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Susanna ha dormito qui

Titolo originale: Susan Slept Here
  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 38min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,4/10
2295
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Debbie Reynolds and Dick Powell in Susanna ha dormito qui (1954)
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Holiday RomanceScrewball ComedyTeen RomanceComedyDramaRomance

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA Hollywood screenwriter takes in a runaway girl who's more woman than he can handle.A Hollywood screenwriter takes in a runaway girl who's more woman than he can handle.A Hollywood screenwriter takes in a runaway girl who's more woman than he can handle.

  • Regia
    • Frank Tashlin
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Alex Gottlieb
    • Steve Fisher
    • Frank Tashlin
  • Star
    • Dick Powell
    • Debbie Reynolds
    • Anne Francis
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    6,4/10
    2295
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Frank Tashlin
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Alex Gottlieb
      • Steve Fisher
      • Frank Tashlin
    • Star
      • Dick Powell
      • Debbie Reynolds
      • Anne Francis
    • 51Recensioni degli utenti
    • 19Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 2 Oscar
      • 4 candidature totali

    Video1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:17
    Trailer

    Foto99

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    Interpreti principali26

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    Dick Powell
    Dick Powell
    • Mark Christopher
    Debbie Reynolds
    Debbie Reynolds
    • Susan Beaurgard Landis
    Anne Francis
    Anne Francis
    • Isabella Alexander
    Glenda Farrell
    Glenda Farrell
    • Maude Snodgrass
    Alvy Moore
    Alvy Moore
    • Virgil - Mark's Gofer
    Horace McMahon
    Horace McMahon
    • Sergeant Monty Maizel
    Herb Vigran
    Herb Vigran
    • Sergeant Sam Hanlon
    Les Tremayne
    Les Tremayne
    • Harvey Butterworth - Mark's Lawyer
    Mara Lane
    Mara Lane
    • Marilyn - Mark's Neighbor
    Rita Johnson
    Rita Johnson
    • Dr. Rawley - Harvey's Shrink
    Maidie Norman
    Maidie Norman
    • Georgette - Mark's Maid
    Lela Bliss
    Lela Bliss
    • Woman in Elevator
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Daws Butler
    Daws Butler
    • Actor on TV
    • (voce)
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Ken Carpenter
    • Oscar Narrator
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Ellen Corby
    Ellen Corby
    • Coffee Shop Waitress
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    June Foray
    June Foray
    • Actress on TV
    • (voce)
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Rudy Germane
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Art Gilmore
    Art Gilmore
    • The Oscar
    • (voce)
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Frank Tashlin
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Alex Gottlieb
      • Steve Fisher
      • Frank Tashlin
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti51

    6,42.2K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    6AlsExGal

    On paper it sounds creepy but on screen it works

    This is the kind of odd thing that RKO would put together on its downhill slide in the 50's that sometimes would work and sometimes would not. This time it does seem to work although an ick factor seems to be hanging around just off camera that doesn't ever quite completely present itself. At least part of the enjoyment is seeing two veterans of the 30's Warner Brothers musical comedies together playing mature roles twenty years after the fact - Dick Powell as screenwriter-in-a-rut Mark Christopher and Glenda Farrell as his secretary Maude who likes to stay inebriated but is quite the philosopher and friend during her sober moments. She still has all of the bite and fun she had when she was Torchy Blaine.

    The ick factor I talked about before is the marriage in name only of middle-aged Mark to 17 year old Susan Landis (Debbie Reynolds) who is left on Mark's doorstep by the police of all people, because one of the detectives thinks Susan would be good research for a serious script by Mark, and plus the detective doesn't want to put her in jail on Christmas Eve. The detective promises to return for her in two days. The marriage occurs because Susan will be booked on vagrancy without a visible means of support, so off they go to Vegas with Mark looking at this whole thing as a good deed to keep a basically good kid out of jail. However, Susan, the romantic, wants it to be something more. After the wedding Mark deposits Susan back in his Hollywood apartment while he goes off to an isolated spot - without Susan - to try and redeem the script he's been writing.

    Susan and writer's block aren't Mark's only problems. He also has a rich girlfriend (Anne Francis) whom he seems to want to quit almost as much as the job at the studio he had writing fluff pieces but that paid well. It's hard to leave something behind that's comfortable and familiar for the unknown, even if it's slowly strangling you.

