[go: up one dir, main page]

    Release calendarTop 250 moviesFilmes mais popularesBrowse movies by genreTop box officeShowtimes & ticketsMovie newsDestaque do cinema indiano
    What's on TV & streamingTop 250 TV showsMost popular TV showsBrowse TV shows by genreNotícias de TV
    What to watchLatest trailersOriginais do IMDbEscolhas do IMDbDestaque da IMDbFamily entertainment guidePodcasts do IMDb
    OscarsPride MonthAmerican Black Film FestivalSummer Watch GuidePrêmios STARMeterCentral de prêmiosCentral de festivaisTodos os eventos
    Born todayMost popular celebsCelebrity news
    Central de ajudaContributor zoneEnquetes
For Industry Professionals
  • Idioma
  • Totalmente suportado
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente suportado
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Lista de favoritos
Fazer login
  • Totalmente suportado
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente suportado
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Usar o app
  • Elenco e equipe
  • Avaliações de usuários
  • Curiosidades
  • Perguntas frequentes
IMDbPro

Meu Filho é Meu Rival

Título original: Come and Get It
  • 1936
  • Approved
  • 1 h 39 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
2,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Frances Farmer, Edward Arnold, and Joel McCrea in Meu Filho é Meu Rival (1936)
An ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.
Reproduzir trailer1:39
1 vídeo
26 fotos
DramaRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAn ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.An ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.An ambitious lumberjack abandons his saloon girl lover so that he can marry into wealth, but years later becomes infatuated with the woman's daughter.

  • Direção
    • Howard Hawks
    • William Wyler
    • Richard Rosson
  • Roteiristas
    • Edna Ferber
    • Jane Murfin
    • Jules Furthman
  • Artistas
    • Edward Arnold
    • Joel McCrea
    • Frances Farmer
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,9/10
    2,6 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Howard Hawks
      • William Wyler
      • Richard Rosson
    • Roteiristas
      • Edna Ferber
      • Jane Murfin
      • Jules Furthman
    • Artistas
      • Edward Arnold
      • Joel McCrea
      • Frances Farmer
    • 60Avaliações de usuários
    • 28Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Ganhou 1 Oscar
      • 4 vitórias e 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:39
    Trailer

    Fotos26

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    + 20
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal60

    Editar
    Edward Arnold
    Edward Arnold
    • Barney Glasgow
    Joel McCrea
    Joel McCrea
    • Richard Glasgow
    Frances Farmer
    Frances Farmer
    • Lotta Morgan…
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
    • Swan Bostrom
    Mady Christians
    Mady Christians
    • Karie
    Mary Nash
    Mary Nash
    • Emma Louise
    Andrea Leeds
    Andrea Leeds
    • Evvie Glasgow
    Frank Shields Sr.
    Frank Shields Sr.
    • Tony Schwerke
    • (as Frank Shields)
    Edwin Maxwell
    Edwin Maxwell
    • Sid LeMaire
    Cecil Cunningham
    Cecil Cunningham
    • Josie
    Charles Halton
    Charles Halton
    • Mr. Hewitt
    Edwin August
    Edwin August
    • Restaurant Patron
    • (não creditado)
    Bobby Barber
    Bobby Barber
    • Diner
    • (não creditado)
    Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans
    • Gunnar Gallagher
    • (não creditado)
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Dining Car Patron
    • (não creditado)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Lumberjack
    • (não creditado)
    Harry C. Bradley
    Harry C. Bradley
    • Thomas Gubbins
    • (não creditado)
    Ed Brady
    Ed Brady
    • Barfly
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Howard Hawks
      • William Wyler
      • Richard Rosson
    • Roteiristas
      • Edna Ferber
      • Jane Murfin
      • Jules Furthman
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários60

    6,92.5K
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    drednm

    Frances Farmer and Edward Arnold Shine

    Old fashioned to be sure, but this film version of the Edna Ferber novel boasts some great film acting by Edward Arnold and Frances Farmer (in a dual role).

