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Rafter Romance

  • 1933
  • Approved
  • 1h 13min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,6/10
974
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Rafter Romance (1933)
CommediaCommedia romanticaRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA man and a woman share an apartment on a shift basis, never seeing each other; she dislikes him until they actually meet.A man and a woman share an apartment on a shift basis, never seeing each other; she dislikes him until they actually meet.A man and a woman share an apartment on a shift basis, never seeing each other; she dislikes him until they actually meet.

  • Regia
    • William A. Seiter
  • Sceneggiatura
    • H.W. Hanemann
    • Sam Mintz
    • Glenn Tryon
  • Star
    • Ginger Rogers
    • Norman Foster
    • George Sidney
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,6/10
    974
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • William A. Seiter
    • Sceneggiatura
      • H.W. Hanemann
      • Sam Mintz
      • Glenn Tryon
    • Star
      • Ginger Rogers
      • Norman Foster
      • George Sidney
    • 28Recensioni degli utenti
    • 8Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 1 vittoria in totale

    Foto45

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    + 39
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    Interpreti principali20

    Modifica
    Ginger Rogers
    Ginger Rogers
    • Mary Carroll
    Norman Foster
    Norman Foster
    • Jack Bacon
    George Sidney
    George Sidney
    • Eckbaum
    Robert Benchley
    Robert Benchley
    • H. Harrington Hubbell
    Laura Hope Crews
    Laura Hope Crews
    • Elise Peabody Worthington Smythe
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    • Fritzie
    • (as Guinn Williams)
    Sidney Miller
    Sidney Miller
    • Julius Eckbaum
    Ferike Boros
    Ferike Boros
    • Rosie Eckbaum
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    June Brewster
    June Brewster
    • Blonde Telemarketer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Wong Chung
    Wong Chung
    • Chinese Waiter
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Ellen Corby
    Ellen Corby
    • Telemarketer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    June Gittelson
    June Gittelson
    • Bobbie Finklestein - Telemarketer
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Ben Hendricks Jr.
    • Mike - Counterman
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Bud Jamison
    Bud Jamison
    • Morton McGillicuddy
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Charles King
    Charles King
    • Sidewalk Superintendent
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Jean Lacy
    Jean Lacy
    • Undetermined Secondary Role
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Mary MacLaren
    Mary MacLaren
    • Office Supervisor
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Jerry Mandy
    • Italian Flower Seller
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • William A. Seiter
    • Sceneggiatura
      • H.W. Hanemann
      • Sam Mintz
      • Glenn Tryon
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti28

    6,6974
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    5bkoganbing

    Love In The Attic

    The Depression was hard times folks and people made due the best they could economically. Goes for landlords and tenants in Rafter Romance.

    Landlord George Sidney decides to help Ginger Rogers out and double his income besides. He's got a tenant in Norman Foster who works as a night watchman where he also gets to do his painting at his real vocation as artist. Rogers is having a bad time financially so Sidney gets the bright idea to rent her the attic apartment that Foster lives in and sleeps days. She'll take it for twelve hours also.

    Of course this being the thirties proprieties must be observed and Sidney and his whole family will make sure they're observed. No contact of any kind between the two tenants.

    But this is Hollywood and I think you can figure out the rest.

    Besides those mentioned look for good performances by Robert Benchley as Ginger's wolfish boss at what would now be called a tele-marketing agency. And also from Laura Hope Crews who plays a drunken society woman who would very much like to keep artist Foster as a private boy toy.

    Times have certainly changed. Quite frankly as long as I don't wreck the place, do no illegal activity, and pay my rent on time, my landlord could not care less who I might have as company at a given moment. I'm not sure today's audience would really get what was happening here in Rafter Romance.

    The laughs though are still in place and ready to be enjoyed.
    7chaz-16

    No reference to Hitler at all

    The father was NOT upset due to a reference to Hitler but he was upset that the boy was scribbling on the walls. the swastika was, at one time, a good luck charm and could be found in many cultures around the world. Today, of course, it refers to nothing but Hitler and his atrocities, but in 1933 it had nothing to do with Hitler.

    This was a great movie, and was before the censors got into cutting some scenes. Her bare back in one scene and showing her undressing must have been outrageous to many at that time.

    Movies went from that freedom to almost no freedoms to almost unlimited freedom today. Ain't it a wonderful life ????
    7AlsExGal

    A cute little precode film

    This has the same leading cast as "Professional Sweetheart", even the same director. It was lost for years because it was in legal rights limbo when Turner Classic Movies got the rights to it and five other films, but I digress.

    The setup is simple but purely precode. A man (Norman Foster) and a woman (Ginger Rogers) -Jack and Mary - are forced by their landlord to move into the same attic together, with Mary having the premises at night and Jack having them during the day. Each has to be out of the attic 15 minutes before the other arrives "home" so that they never meet. The reason for this was that they were both behind on their rent with no real chance of catching up. Thus the landlord can rent their old rooms out to people who can pay the rent plus he gets rent for what has now been an unused part of the house - the attic - and Jack and Mary are not homeless. A win win.

