Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaIn 1923, two young ladies depart unescorted for a tour of Europe and meet two eligible men aboard the ship. Their great naivete' and efforts to seem grown-up lead them into many comic misadv... Leggi tuttoIn 1923, two young ladies depart unescorted for a tour of Europe and meet two eligible men aboard the ship. Their great naivete' and efforts to seem grown-up lead them into many comic misadventures.In 1923, two young ladies depart unescorted for a tour of Europe and meet two eligible men aboard the ship. Their great naivete' and efforts to seem grown-up lead them into many comic misadventures.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie totali
Wilson Benge
- Deck Steward
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Carmella Bergstrom
- Girl
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Eugene Borden
- Coachman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Matthew Boulton
- Ship's Officer
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Lionel Braham
- Middle-Aged Englishman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Edmund Breon
- Guide
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Georgie Cooper
- Minor Role
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Nell Craig
- Mother of Little Girl
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Roland Dupree
- Boy at Dance
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Cornelia (Gail Russell) and Emily (Diana Lynn) decide to go on a trip to Europe as Cornelia discovers that Avery (James Brown) is travelling there. On the ship, Cornelia meets Avery while Lynn meets Tom (Bill Edwards) and the four become travelling partners. They disembark in England and visit France before making their way back home.
There is no plot in this story. It's a sequence of incidents that take you from the beginning to the end. The acting is pretty wooden in parts, especially from Brown, Edwards and Russell. The acting honours go to Charles Ruggles (Otis Skinner), Dorothy Gish (Mrs Skinner) and Lynn. Brown is a typically brainless, lug-headed American and Edwards is even worse! The film alternates between funny moments and drawn out scenes.
There is no plot in this story. It's a sequence of incidents that take you from the beginning to the end. The acting is pretty wooden in parts, especially from Brown, Edwards and Russell. The acting honours go to Charles Ruggles (Otis Skinner), Dorothy Gish (Mrs Skinner) and Lynn. Brown is a typically brainless, lug-headed American and Edwards is even worse! The film alternates between funny moments and drawn out scenes.
It's important to note, going into this movie, that it's set in the 1920s. "Our Hearts Were Young and Gay" is based on a book of the same title by Cornelia Otis Skinner and Emily Kimbrough. It's about their teenage adventures aboard ship and on a trip to Europe. But the book wasn't written until 1942, and the movie made in 1944. That was smack dab in the years of heaviest fighting during World War II. So, one wonders what audiences thought at the time. Here they were seeing scenes of gaiety and fun from around Europe - staged at the Paramount studios along with older film clips from Europe. But they were probably seeing newsreel films the same day of the war and devastation in Europe.
Well, that aside, this is a very good comedy travelogue of two young ladies who have mishap after mishap in their adventures. Their antics and miscues resemble the comedy scenes of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.
The film is good and fared okay at the box office. But considering its best selling status as a book, Paramount might have expected it to do much better than below 50th with a box office of $6 million. There were many war-related films ahead of it that year, but also a number of fine dramas, crime and mystery films, and several comedy romances and musicals.
Gail Russell plays Cornelia Skinner, but already in just her fourth film and at age 20, she was drinking to steady her nerves. By the late 1940s, she was an alcoholic and she made only 10 films after that. She died of liver failure from acute chronic alcoholism in 1961. She was just 36 years old.
Here are a couple of the better lines from the film.
Mrs. Lamberton, played by Alma Kruger, "I never forget things." Miss Horn, played by Beulah Bondi, "How to you know, Ethel? People who forget things don't remember."
Hotel Clerk (Marek Windheim, uncredited), "We never worry about American girls. They know how to take care of themselves." Tom Newhall, "Not these girls." Avery Moore, "You said it."
Well, that aside, this is a very good comedy travelogue of two young ladies who have mishap after mishap in their adventures. Their antics and miscues resemble the comedy scenes of Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy.
The film is good and fared okay at the box office. But considering its best selling status as a book, Paramount might have expected it to do much better than below 50th with a box office of $6 million. There were many war-related films ahead of it that year, but also a number of fine dramas, crime and mystery films, and several comedy romances and musicals.
Gail Russell plays Cornelia Skinner, but already in just her fourth film and at age 20, she was drinking to steady her nerves. By the late 1940s, she was an alcoholic and she made only 10 films after that. She died of liver failure from acute chronic alcoholism in 1961. She was just 36 years old.
Here are a couple of the better lines from the film.
Mrs. Lamberton, played by Alma Kruger, "I never forget things." Miss Horn, played by Beulah Bondi, "How to you know, Ethel? People who forget things don't remember."
Hotel Clerk (Marek Windheim, uncredited), "We never worry about American girls. They know how to take care of themselves." Tom Newhall, "Not these girls." Avery Moore, "You said it."
Based on Cornelia Otis Skinner's book about her misadventures in Paris during the 1920s, as she and Emily Kimbrough embark on an unchaperoned visit to Europe where they are to meet up with their parents at a later time.
Right from the start, the misadventures start--all tinged with humor as the naive girls cope with all manner of happenings, including an overnight stay on a Notre Dame balcony when they are locked out. Some of it seems a bit far-fetched but presumably much of it is based on real life events.
It's rose-tinted nostalgia and a fine period piece. It gives DIANA LYNN (as Emily) and GALE RUSSELL (as Cornelia) some wonderful bits of business that reveals they had a talent for light comedy. CHARLES RUGGLES, JAMES BROWN and BEULAH BONDI shine in supporting roles.
Trivia note: Gale Russell and Cornelia Otis Skinner would be re-united on screen in THE UNINVITED, in which Cornelia played Miss Holloway, the woman who hides a dark secret and keeps Russell locked away in a sanitarium.