    Story has the ruthless Arnold working his way up in the Wisconsin lumber business, grabbing at everything in sight, including saloon gal Farmer. He seems to care about nothing but getting ahead. When he gets the chance to marry the boss' daughter (Mary Nash), he dumps Farmer and moves on.

    Twenty year later, he has it all plus two children: Joel McCrea and Andrea Leeds. By chance he runs into old pal (Walter Brennan in his first Oscar win) who married Farmer. She's dead but her daughter (Farmer again) lives with him along with a niece (Mady Christians). The daughter is a dead ringer for the mother, and Arnold decides to move in on her (in a last gasp at youth).

    But when the daughter meets McCrea, it's all over for Arnold. The father and son have a confrontation and the old man sees the light.

    This film offers some of the best acting of any 30s film. Edward Arnold is superb, and his final scene is just plain chilling. Farmer is glorious in her dual role, her best chance at film stardom (that never happened). Also solid are McCrea, Brennan, Leeds, and Nash. Supporting cast offers Cecil Cunningham as the wise-cracking and wise secretary.

    The film may set a Hollywood record in listing THREE directors. Both Howard Hawks and William Wyler are listed as co-directors while Richard Rosson is credited with the timber scenes (which are great).

    Worth a look for Frances Farmer and Edward Arnold!
    7brogmiller

    Hollywood hybrid.

    Behind every film there is usually a story and this one is certainly no exception. Howard Hawks departed the production two-thirds of the way through(whether he quit or was fired is debatable) and a reluctant William Wyler was instructed by Samuel Goldwyn to complete it. As the Director's Guild was as yet not recognised by the studio, both directors were given credit. If two directors were not enough, the tree-felling sequences were handled by Richard Rosson. These scenes are spectacular but guaranteed to have conservationists rolling on the floor and foaming at the mouth.

    It would seem that the film was shot in script order and the rumbustious early scenes have Mr. Hawks written all over them whereas Mr Wyler's more subdued tone is evident later on. Both directors disowned the finished product and despite some telling scenes the film represents neither of them at their very best. Gregg Toland is behind the camera(Rudoph Maté for the tree-felling) and the soundtrack to the characters' lives is supplied by the Civil War ballad 'Aura Lea', later reincarnated as 'Love me Tender.'

    It is the splendidly spirited performances that carry it through notably those of Edward Arnold, Walter Brennan, here making filmic history as the first actor to win a Best Supporting Oscar and the ill-fated Mady Christians whilst Howard Hawks' 'discovery' Frances Farmer is utterly luminous. Of all the stars that fell from the Hollywood firmament, the tragic Miss Farmer was surely one of the most dazzling.
    8johno-21

