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Sesso gentile

Titolo originale: The Gentle Sex
  • 1943
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 32min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,2/10
548
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Sesso gentile (1943)
CommediaDrammaGuerraRomanticismo

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaThis film tells the stories of seven gentle British girls who decide to do their bit and help out during World War II.This film tells the stories of seven gentle British girls who decide to do their bit and help out during World War II.This film tells the stories of seven gentle British girls who decide to do their bit and help out during World War II.

  • Regia
    • Leslie Howard
    • Maurice Elvey
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Moie Charles
    • Aimée Stuart
    • Doris Langley Moore
  • Star
    • Joan Gates
    • Jean Gillie
    • Joan Greenwood
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,2/10
    548
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Leslie Howard
      • Maurice Elvey
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Moie Charles
      • Aimée Stuart
      • Doris Langley Moore
    • Star
      • Joan Gates
      • Jean Gillie
      • Joan Greenwood
    • 22Recensioni degli utenti
    • 3Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto2

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali35

    Modifica
    Joan Gates
    • Gwen Hayden
    Jean Gillie
    Jean Gillie
    • Dot Hopkins
    Joan Greenwood
    Joan Greenwood
    • Betty Miller
    Joyce Howard
    Joyce Howard
    • Anne Lawrence
    Rosamund John
    Rosamund John
    • Maggie Fraser
    Lilli Palmer
    Lilli Palmer
    • Erna Debruski
    Barbara Waring
    • Joan Simpson
    John Justin
    John Justin
    • Flying Officer David Sheridan
    Elliott Mason
    • Mrs. Fraser
    • (as Elliot Mason)
    Tony Bazell
    • Ted
    • (as Anthony Bazell)
    Frederick Leister
    Frederick Leister
    • Colonel Lawrence
    Everley Gregg
    Everley Gregg
    • Miss Simpson
    John Laurie
    John Laurie
    • Scots Corporal
    Mary Jerrold
    Mary Jerrold
    • Mrs. Sheridan
    Meriel Forbes
    Meriel Forbes
    • Junior Commander Davis
    Noreen Craven
    • Convoy Sergeant
    Miles Malleson
    Miles Malleson
    • Guard
    Jimmy Hanley
    Jimmy Hanley
    • 1st Soldier
    • Regia
      • Leslie Howard
      • Maurice Elvey
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Moie Charles
      • Aimée Stuart
      • Doris Langley Moore
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti22

    6,2548
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    heebie_jeebies

    Women will enjoy it more than men

    This film follows the experiences of seven women who find themselves together in the Auxillary Territorial Services during the war. The film begins at a train station where the narrator picks out six young women at random. These six ladies - charming but indistinguishable to me - end up in the same carriage of a train on their way to their base. The seventh, Gwen Hayden, joins the others as the train is about to depart. It's a promising start - we eagerly anticipate what will happen to these seven ladies throughout the course of the war. We assume that they'll all end up going their separate ways, but will perhaps reunite at the end of the war, having each been through some unique and fascinating experiences.

    Unfortunately, nothing much happens to any of them. They arrive at their base, engage in some vacuous conversation, and then it's on with the mundane duties of the Auxillary Territorial Services. The first fifteen minutes or so after they arrive is basically a montage of footage showing the ladies and their colleagues being regimented by their superiors, during marching practise and so on, and contains very little entertainment value, except for a couple of attempted visual jokes, including one lady soldier who turns the wrong way and ends up marching away from all the others.

    Perhaps the problem with the rest of the film is that it's a little too honest. There's no drama and there are no complications - just a group of ladies fulfilling the mundane duties of lorry driving, drilling and manning ack-ack batteries, and prattling on in between. The almost complete lack of male characters makes the conversation even more intolerable. Occasionally the characters ponder the purpose of the war and what they're really fighting for, but their discourse fails to scale any great philosophical heights. There's a melodramatic spiel by a French woman in the middle of the film, in which she tells some of our British ladies about what the Nazis did to her father and brother, but it fails to stir us amidst the jollility of life in the Services. Rather, it seems like a contrived attempt by the scriptwriters to provide some semblance of drama.

    The only other drama that occurs - in fact, one of the few events that occurs in this basically plotless film - happens towards the end of the film, but unfortunately it is too little too late. This film is nothing more than a slice of British life during the war. None of the seven ladies embark on any great adventures, they never experience the hardships of war and since the film only scratches the surface of its seven main characters, at the end one is left feeling as though we hardly know them any better than we did when we first met them at the train station. Women will probably enjoy this film more than men, but there is really nothing in it to make it worthy of recommendation.
    Charlot47

    Lack of character development and lack of action?

    Previous reviewers have commented on lack of character development and lack of action. While there is some truth in both assertions, I think we do have to look at the essential purpose of the film, which is to show seven very different young women (though these ones do tend to be above average in looks) being turned into soldiers.