    The funniest part of the movie is watching Susan, after she's legally married and living apart from Mark, trying to figured out how to win her man back. She tries everything from watching home movies of Mark's girlfriend and trying to imitate her moves and expressions to basting a turkey in an evening dress waiting for Mark to arrive for dinner, to memorizing how to make various mixed drinks. Then you have to wonder how much of this is love and how much of this is a teenage girl's natural curiosity about sex. Since Debbie Reynolds is just five years older than the part she's playing, she gives the role of Susan the realism of someone who is young enough to have recent memories of their teen years but is old enough to see the humor in them.

    This thing works because it is the 50's, because it is Susan with all of the romantic and aggressive sexual impulses rather than Mark, and because of the excellent supporting players. The one thing that doesn't quite work here is Dick Powell as a 35 year old. He seems like he's playing a man quite a bit older and more beat down than one of 35 - Dick Powell was actually 50 at the time- and perhaps Mark is lying - to himself and to Susan - when he says that's how old he is.

    This isn't a masterpiece, but it is a cute romantic comedy that works.
    7jotix100

    The major and the minor

    What would a confirmed bachelor, of a certain age, do with the unexpected arrival of a lively 17 years old girl into his life? Reason would indicate to run away from the situation! But have no fear, in the theater, as well as in the movies, these two unmatched people get to grow fond of one another and eventually they get married. That seems to be the premise of "Susan Slept Here", a movie that proves irresistible because of the two leading stars.

    Under the direction of Frank Tashlin, this movie, although reflecting a naivete not in synch with the present times, is good fun to watch. The film is done with an impeccable good taste and there is never anything tawdry, or out of place with what one is watching.

    Dick Powell was at his best when he took the part of Mark Christopher a thirty-something man in the plot, but looking older than that. Debbie Reynolds, as Susan Landis, brought her winning personality and charm to this rebel girl that begins a total transformation as she discovers she is attracted to Mark.

    The supporting cast is also up to task under Mr. Tashlin's guidance. Anne Francis is seen as Isabella, Mark's present love interest. Glenda Farrell, Horace McMahon, Herb Vigran and Alvy Moore, among others make this delightful film into a winner.

    Mr. Tashlin includes a dance sequence that plays as a dream in which Mr. Powell, Ms. Francis and Ms. Reynolds are seen as the players. The film is festive and it will delight any viewer looking for an easy time at the movies.
    6capone666

    The Vidiot Reviews....

    Susan Slept Here

    Christmas is the best time to cheat because you already have gifts to make up for it.

    That's why it makes sense for the screenwriter in this romantic comedy to have a holiday affair.

    On Christmas Eve Oscar winner Mark (Dick Powell) is visited by the Vice Squad, who have brought him a 17-year-old runaway, Susan (Debbie Reynolds), as inspiration for his new script about delinquency. But when Mark learns that Susan will be jailed until 18, he marries her. Their abrupt nuptials however don't sit well with Mark's fiancée (Anne Francis), his US Senator father-in-law, or the press.

    If the comedy were as risqué as the romance than this 1954 adaptation of the stage-play wouldn't be as creepy as it is. But with little else to offer besides the illicit affair, this Techicolor romp is pure trash.

    Besides, when you marry a 17-year-old you have to pay for their University. Yellow Light