    Good Frances Farmer flick from the 30's

    Edna Ferber had several of her novels made into films including Giant, Showboat a couple of times and Dinner at Eight among the well known. Come and Get it is based on the Ferber novel adapted to the screen by Jules Furthman and Jane Murfin. I grew up in the area where the story is set. In the story the town is called Iron Ridge but Ferber did her research for the story while staying at the Burton House hotel in the old lumber and mining town of Hurley, Wisconsin on the Michigan border with Ironwood, Michigan. The Burton House was a grand old three story 100 room wooden hotel that President Grover Cleveland once stayed at. It would burn down in the 1940's. In the character name Lotta Morgan she used the actual name of a famous Hurley saloon singer of the 1880's. Actually, the real Lotta Morgan earned her living from something other than just singing in the saloons. She was also an unsolved murder victim whose body was found floating in the river with a hatchet in her forehead. Ferber put together her romantic tale of the north woods and it's many lumber camps. This is a good movie set in the late 19th century. Frances Farmer plays dual roles of mother and daughter in the fourth leading role of her career and maybe her best. She would go on to star in only six more lead roles before being relegated to supporting actress in four more films and then her film career was over. Edward Arnold, Joel Mcrea, Walter Brennan and Mary Nash round out the fine cast. Howard Hawks directed and this was his project until an argument with the studio boss caused his dismissal and William Wyler was called in to finish the film. Excellent Cinematography from Rudolf Maté and Greg Toland. One of the last films of famed costume designer Omar Kiam. Walter Brennan won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor in his role of the Swedish logger Swan Bostrom. The first of three career Academy Awards he would win. Come and Get it also received an Academy Award nomination for Edward Curtis for editing which was well deserved being that he had to put together the work of three directors, Hawks, Wyler and Richard Rosson who directed the logging scenes. Farmer should have been nominated for Best Actress but was over looked by the Academy for Irene Dunn, veterans from silent film days Gladys George, Carole Lombard, Norma Shearer and German actress Luise Rainer who won. The studio in promoting this film had Farmer signing the book Come and Get it at autograph opportunities. She once found it exceptionally strange that she would be signing a book she had not written when she was doing a signing at the Bon Marché department store in her hometown of Seattle where she had been fired from a few years before. I've seen this several times in television over the years and it's worth a look. I would give it an 8.0 out of 10.
    7ilprofessore-1

    Dazzling beautiful, dazzling real

    When Frances Farmer was a drama student at the University of Washington she won a scholarship to visit Russia and watch the Moscow Art Theater headed by the great actor and director, Konstantin Stanislavski. When that Russian company first came to tour the United States in the 1920s, the truthfulness and expressivity of the acting so impressed many of America's best young actors that they eventually formed The Group Theater (1931-1940),modeling their ensemble work on it. In 1937 The Group Theater invited Frances Farmer, a non-member of the company, to play the female lead in Clifford Odets' new play "Golden Boy." At the time it was thought by many that the sole reason for the invitation was because Farmer was a beautiful movie star whose presence would boost box office. Today anyone who sees her remarkable work in the dual roles of Lotta in "Come and Get It" (1936) will recognize that not only was she dazzling beautiful, she was also dazzling real and painfully truthful --a true actress in the Stanislavski tradition. No wonder Howard Hawks said she was the best actress he had ever worked with in his long career.
    10Ron Oliver

    Topnotch Acting Enlivens Lumber Tale

    An aging lumber tycoon tries to relive his youth after meeting the hauntingly beautiful daughter of an old friend.

    Based on the sprawling novel by Edna Ferber, COME AND GET IT is a fascinating love story, filled with action & tenderness and some very good acting. The production values are on a high order, with the authentic logging sequence especially exciting.

    Boisterous, brash & bold, Edward Arnold portrays the brawling two-fisted lumberjack who pushes himself to the top of the heap, trampling on his one great love in the process. Although completely unbelievable as a young man during the first three-quarters of an hour, this is not a problem as he is never anything less than enjoyable in the role.

    Miss Frances Farmer, playing a tenderhearted floozy and her own ambitious daughter, has the best film of her career. She is nothing less than radiant and her obvious talent makes her bizarre personal history all that much more tragic.

    Wonderful Walter Brennan plays Arnold's jovial Swedish pal, in a performance that would catapult him out of cinematic anonymity and earn him the first of his three Oscars for Best Supporting Actor. Seemingly able to play any kind of part - as long as the character was middle-aged or elderly - during his 46 years in movies & television Mr. Brennan would become one of America's most beloved character actors. He died in 1974 at the age of 80.

    Almost obscured by the oversized talents around him, Joel McCrea wisely turns in an understated performance as Arnold's quiet, intelligent son (he invents the disposable paper cup!). His years of solid successes in front of the cameras were adding up and he would soon become a major Hollywood star.

    A quartet of fine actresses fill smaller roles: Mary Nash as Arnold's neglected wife; Andrea Leeds as his adored daughter; Mady Christians as Brennan's sturdy, sensible niece; and Cecil Cunningham as Arnold's intuitive, sharp-tongued secretary. That's porcine Edwin Maxwell once again playing a bad guy, this time the crooked owner of a lumber camp saloon.

