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IMDbPro

Escravos do Desejo

Título original: Of Human Bondage
  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1 h 23 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,0/10
8,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Bette Davis and Leslie Howard in Escravos do Desejo (1934)
Of Human Bondage: Calls Himself A Gentleman
Reproduzir clip1:17
Assistir a Of Human Bondage: Calls Himself A Gentleman
1 vídeo
58 fotos
Drama médicoFilme NoirRomance sombrioRomance trágicoTragédiaDramaRomance

Um jovem é atraído por uma garçonete fria e insensível que pode acabar por destruí-los aos dois.Um jovem é atraído por uma garçonete fria e insensível que pode acabar por destruí-los aos dois.Um jovem é atraído por uma garçonete fria e insensível que pode acabar por destruí-los aos dois.

  • Direção
    • John Cromwell
  • Roteiristas
    • Lester Cohen
    • W. Somerset Maugham
    • Ann Coleman
  • Artistas
    • Bette Davis
    • Leslie Howard
    • Frances Dee
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,0/10
    8,9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • John Cromwell
    • Roteiristas
      • Lester Cohen
      • W. Somerset Maugham
      • Ann Coleman
    • Artistas
      • Bette Davis
      • Leslie Howard
      • Frances Dee
    • 123Avaliações de usuários
    • 42Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 1 Oscar
      • 3 vitórias e 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos1

    Of Human Bondage: Calls Himself A Gentleman
    Clip 1:17
    Of Human Bondage: Calls Himself A Gentleman

    Fotos58

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    Elenco principal31

    Editar
    Bette Davis
    Bette Davis
    • Mildred
    Leslie Howard
    Leslie Howard
    • Philip
    Frances Dee
    Frances Dee
    • Sally
    Kay Johnson
    Kay Johnson
    • Norah
    Reginald Denny
    Reginald Denny
    • Griffiths
    Alan Hale
    Alan Hale
    • Miller
    Reginald Sheffield
    Reginald Sheffield
    • Dunsford
    Reginald Owen
    Reginald Owen
    • Athelny
    Desmond Roberts
    Desmond Roberts
    • Dr. Jacobs
    Charles Coleman
    Charles Coleman
      Frank Mills
      Frank Mills
      • Chimneysweep
      • (cenas deletadas)
      Pat Somerset
      Pat Somerset
        Harry Allen
        • Cabbie at End
        • (não creditado)
        Ray Atchley
        • J. Murphy
        • (não creditado)
        Frank Baker
        Frank Baker
        • Policeman Removing Mildred
        • (não creditado)
        Evelyn Beresford
        Evelyn Beresford
        • Coughing Lady
        • (não creditado)
        Jimmy Casey
          Ma Curly
          • Charwoman
          • (não creditado)
          • Direção
            • John Cromwell
          • Roteiristas
            • Lester Cohen
            • W. Somerset Maugham
            • Ann Coleman
          • Elenco e equipe completos
          • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

          Avaliações de usuários123

          7,08.8K
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          Avaliações em destaque

          8donta49001

          That darn Bette Davis!

          I just saw "Of Human Bondage" for the first time a few days ago and WOW! What a mysterious and almost spooky film. I loved how the music went with the pace of each step of Philip's feet. It gave me the chills for some reason...

          One of the greatest aspects of this film is that you get to see Bette Davis coming into herself right before your eyes. She's great, not necessarily because this is her best work, but because it was so out of the ordinary to be so vicious, gritty, and unflinching as an actress in 1934... Bette was a risk taker, always wanting to be different and this is right about when she started to realize that she could be as nasty and daring as she wanted and people would love her for it. If you're a true lover of film, it's amazing to see...

          She just had a way of delivering a line that made the part, and the film for that matter, belong to her. Like "A mass of music and fire. That's me...an old kazoo and some sparklers" or "But you are Blanche, you are in that chair!" or "WITH ALL MY HEART, I STILL LOVE THE MAN I KILLED!!"... Those are from a few of her films, but you get my drift. She was just so brave, sassy, and exotic looking with those beautiful big eyes. After seeing this, I can't believe it was remade twice...

          Leslie Howard was gorgeous...so calm and persistent, needing to be loved. I thought he was adorable and couldn't understand how everyone wasn't falling for him, but then again, everyone was...except Mildred. He did a great job...