    vidiotreviews.blogspot.ca
    9zetes

    Exceptionally funny

    After the lamentably unseen The First Time, the next Frank Tashlin movie showing at my local revival theater was Susan Slept Here. I was sure that SSH could not live up to the high standard set by the first film. But it did, and surpassed it. Personally, I think it's one of my five or ten favorite comedies. Dick Powell (whom I've always loved) stars as Mark Christopher, a Hollywood screenwriter who hasn't had any success after winning an Oscar (which, incidentally, serves as the narrator). He once had an idea to write a serious picture (as opposed to the frivolous comedies that he has specialized in) about a juvenile delinquent, which he mentioned to a policeman friend of his. Well, on Christmas Eve, that policeman, along with his partner, shows up at Mark's door with a 17 year-old juvenile delinquent as a present. Her name is Susan (Debbie Reynolds, whom I also love, almost desperately!), and the policeman proposes that Mark hang around her for a couple of days, you know, for research. He's in a hurry to take his girlfriend (the gorgeous but ferocious Anne Francis, who would star in Forbidden Planet a couple of years later) out on a date, but that comes to an abrupt halt when Susan answers Mark's phone. You know the schtick: Mark starts out annoyed at Susan, but they grow attached. The age difference is brought up frequently enough so it doesn't get too creepy. Mark is 35 ([laugh] - maybe when Powell was dancing with Busby Berkeley) and Susan is 17 (Reynolds was 22 at the time, but she is probably the only actress who could get away with playing a teenager until she was in her 40s). For a very long time Mark doesn't respond to Susan's crush. The only major flaw in the film - and even it's acceptable - is Mark's motivation in marrying Susan. He does it, he says, to save her from six months jail time (she has been arrested for assault on a sailor and vagrancy). It's not very believable, but it's also not that big a deal.

    The two leads are exceptional. This was Powell's last movie. After it, he retired to television, although I only call it retirement as a movie snob; he was enormously, enormously successful in the new medium. He's more or less the straight man here. He has a particularly great scene where he watches a 20 year-old movie for which he wrote the dialogue on television. As the actors speak their horrendous dialogue, we watch Powell as he mouths their words, both a man's and a woman's (it's a break-up scene), with an embarrassed look in his eyes. If Powell is good, Reynolds is masterful. She's such an odd actress, not conventional in any way. She had her own niche in Hollywood. Her acting is doll-like with its jerky movements and huge facial expressions. That isn't a criticism whatsoever. I have never seen her in a straight drama (the closest is How the West Was Won); I'd imagine she acts differently, or she never made one. In comedies like this and Singin' in the Rain, she's absolutely perfect. There is not a moment when she's on screen during which I was not laughing myself to tears. The film also has one of the greatest supporting casts ever. Anne Francis I've already mentioned. I very much appreciate the fact that the writers didn't make her character abominable; Susan Slept Here, although it's not a musical, is very much a direct descendent of An American in Paris and Singin' in the Rain. One criticism I have of Singin' is that Jean Hagan's villain is too cartoonish (or at least I would have that criticism if Hagan weren't so damn funny in that movie). Francis in SSH is played sympathetically for the most part. Glenda Farrell plays Mark's secretary, Maude, an alcoholic who answers the telephone on Christmas morning: "You talk, I can't." Alvy Moore is Mark's friend and assistant, Virgil, who can crack wise with the best of them. Horace McMahon and Herb Vigran play the two cops, and Les Tremayne plays Mark's lawyer, who is obsessive about his therapy sessions. Red Skeleton has a wordless but amusing cameo as Maude's teenage sweetheart. 10/10.
    paluska

    Delightful Movie to Watch Christmas Eve--Even if dated today

    Yet another Frank Tashlin (a former cartoonist) farce, set in LA on Christmas Eve with juvenile delinquent Debbie Reynolds (as perky and as cute as ever) consigned to old Oscar-winner Dick Powell--with the late Alvy Moore as his kookie sidekick, Virgil. Dated now with early 1950s song and look (dig that crazy sports car Powell drives), "real nervous" dialogue, etc. but something still comfy and fun about it--especially to watch on Christmas Eve. Look for great cameo at end by Red Skelton. Oh yes, and *I* like dill pickles and peanut butter!!

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Debbie Reynolds liked the film, later stating "that little comedy made $5,500,000, pulled RKO out of the red and then Howard Hughes sold the studio".
    • Blooper
      When Isabella confronts new bride Susan in her bedroom, a part of the camera setup and a crew member's arm are visible in the mirror.
    • Citazioni

      Mark Christopher: You know, I've forgotten what 17-year-old emotional kids are like. I've been going out with middle-aged women--20, 21...

    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Violent Years (1994)
    • Colonne sonore
      Susan Slept Here
      (uncredited)

      Written by Jack Lawrence

      Sung over the opening credits by a chorus

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 21 ottobre 1954 (Portogallo)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Siti ufficiali
      • HBOMAX
      • Official site
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Susan Slept Here
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Harriet Parsons Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 38 minuti
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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