    Now the two have never met, but tensions rise immediately when Mary overhears Jack calling her a "skinny old maid". They play pranks on each other that escalate to the point we are in Looney Tunes territory. Meanwhile Jack and Mary have actually met on the street, and have begun to fall in love. What will happen when they each find out who the other is? Watch and find out.

    As in many precode films, nothing really indecent goes on, yet this film would not have been allowed to be produced just a year later. The most extreme thing you see is Ginger Rogers in various stages of undress, and Jack seems to be in some kind of "boy toy" situation with Laura Hope Crews' character, Elise. He is an artist working as a night watchman and she is a rich woman who seems to want to "keep" him, although he is not willing to let it go that far.

    This is Peter Benchley's biggest role so far in a film. Here he plays Mary's lecherous boss who is making the moves on Mary and at least one other girl in his employ. Not exactly the role I am accustomed to seeing Benchley in, and yet he still plays it with his signature dry wit.

    The most shocking thing to audiences today, probably? The landlords, the Eckbaums, are Jewish, and they have a son that they tell to stand in the hall and wait for one of the tenants to get home, there is a message for this person. Well like so many teens he gets bored and starts doodling on the wall. What does he doodle? Swastikas! How odd.
    7jchokey

    A cute romantic comedy and an odd historical document

    This is a cute romantic comedy from the 30's. An enterprising landlord arranges to rent the same top-floor apartment to a man who has a night job and a woman (played by a young Ginger Rogers) who has a day job. He lives/sleeps there during the day; she does during the night. The two protagonists don't actually know each other, except through the increasingly hostile notes that they leave to each other about the upkeep of the apartment. (It starts off with mild stuff like "Clean up the sink after you shave", and gets increasingly angry from thereon.) Eventually the two become bitter enemies, even though they have never met in person-- or so they think. As one might predict, it just so happens that the two meet and fall in love in the course of their lives outside the apartment-- and they don't realize that they are actually in love with their despised 'roommate' until the very end.

    Though hardly classic cinema, this is certainly a cute and entertaining comic romance. Also, it has a couple of curious bits of cultural history built into it. The first is that Ginger Roger's character is a telemarketer-- and this is, to my knowledge, the first representation of that very modern profession in the cinema. The second is that there's a very strange reference to Nazism in the film. At one point, the landlord's somewhat dim-witted son draws a swastika on one of the doors as he's heard it means 'good luck'. The landlord (who, like is son, is clearly meant to be Jewish) is of course, furious. The odd thing is that this little incident was obviously intended to be funny (though I think most contemporary viewers will find it jarring or troubling). I think that just shows that this movie was made at during the narrow period of time when Nazism's anti-semitism was known in the U.S., but could still serve as a foil for laughter; it had not yet been recognized as the truly terrible force that it really was. As such, that makes this movie a curious historical artifact as well.
    6Doylenf

    On TCM's "lost and found" schedule...but a minor discovery...

    There's a feeling of deja vu to the plot of RAFTER ROMANCE about two people who aren't aware of each other's identity until they fall in love, but in 1933 it must have seemed quite an original idea.

    At any rate, it gives GINGER ROGERS and NORMAN FOSTER a nice chance to show what they could do with light comedy and tender romance. They play two roommates who work different shifts but who eventually meet and fall in love. (Shades of YOU'VE GOT MAIL and other such stories). And oddly enough, ROBERT BENCHLEY would be making a play for Ginger as a lecherous wolf, just as he would some ten years later in THE MAJOR AND THE MINOR when he suggested she slip into something more comfortable.

    After a series of pranks and misunderstandings, Foster and Rogers find each other at the company picnic and promptly fall in love.

    Watch for LAURA HOPE CREWS (Aunt Pittypat of GWTW) as a woman who wants to "keep" Norman Foster--and GUINN WILLIAMS as a brawny taxicab driver.

    Summing up: Good fun with an early look at Ginger.

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Ginger Rogers and Norman Foster replaced Dorothy Wilson and Joel McCrea in the lead roles.
    • Blooper
      When the bell rings indicating the day's end, all the girls immediately hang up their phones. This means they rudely hung up on a customer instead of completing the call.
    • Citazioni

      Mary: What about the other party, Mr. Eckbaum?

      Eckbaum: Wha-what other party? Ah, don't you worry about that. The nighttime, the attic is yours! In the daytime, you ain't here, anyhow. So what do you care? As far as you're concerned, the other party is - inwizible.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in TCM: Twenty Classic Moments (2014)
    • Colonne sonore
      Dinah
      (1925) (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Akst

      Background music at the Chinese restaurant

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 1 settembre 1933 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • La traviesa enemiga
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Lancaster's Lake, Sunland, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti(on location)
    • Azienda produttrice
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 13 minuti
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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