          The only thing that I didn't like was something that was common with the writing in the early films. They'd make a character so hateful that it's almost unbelievable that someone would actually fall for them in the first place. The performances were great, but in real life, Philip would have never been interested in Mildred. That's just the simple truth... See it!!
          7blanche-2

          Davis' breakout role

          Today actresses happily gain weight, dye their hair, dress like slobs, and lose their glamor for a role, and Bette Davis was probably the actress who started the trend. Even as a pretty young woman who occasionally wore designer clothes and Constance Bennett-type makeup in films, Davis was willing to ravage herself in order to create a character on the outside as well as the inside.

          Her determination is amply demonstrated here in her breakout film, "Of Human Bondage," in which she stars with Leslie Howard as Philip Carey. Davis plays Mildred, a slutty, manipulative, greedy low-life to Howard's masochistic, club-footed Philip. He first meets her when she's a waitress, and she allows him to take her out to dinner and theater while she frolics with a wealthy older man (Alan Hale Sr.). In truth, Mildred is repulsed by Philip's club foot. On his part, Philip seems to enjoy the abuse of her open flirtation and her coolness toward him. He allows Mildred to bleed him dry financially in between boyfriends who drop her when they tire of her, while he blows off a couple of truly lovely women (Kay Johnson and Frances Dee). When he gets the gumption to throw her out, Mildred trashes his apartment and robs him, forcing him to withdraw from medical school and lose his lodgings.

          "Of Human Bondage" looks rather stilted today in parts. Though Leslie Howard was a wonderful actor and attractive, his acting style is of a more formal old school, and as a result, he tends to date whatever he's in. He shines in material like his role opposite Davis in "It's Love I'm After" or "The Petrified Forest" which call for his kind of technique. His dated acting is even more obvious here because Davis was forging new ground with a gritty, edgy performance that would really make her name. If she seems at times over the top, she came from the stage, and the subtleties of film acting would emerge later for her. Contrast this performance with the restraint, warmth and gentleness of her Henriette in "All This, and Heaven Too" or the pathos she brought to "Dark Victory." She was a true actress and a true artist. Davis really allows herself to look like holy hell; Mildred's deterioration is absolutely pathetic as Philip seems to gain strength as her spirit fades.

          An excellent film in which to see the burgeoning of one of film's greatest stars.
          verna55

          A star is born!

          After laboring in Hollywood for nearly four years, playing one nothing role after the other in one forgettabe film after the other, Davis won the role of a lifetime. That of slatternly waitress Mildred Rogers, the 'bitch' heroine of Somerset Maugham's classic story. Davis in BONDAGE is an example of an actress's triumph. Lester Cohen's script, making for a picture that runs in length 83 minutes, is breezy and admittedly fails to capture all of the qualities that made Maugham's book such a compulsive read. But Bette Davis' performance in BONDAGE makes the film every bit as good as the book itself. She is absolutely fascinating. Her role of Mildred is as spiteful and bitchy as they come. Yet Bette plays the part so well that you can't help but root for her. That's not to say that she doesn't overdo it at times. But she is clearly into the role and rightfully so. Having played so many thankless background parts(secretaries, gun molls, etc.), this was her chance to break loose and show critics and audiences alike her full capabilities as an actress, and did she ever! Even keeping in mind all of the memorable Davis movie moments that followed, Mildred Rogers still remains her most stunning achievement. The great British actor Leslie Howard, playing the club-footed medical student who becomes infatuated with Mildred, seems over-powered, and possibly intimidated by his co-star. Oh yes, Davis was not yet a full-fledged star and was supposed to be playing second fiddle to the already distinguished Howard, but with BONDAGE, that situation quickly reversed. Shockingly, Davis didn't receive so much as an Oscar nomination for her brilliant performance, and when she won a year later for the tired melodrama DANGEROUS, everyone(including Bette herself) assumed it was out of sympathy for not receiving her full due for this film.
          9lawprof

          The First Version (of three) is Still the Best

          Coming shortly before the imposition of a morality code darkened the spirits of writers, directors and actors, the first film adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's "Of Human Bondage" titillated countless moviegoers. It has no shock value today, just fine acting.

          While the cast is excellent, this is Bette Davis's first great role and one of Leslie Howard's best performances. Howard is English wannabe Parisian artist Philip Carey who is gently and firmly told that he lacks any talent and that his dedication is no substitute for true genius. Taking the lesson to heart he returns to London and enrolls in a medical college (one, by the way, that seems to have no female students-at that time there would have been at least a few. Perhaps author/physician Maugham didn't care for distaff medicos).

