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Le secret de mon succès

Titre original : The Secret of My Succe$s
  • 1987
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 51min
NOTE IMDb
6,5/10
39 k
MA NOTE
Michael J. Fox and Helen Slater in Le secret de mon succès (1987)
Home Video Trailer from Universal Studios Home Entertainment
Lire trailer0:31
1 Video
87 photos
ComédieRomanceComédie romantiqueComédie Screwball

Un jeune homme talentueux ne peut pas obtenir un poste de direction sans gravir les échelons. Il élabore donc une méthode accélérée, qui profite également à sa vie amoureuse.Un jeune homme talentueux ne peut pas obtenir un poste de direction sans gravir les échelons. Il élabore donc une méthode accélérée, qui profite également à sa vie amoureuse.Un jeune homme talentueux ne peut pas obtenir un poste de direction sans gravir les échelons. Il élabore donc une méthode accélérée, qui profite également à sa vie amoureuse.

  • Réalisation
    • Herbert Ross
  • Scénario
    • Jim Cash
    • Jack Epps Jr.
    • AJ Carothers
  • Casting principal
    • Michael J. Fox
    • Helen Slater
    • Richard Jordan
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,5/10
    39 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Herbert Ross
    • Scénario
      • Jim Cash
      • Jack Epps Jr.
      • AJ Carothers
    • Casting principal
      • Michael J. Fox
      • Helen Slater
      • Richard Jordan
    • 115avis d'utilisateurs
    • 37avis des critiques
    • 36Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total

    Vidéos1

    The Secret of My Success
    Trailer 0:31
    The Secret of My Success

    Photos87

    Voir l'affiche
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    Rôles principaux45

    Modifier
    Michael J. Fox
    Michael J. Fox
    • Brantley Foster…
    Helen Slater
    Helen Slater
    • Christy Wills
    Richard Jordan
    Richard Jordan
    • Howard Prescott
    Margaret Whitton
    Margaret Whitton
    • Vera Prescott
    John Pankow
    John Pankow
    • Fred Melrose
    Christopher Murney
    Christopher Murney
    • Barney Rattigan
    Gerry Bamman
    Gerry Bamman
    • Art Thomas
    Fred Gwynne
    Fred Gwynne
    • Donald Davenport
    Carol Ann Susi
    Carol Ann Susi
    • Jean
    • (as Carol-Ann Susi)
    Elizabeth Franz
    Elizabeth Franz
    • Grace Foster
    Drew Snyder
    Drew Snyder
    • Burt Foster
    Susan Kellermann
    Susan Kellermann
    • Maureen
    Barton Heyman
    Barton Heyman
    • Arnold Forbush
    Mercedes Ruehl
    Mercedes Ruehl
    • Sheila
    Ira Wheeler
    • Owens
    • (as Ira B. Wheeler)
    Ashley J. Laurence
    • Vernon S. Fletcher
    Rex Robbins
    • McMasters
    Christopher Durang
    Christopher Durang
    • Davis
    • Réalisation
      • Herbert Ross
    • Scénario
      • Jim Cash
      • Jack Epps Jr.
      • AJ Carothers
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs115

    6,538.6K
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    Avis à la une

    7Sylviastel

    It's Vera Prescott who steals the show!

    Okay, Michael J. Fox stars as a Midwestern college graduate who moves to New York City to conquer the business world. He is completely unprepared as Brantley Foster. He is so desperate that he contacts a distant cousin, Richard Prescott, for help breaking in to the business world of New York City. Along the way, he meets his aunt Vera Prescott, played by the delicious Margaret Whitton who really steals the show in this role. He also falls in love with Christy Wills who works there and is played admirably by Helen Slater. John Pankow plays the guy in the mail room who helps Brantley. The cast is first rate but the writing is somewhat mediocre material. It's a good entertainment with a first rate cast and the scenes in the country are quite beautiful.
    7philip_vanderveken

    Typically eighties, but worth watching thanks to Michael J. Fox

    The eighties, the decade of ugly clothes and hairstyles, bad music and easily forgettable movies. But there is one positive aspect about that decade and that is Michael J. Fox. He's probably one of the few actors who started his movie career at those days who I still admire. He's still nice to watch, especially in light weighted comedies like this one.

