Lewis: [offering Thomas a cigar after a three-course dinner] You see, the bourgeois life does have its compensations.

      Thomas: What would it be without them?

    • Connexions
      Featured in Premio Donostia a Michael Caine (2000)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is The Romantic Englishwoman?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 11 juin 1975 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • France
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Allemand
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Romantic Englishwoman
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Baden-Baden, Baden-Württemberg, Allemagne
    • Sociétés de production
      • Dial Films
      • Les Productions Meric-Matalon
      • Angel Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 1 200 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 56 minutes
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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