Right from the start, the misadventures start--all tinged with humor as the naive girls cope with all manner of happenings, including an overnight stay on a Notre Dame balcony when they are locked out. Some of it seems a bit far-fetched but presumably much of it is based on real life events.
It's rose-tinted nostalgia and a fine period piece. It gives DIANA LYNN (as Emily) and GALE RUSSELL (as Cornelia) some wonderful bits of business that reveals they had a talent for light comedy. CHARLES RUGGLES, JAMES BROWN and BEULAH BONDI shine in supporting roles.
Trivia note: Gale Russell and Cornelia Otis Skinner would be re-united on screen in THE UNINVITED, in which Cornelia played Miss Holloway, the woman who hides a dark secret and keeps Russell locked away in a sanitarium.
They were just two American girls on vacation... who bring chaos wherever they go. What a fun movie. I love the little incident with the rabbit coats. You could never believe that anything in the movie was true until you read the book. It even states "Lest the reader should be in any doubt, we wish to state that the incidents in this book are all true and the characters completely non-fictitious." Once you see the film read the book! Like the film, it will keep you laughing!
In the late 1920s Cornelia Otis Skinner and her friend Emily Kimborough decided to travel to England and France for a vacation. It was the first time they went abroad. Cornelia was the daughter of the notable stage star character actor Otis Skinner, and he agreed to their plans because he would be going to England with his wife shortly afterward and could meet them there and return with them. After the trip was over, the two friends wrote a book THERE HEARTS WERE YOUNG AND GAY about the trip. It became a best seller and was the basis for this 1944 film version.
It is a charming comic travelogue tale, bearing comparison to Jerome K. Jerome's THREE MEN IN A BOAT and ANITA LOOS' somewhat more cynical GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDS, except that this seems to be a true account (although Jerome's book has some elements of truth in it). We watch the two female Candides trying to prove themselves as capable of self-protection (and mutual protection) but not adverse to a little safe romance where they can.
But from the start things keep going awry for them. Nothing major, but all quite embarrassing. When Cornelia (Gail Russell) and Emily (Diana Lynn) are strolling the deck of the ocean liner taking in the cool evening air they pass wealthy, imperious, Alma Kruger. They happen to make a sharp turn while walking around Ms Kruger, and snag her loosely held pocketbook without Ms Kruger noticing. When they notice this they are in their cabin. Before they can return it safely, they hear that Ms Kruger is screaming about being robbed and wanting the thieves arrested. So they have one of their dilemmas: how to get the bag back to the old bat without getting arrested? It is like that (delightfully) throughout the story. When in a boarding house that is cheap but very old fashioned, they are told that if they want to get hot water they have to put a penny in the "Geyser" (pronounced "Geezer"). Naturally, when they see an elderly, crotchety gentleman near the washroom, they give him (the old geezer) a penny which he throws back at them.
Their misadventures follow them throughout the film, even involving their parents (Charlie Ruggles and - in a rare sound movie appearance - Dorothy Gish). Like many others they manage to get lost in the maze at Hampton Court, only managing to drag in Ruggles and Gish and others as well.
This was a nice film, too rarely seen on television (and not - apparently - on video or DVD). It also has it's period charms (the Skinners and Kimborough having dinner at a fancy restaurant, with Skinner/Ruggles ordering a bottle of Mumm's 1928 has a nice touch to it). I think that most of you would enjoy it.
It is a charming comic travelogue tale, bearing comparison to Jerome K. Jerome's THREE MEN IN A BOAT and ANITA LOOS' somewhat more cynical GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDS, except that this seems to be a true account (although Jerome's book has some elements of truth in it). We watch the two female Candides trying to prove themselves as capable of self-protection (and mutual protection) but not adverse to a little safe romance where they can.
But from the start things keep going awry for them. Nothing major, but all quite embarrassing. When Cornelia (Gail Russell) and Emily (Diana Lynn) are strolling the deck of the ocean liner taking in the cool evening air they pass wealthy, imperious, Alma Kruger. They happen to make a sharp turn while walking around Ms Kruger, and snag her loosely held pocketbook without Ms Kruger noticing. When they notice this they are in their cabin. Before they can return it safely, they hear that Ms Kruger is screaming about being robbed and wanting the thieves arrested. So they have one of their dilemmas: how to get the bag back to the old bat without getting arrested? It is like that (delightfully) throughout the story. When in a boarding house that is cheap but very old fashioned, they are told that if they want to get hot water they have to put a penny in the "Geyser" (pronounced "Geezer"). Naturally, when they see an elderly, crotchety gentleman near the washroom, they give him (the old geezer) a penny which he throws back at them.
Their misadventures follow them throughout the film, even involving their parents (Charlie Ruggles and - in a rare sound movie appearance - Dorothy Gish). Like many others they manage to get lost in the maze at Hampton Court, only managing to drag in Ruggles and Gish and others as well.
This was a nice film, too rarely seen on television (and not - apparently - on video or DVD). It also has it's period charms (the Skinners and Kimborough having dinner at a fancy restaurant, with Skinner/Ruggles ordering a bottle of Mumm's 1928 has a nice touch to it). I think that most of you would enjoy it.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizCornelia Otis Skinner and Emily Kimbrough, on whose memoirs the film is based, worked on the script but were not credited.
- BlooperHairdos and costumes are in the style of the Forties, not the Twenties, the time in which the movie is set.
- Citazioni
Mrs. Lamberton: I never forget things.
Miss Horn: How do you know, Ethel? People who forget things don't remember.
- ConnessioniFollowed by Our Hearts Were Growing Up (1946)
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- När jag var ung i Paris
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 21 minuti
- Colore
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- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Our Hearts Were Young and Gay (1944) officially released in India in English?
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