    In fact, the title "The Secret of My Succe$s" already says enough about what you can expect from this movie (also notice the little dollar sign in the title), but I'll give a short resume anyway. It shows how Brantley Foster, a talented and well-educated young man coming from rural Kansas, goes to New York to find a suiting job and a nice girlfriend. But he isn't very successful, no company wants to hire him, because he doesn't have any experience. Before leaving Kansas for the Big Apple, his father had bought him a return ticket home and his mother gave him the address of his in New York living uncle, Howard Prescott, just in case when he should need some help. But what Foster didn't know is that his uncle runs a multi-million-dollar company. When he pays him a visit, he gets a job ... in the mail room. But then he meets Christy Wills, who happens to be one of the top executives. Believing that the best way to win her over is by posing as an executive, Brantley decides to take a position under the name Carlton Whitfield and of course things soon start to get completely out of hand...

    I admit that this movie is as 'eighties' as you can get them. I'm pretty sure that no-one of todays directors would be able to make it exactly the way it looks, because they don't write scripts like that anymore and there are no more actors like Fox. The man that comes closest for this kind of role is probably Jim Carrey, but even then you would get a completely different kind of movie. It's probably thanks to Michael J. Fox, who is really very nice in this movie, that I forgot about most of its flaws. Once again he's the boyish, sweet guy and that's probably the best thing this movie has to offer. If it hadn't been for him, almost no-one would ever have seen the movie or would still remember it because the story isn't special and it's too typical for that time period.

    All in all this is a fast-paced comedy full of typical eighties clichés, but it works thanks to Michael J. Fox's performance and that's why I still give it a 7/10.
    7hitchcockthelegend

    Nothing wrong with being typically 80s.

    Brantley Foster (Michael J,Fox) is from Kansas, wanting to better himself in the big wide world he hits New York hoping to make it big. However, landing a job in the big apple isn't as easy as he had thought. So turning to a tycoon uncle he literally doesn't know, he lands a job the mail room!. From where Brantley leads a double life as he creates Carlton Whitfield and sets about bluffing his way to the top and into the heart of sexy executive Christy Wills (Helen Slater).

    Michael J. Fox is on cracking comedy form as the young hero of this 1980s light comedy. It's the sort of 80s film that has managed to break out of that decade and still be enjoyable in this latest, power driven, age. The formula is safe and plays out as expected, and the soundtrack, including notable movie riffs, adds to the high sense of energetic fun on offer. Wafer thin plot be damned, Fox delivers on the star vehicle promise and he in turn is backed up by a smashing turn from Margaret Whitton. Silly, unadulterated fun it be. 7/10
    6vertigo_14

    The Corporate 80s Genre

    I assume it was the proliferation of Yuppies and the Me,Me,Me Age that was responsible for the numerous 80s movies about the cutthroat corporate life. 'Baby Boom' and 'Working Girl' are other titles that come to mind.

    The Secret of My Success is a charming movie, though sometimes not a very funny one. As one viewer wrote, it is likely Michael J. Fox's innocent good-natured character that drives what might otherwise be only a mildly amusing movie. Margaret Whitton and John Pankow (had he not said 'suits' so many damn times) are pleasing secondary characters as well, and a much needed counterbalance to the obnoxious characters that Helen Slater and Richard Jordan portray.

    Brantley Foster (Fox), fresh off the Kansas farm, learns the harsh reality of a business graduate's life when he travels to New York expecting to become the next CEO of some company. Nevermind find a job, he can't even seem to get past the interview stage, with one rejection after another. And these are some of the funniest lines in the films. Especially, when Brantley asks his interviewer how he can get hard-nosed business experience if no one will hire him. "If we hired you to get experience, you'd take that experience and get a better job. If you'd joined our training program right out of high school, you would've had a job today." Brantley asks, curiously, "Why did I go to college." The interviewer laughs, "You had fun, didn't you?"

    Brantley decides to dial up some unknown uncle Howard, hoping to get a job with his company in his last resort. And his first impression work, landing him a job in the mailroom. But Brantely has his sights on bigger, better things, and uses his newfound position to establish his plan. That is, he is going to be the new great employee at Prescott's employee, but as Carlton Whitton, a business mastermind.