    An army in wartime is a great mincing machine, taking individuals from all walks of life in at one end and turning them out at the other as soldiers. By definition, they are then no longer individuals but a member of a team that has been trained to achieve objectives jointly. The common experience of first training together and then learning to do the jobs they are assigned means that not only do the young women in the film mature fast as people but also they cohere as soldiers. Loyalty to their mates and their unit overrides personal needs, with their own strengths and weaknesses evened out in the common effort. For example, Barbara Waring has no particular feelings about the Germans, seeing them merely as efficient, but Erna Debruski (who is probably meant to be not French but Czech) has seen their lethal efficiency at work in her country and is driven by violent hatred.

    Of the tasks soldiers have to do, some are everyday and boring while others are unique and exciting. We see two young men doing very dangerous work, one a fighter pilot and one a commando, but our seven girls end up driving lorries and manning anti-aircraft guns. Even so, they are all put to the test. The lorry girls have to drive through the night to get their trucks aboard a ship sailing to the front, possibly North Africa, and then have to rush fresh ammunition to the anti- aircraft battery during a raid. There the AA girls bring an attacking bomber down in flames.

    From the seven young strangers who shared a railway compartment at the start to the trained and dedicated women who are doing demanding, even hazardous, jobs to protect their country, surely there has been huge character development and surely there has been action?

    PS As for that music hall sketch, should we judge it by professional standards? Isn't it meant to be an amateur, who has volunteered to amuse her chums?
    8emmaf3

    A propaganda film paying tribute to the women of the ATS

    This film should be watched with an understanding of its intentions, which was to bolster morale and pay tribute to the ordinary British women serving in the ATS, as well as encourage recruitment. There were many propaganda films made around this time, some better than others, but they all had a huge impact on helping the war effort. These were not career soldiers, remember. They'd been called up from offices, shops and factories from all over Britain and did a fantastic job. Practically every British family had at least one female member serving in the ATS during the second world war. We're reminded over and over again, that these women were doing the kind of work normally reserved for men and more important were valued for it! Every so often, a bystander will remark on how hard they work. The film lost no opportunity to remind a tired and increasingly demoralised British public what the war was about and why it was important not to give in.
    skarl-30445

    Excellent film

    Read a review that said women will enjoy it better than men. Rubbish it's a nice story and a good watch. Just a story about people and their experiences. You warm to the ladies and there worries and fears and successes. I've watch it a few times, it's a great afternoon film. Spotting young versions of actors that you've seen as old men growing up, like the odd Dads Army actor looking very youthful.

    So give it a try, good characters and enjoy a story from a simpler and more naive time. It will warm the cockles of your heart. I always enjoy an old black and white film, they're from a different world.
    5csrothwec

    Boring wartime propaganda without any particular pace or verve

    My view is that this film has nothing to compare it with wartime productions like "Millions like us", let alone the Powell and Pressburger masterpiece, "A Canterbury Tale". While the production and acting standards are quite good, the whole thing simply lacks pace and sufficient development of either plot or characters to keep the viewer's interest. Rather than attempting to follow the fortunes of seven new recruits to the women's forces in the second world war, (and then dissipating the time covered by the film trying to keep up with all of them), Howard would have done better to focus, (as in the two afore-mentioned films), on a small number of characters and investigate the way in which the relationships between them develop and intensify and, in THESE ways, allow the message of "why we are fighting" to come through much more clearly than in the stiff upper lip, (except, of course, for Lilli Palmer playing "the excitable foreigner"!), rendering of patriotic platitudes which the film produces. A disappointment and, in my view, now mainly of interest only for what it conveys of "established" views of women's war time endeavours in 1943 rather than as visual entertainment which, while being revelatory of its own period, ALSO far transcends this and provides entertainment and reflection of a much deeper nature as well. Right, let's roll "A Canterbury Tale" again and see how it SHOULD have been done!

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    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      Leslie Howard's last role.
    • Blooper
      During the third shot of the scene of the women's first day of drill training, what appears to be a small insect crawls across the camera lens, upper left of the frame.
    • Citazioni

      [last lines]

      Narrator: Let's give in at last and admit that we're really proud of you, you strange, wonderful, incalculable creatures. The world you're helping to shape is going to be a better world because you're helping to shape it. Pray silence gentlemen. I give you a toast - the gentle sex.

    • Curiosità sui crediti
      Prologue following opening credits: "Woman, when I behold thee, flippant, vain, inconstant, childish, proud and full of fancies" (spoken by Leslie Howard)
    • Connessioni
      Featured in War Stories (2006)
    • Colonne sonore
      Don't Dilly Dally
      (uncredited)

      Written by Charles Collins and Fred W. Leigh

      [Incorrectly credited as "Traditional"]

      Performed by Joan Gates

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 17 gennaio 1944 (Svezia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Regno Unito
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Gentle Sex
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Carlisle, Cumbria, Inghilterra, Regno Unito(on location)
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Two Cities Films
      • Concanen Productions
      • Derrick De Marney Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 32min(92 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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