          Having tea one day Carey is entranced by a waitress, Mildred Rogers, Bette Davis in a role as a morally loose and basically wicked farrago. Her Cockney accent is as sharp as Eliza Doolittle's. His repeated attempts to date her are greeted with the less than enthusiastic reply, "I don't mind," a sure sign for any man with his head screwed on straight that he's plumbing the depths. Maugham's Mildred supplemented her waitress tips with a bit of old fashioned street-walking, something not clearly brought out here.

          Carey's besotted prostration serves Rogers' avaricious need for support of the financial kind. He is desperately in love with her-she plays him as a Sunday church organist effortlessly plies her instrument. No sex here. Recognizing that he is getting nowhere, he begins a chaste relationship with Norah, a woman who adores him. Re-enter Mildred, replete with a baby, and in her usual need of being taken care of. Exit heartbroken Norah.

          Another separation from Mildred and Carey begins a long-term friendship with Sally, abetted enthusiastically by her dad who seems to view eventual marriage as both a good thing for the two young people and a chance to be relieved of one of his nine offspring.

          The movie reasonably but not entirely follows Maugham's excellent novel. Howard's Carey is naive and vulnerable and for much of the movie his sad eyes remind one of a doe facing a double-barreled shotgun. Mildred is unrestrainedly wicked, a user of the worst kind, her sole preoccupation with her own needs barely disguised when she tries to wheedle Carey with a thin patina of affectionate words (and offers-at one point she promises she'll do "anything [he] wants," a daring statement for the times and one I'm sure audiences fully understood.

          Pre-Code it may be but Mildred's quick-march dissolution would have satisfied the League of Catholic Decency. The ending is conventional-sin loses, principled behavior triumphs.

          Director John Cromwell wrought excellent performances from his two main stars, one well-established, the other established largely because of this film. The atmosphere is 1930s London and the trip back in time is worth taking.

          Available on DVD.

          9/10 (for Davis's and Howard's performances)
          Schlockmeister

          Bette is first noticed!

          A good, historical movie for the Bette Davis fan in that this is the first movie where she was noticed, based on her merits as an actress. This was a role that was offered to others, but "others" thought that playing such an evil "belladonna" role would harm their career. Bette never flinched from playing the "bitch" and it helped push her career forward. Bette does a good job in this story of an evil woman and the man who just won't/can't let her go. As another writer here has stated, this should be required viewing by young men. The scary thing is, there truly ARE such women out there. A cautionary tale that delivers..

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          Enredo

          Editar

          Você sabia?

          Editar
          • Curiosidades
            In later years, Bette Davis said that she found Leslie Howard very frosty and this actually helped her performance, particularly for the scenes requiring her to be horrible to him.
          • Erros de gravação
            Athelny's mustache and beard are almost coming unstuck when he is eating dinner.
          • Citações

            Mildred Rogers: You cad, you dirty swine! I never cared for you, not once! I was always makin' a fool of ya! Ya bored me stiff; I hated ya! It made me sick when I had to let ya kiss me. I only did it because ya begged me, ya hounded me and drove me crazy! And after ya kissed me, I always used to wipe my mouth! Wipe my mouth!

          • Conexões
            Edited into Liquid Television: Episode #2.10 (1992)
          • Trilhas sonoras
            Hesitation Blues
            (1915) (uncredited)

            Written by Billy Smythe, Scott Middleton and Art Gillham

            Played when Mildred is tearing up the apartment

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          Perguntas frequentes20

          • How long is Of Human Bondage?Fornecido pela Alexa
          • What is 'Of Human Bondage' about?
          • Is 'Of Human Bondage' based on a book?
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          Detalhes

          Editar
          • Data de lançamento
            • 20 de julho de 1934 (Estados Unidos da América)
          • País de origem
            • Estados Unidos da América
          • Idiomas
            • Inglês
            • Francês
          • Também conhecido como
            • Servidão Humana
          • Locações de filme
            • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
          • Empresa de produção
            • RKO Radio Pictures
          • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

          Bilheteria

          Editar
          • Orçamento
            • US$ 403.000 (estimativa)
          Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

          Especificações técnicas

          Editar
          • Tempo de duração
            • 1 h 23 min(83 min)
          • Cor
            • Black and White
          • Proporção
            • 1.37 : 1

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