    Trying to run one life is hard enough, and many comedic mishaps arise when Brantley tries to maintain his own life and pose as Carlton Whitton on a near full-time basis as well. He has trouble separating the two, when he has to keep hiding Carlton Whitton from his uncle Howard, who obviously knows who he is. He simultaneously has to hide his true identity from a fellow coworker that he falls in love with (Helen Slater). Add to the mix that Howard is having an affair with Christy (Slater) and asks her to spy on Cartlon Whitton because he suspects a spy within his company during rumors of a hostile takeover. Can Brantley keep up with it all? It is the only way to prove to anyone that he's not some dumb college kid. His success depends on it.

    The movie is kind of funny, and pretty dated. Sometimes Fox's character is too charming. He never seems to get too angry, even after figuring that some people in the company were trying hard to screw him out of his job (both as Carlton and as Brantley). But, his charm and some of those strange mishaps (the sequence with the four characters at the townhouse sneaking around at night is a nice arrangement) keep the movie going. Best recommended for 80s fans or Michael J. Fox fans who would mostly likely be immune to some of the films flaws.
    8loza-1

    Corporate America under the Microscope

    Whenever I see groups of people in suits slaving away at their laptops and wonder what they are doing, I am reminded of this film. The suits who don't talk to the mailroom staff, whose ties cut off the flow of blood to their brains, and who cut down the effectiveness of their company are looked at with a jaundiced eye.

    Is it possible for a someone from the mailroom to open up an office, get himself a secretary, and start operating within the organisation as a suit? It's ridiculous, of course. Utter fantasy. Or is it? I would find it unbelievable, had I not witnessed for myself the kind of conditions that would allow this sort of thing to happen in a large organisation. I dare say anyone who had the nerve could do it.

    Michael J Fox turns in a good performance as the protagonist. Fred Gwynne is very photogenic, and Margaret Whitton is excellent as the protagonist's leggy, amorous aunt-in-law.

    This film is well worth watching.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This film was inspired by the early Hollywood experiences of Steven Spielberg, who snuck onto the Universal Studios lot at a young age and began using an empty office as his own production office. The character of Brantley Foster does the same thing in this movie.
    • Gaffes
      When Brantley answers the phone in the office for the first time before starting his "con" as Carlton, his hair length and color change during the course of the call.
    • Citations

      [after sex]

      Brantley Foster: Can I make a personal observation?

      Vera Prescott: Um, anything but the thighs.

      Brantley Foster: You know, somebody sold you a bill of goods and convinced you you had to be 21 forever. That's bullshit. I think you're terrific; I think the only thing wrong with you is your husband is a jerk. You're beautiful, you're intelligent, you're sensuous...

      Vera Prescott: Say that again!

      Brantley Foster: Which part?

      Vera Prescott: All of it!

      [sounds of car]

      Vera Prescott: Oh, no.

      Brantley Foster: What, what is it?

      Vera Prescott: It's the jerk.

      [Brantley rushes to the window]

      Vera Prescott: My husband.

      Brantley Foster: My uncle!

      Vera Prescott: Your what?

      Brantley Foster: Oh God, that makes you...

      Vera Prescott: Auntie Vera?

      Brantley Foster: Oh! God!

      [Vera laughs]

      Brantley Foster: Oh God, oh God, oh God! What's my mother going to say? I've disgraced my whole family!

      Vera Prescott: Oh, the hell you did!

    • Versions alternatives
      There are two different ending sequences. In the first, after they leave the boardroom Fred and Vera meet and start to flirt. Christy and Brantley go into the elevator which stops between floors. In the second version, this scene is ommitted and we cut to several weeks later where the two couples climb into a limo and go the opera. The first shows up on the video releases, whereas the second shows up in broadcast versions.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Making Mr. Right/Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn/Secret of My Success/Prick Up Your Ears (1987)
    • Bandes originales
      Riskin' a Romance
      Written by Siobhan Fahey, Ollie Marland and Paul Weller

      Performed by Bananarama

      Produced by Daryl Hall and T-Bone Wolk (as Tom 'T-Bone' Wolk)

      Bananarama appears courtesy of London Records Ltd.

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    FAQ20

    • How long is The Secret of My Success?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 22 juillet 1987 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • El secreto de mi éxito
    • Lieux de tournage
      • 919 Third Avenue, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(Pemrose Roof and Jog Track)
    • Sociétés de production
      • Rastar Pictures
      • Universal Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 12 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 66 995 879 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 7 766 452 $US
      • 12 avr. 1987
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 110 996 879 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 51min(111 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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