    The song which is used as the theme for Miss Farmer's characters is ‘Aura Lee,' (written in 1861 by W. W. Fosdick & George R. Poulton) a very popular strain on both sides during the War Between The States. Decades later, in the 1950's, Elvis Presley would use the tune for one of his biggest hits, ‘Love Me Tender.'

    Mais itens semelhantes

    Infâmia
    7,4
    Infâmia
    Duas Almas se Encontram
    6,7
    Duas Almas se Encontram
    O Galante Aventureiro
    7,3
    O Galante Aventureiro
    Romance do Sul
    6,2
    Romance do Sul
    O Furacão
    7,1
    O Furacão
    Beco sem Saída
    7,2
    Beco sem Saída
    Kitty Foyle
    6,9
    Kitty Foyle
    Cyrano de Bergerac
    7,4
    Cyrano de Bergerac
    Estrada Proibida
    7,0
    Estrada Proibida
    A História de Louis Pasteur
    7,3
    A História de Louis Pasteur
    Fogo de Outono
    7,7
    Fogo de Outono
    A Canção Prometida
    6,9
    A Canção Prometida

    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Howard Hawks's take on his being "fired" is that he wasn't. Rather, he quit, after refusing to agree with Samuel Goldwyn, who wanted the narrative to stay closer to that of the book. Goldwyn had been ill and absent for the 42 days of shooting that Hawks directed and was unaware of Hawks' rewrites. Hawks left the production with only 14 days left to go.
    • Erros de gravação
      During the early montage showing the lumber process, fluorescent lights are seen on the ceiling of a workshop. While they had just become commercially available when the film was made, this scene takes place in 1884, decades before their refinement.
    • Citações

      Swan Bostrom: You.. you love him Lotta...

      Lotta Morgan: What do you think?

      Swan Bostrom: I think... I think... I think I have another drink.

      Lotta Morgan: Hey you better leave some of that for Barney.

      Swan Bostrom: I ain't have to. He ain't comin' back.

      Lotta Morgan: What did you say?

      Swan Bostrom: That's what I tried so hard to tell you and it yust slip out...

    • Conexões
      Edited into Sunset in Wyoming (1941)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Aura Lea
      (1861) (uncredited)

      Music by George R. Poulton

      Lyrics by W.W. Fosdick

      In the score often as Lotta's theme

      Performed by Frances Farmer and an unidentified quartet in LeMaire's bar

      Reprised later by her, Edward Arnold and Walter Brennan

    Principais escolhas

    Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
    Fazer login

    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How long is Come and Get It?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 23 de dezembro de 1936 (França)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Come and Get It
    • Locações de filme
      • Clearwater River, Idaho, EUA(logging sequences)
    • Empresa de produção
      • The Samuel Goldwyn Company
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 39 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

    Contribua para esta página

    Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente
    Frances Farmer, Edward Arnold, and Joel McCrea in Meu Filho é Meu Rival (1936)
    Principal brecha
    By what name was Meu Filho é Meu Rival (1936) officially released in India in English?
    Responda
    • Veja mais brechas
    • Saiba mais sobre como contribuir
    Editar página

    Explore mais

    Vistos recentemente

    Ative os cookies do navegador para usar este recurso. Saiba mais.
    Obtenha o aplicativo IMDb
    Faça login para obter mais acessoFaça login para obter mais acesso
    Siga o IMDb nas redes sociais
    Obtenha o aplicativo IMDb
    Para Android e iOS
    Obtenha o aplicativo IMDb
    • Ajuda
    • Índice do site
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • Dados da licença do IMDb
    • Sala de imprensa
    • Anúncios
    • Empregos
    • Condições de uso
    • Política de privacidade
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, uma empresa da Amazon

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.