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IMDbPro

O Homem de Cinzento

Título original: The Man in Grey
  • 1943
  • Approved
  • 1 h 56 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
1,7 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
James Mason in O Homem de Cinzento (1943)
After a brutish, hedonistic Marquis marries a pretty young Clarissa to act as a 'brood sow,' he begins an affair with her friend who plots to take her place.
Reproduzir trailer2:56
1 vídeo
33 fotos
DramaDrama de épocaDrama históricoHistóriaRomanceRomance trágico

Clarissa, uma jovem bela e gentil, se casa com um marquês hedonista e cruel, que deseja apenas ter um herdeiro. Levando vidas separadas, ele se envolve com a única amiga de Clarissa, que pla... Ler tudoClarissa, uma jovem bela e gentil, se casa com um marquês hedonista e cruel, que deseja apenas ter um herdeiro. Levando vidas separadas, ele se envolve com a única amiga de Clarissa, que planeja tomar seu lugar.Clarissa, uma jovem bela e gentil, se casa com um marquês hedonista e cruel, que deseja apenas ter um herdeiro. Levando vidas separadas, ele se envolve com a única amiga de Clarissa, que planeja tomar seu lugar.

  • Direção
    • Leslie Arliss
  • Roteiristas
    • Margaret Kennedy
    • Leslie Arliss
    • Doreen Montgomery
  • Artistas
    • Margaret Lockwood
    • James Mason
    • Phyllis Calvert
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,5/10
    1,7 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Leslie Arliss
    • Roteiristas
      • Margaret Kennedy
      • Leslie Arliss
      • Doreen Montgomery
    • Artistas
      • Margaret Lockwood
      • James Mason
      • Phyllis Calvert
    • 32Avaliações de usuários
    • 26Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória no total

    Vídeos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:56
    Official Trailer

    Fotos33

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    Elenco principal33

    Editar
    Margaret Lockwood
    Margaret Lockwood
    • Hesther Shaw. later Barbary
    James Mason
    James Mason
    • Lord Rohan
    Phyllis Calvert
    Phyllis Calvert
    • Clarissa Richmond…
    Stewart Granger
    Stewart Granger
    • Swinton Rokeby…
    Antony Scott
    • Toby
    • (as Harry Scott)
    Martita Hunt
    Martita Hunt
    • Miss Patchett
    Helen Haye
    Helen Haye
    • Lady Rohan
    Beatrice Varley
    Beatrice Varley
    • Gipsy
    Raymond Lovell
    • The Prince Regent
    Nora Swinburne
    Nora Swinburne
    • Mrs. Fitzherbert
    • (as Norah Swinburne)
    Kathleen Boutall
    • Amelia
    • (não creditado)
    James B. Carson
    • Gervaise
    • (não creditado)
    Patric Curwen
    Patric Curwen
    • Doctor
    • (não creditado)
    Roy Emerton
    • Gamekeeper
    • (não creditado)
    Jane Gill-Davis
    • Lady Marr - Clarissa's Godmother
    • (não creditado)
    Lola Hunt
    • Nurse
    • (não creditado)
    Diana King
    • Jane Seymour
    • (não creditado)
    Wally Kingston
    • Old Porter
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Leslie Arliss
    • Roteiristas
      • Margaret Kennedy
      • Leslie Arliss
      • Doreen Montgomery
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários32

    6,51.7K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    6blanche-2

    it's actually the boy in black

    I'll explain the subject of my review later.

    I won't lie and say I enjoyed this film, though I certainly loved seeing all the actors so young, and their acting was marvelous.

    "The Man in Grey" begins at a modern-day auction where Phyllis Calvert and Stewart Granger meet. Granger is hoping to pick up something from the Rohan family - one of his ancestors was involved with a Roham. Calvert actually is a Rohan.

    As they look over the various small items available, the film dissolves to an earlier time period. We see how these items were connected to the various people in the story.

    The lovely Clarissa (Calvert) marries the wealthy, arrogant Lord Rohan (James Mason) not for love, but so he can have an heir while he continues with his hedonistic life. While in school, Clarissa befriended a poor girl, Hester (Margaret Lockwood). One night she sees that Hester, who had run off to get married, is in a play, and makes contact with her.

    It's not long before Hester is living in the manse with Clarissa and Lord Rohan and decides that three's a crowd. The unhappy Clarissa meets Rokeby (Granger), and they fall in love. He wants her to leave Rohan. What will happen to the lives of these four?

    Apparently this film was a huge hit and really established these stars. For me it was problematic. The first complete turn-off was a discussion of a disgusting dogfight. Thank God it was just a discussion. I nearly stopped watching then but soldiered on. It solidified Lord Rohan for me as a revolting human being.

    And then we have little Toby (Antony Scott). You're kidding, right? He plays a boy slave who is devoted to Clarissa. He's a white kid in blackface. Stupefying. Or was he? Supposedly he is the son of Harry Scott, part of the minstrel team of Scott and Whaley. Scott and Whaley supposedly actually were black. But boy this kid looked like he had on blackface. A little mystery that I couldn't solve.

    The Man in Grey is a story where good is good and evil is evil, no in betweens. Hester and Lord Rohan are nasty pieces of work.

    See it for the fine actors and as an example of Gainsborough films - this is probably the most successful one.
    7JamesHitchcock

    Who Dishonours Us, Dies

    "The Man in Grey" was the first of the "Gainsborough melodramas", a series of films made by Gainsborough Pictures; they generally had a period setting and a highly dramatic plot. They can be considered as "women's pictures" in that they were primarily aimed at a female audience. (During the war, with so many men serving in the Armed Forces, women made up the greater part of cinema audiences). Unlike many Hollywood "women's pictures" which revolved around a central female character, however, they often featured strong male characters in prominent leading roles.

    The main action takes place during the Regency period, although this is set within the framework of a story set in 1943 and involving a romance between the modern descendants of the families featured in the Regency story. The "man in grey" of the title is Lord Rohan, a man notorious both for his debauched lifestyle and for his savage temper. (He has killed several men in duels). He marries Clarissa, a beautiful heiress, but theirs is a loveless marriage from the start. (He marries her partly for her fortune, partly to provide an heir to his family estates). They lead separate lives, and Clarissa falls in love with a handsome young actor named Rokeby. Rohan begins an affair with a scheming young woman named Hesther, who was a former school friend of Clarissa and an actress in the same troupe as Rokeby.

    Some have drawn parallels between the four main characters in this drama with Ashley, Melanie, Scarlett and Rhett in "Gone with the Wind", who like Rokeby, Clarissa, Hesther and Rohan can be divided into "two good and two bad". It seemed to me, in fact, that the main influence on Eleanor Smith, the author of the novel on which the film is based, was Thackeray's "Vanity Fair". Apart from the Regency setting there are parallels between Hesther and Thackeray's Becky Sharp and between Clarissa and Becky's friend Amelia. One similarity with "Gone with the Wind" is that the "bad" characters are more memorable than the "good". We remember "Gone with the Wind" for Vivien Leigh and Clark Gable rather than Leslie Howard and Olivia de Havilland, and here it is James Mason and Margaret Lockwood who stand out more than Phyllis Calvert and Stewart Granger. (Of the four it was Lockwood who was the biggest star when the film was made; Mason and Granger, later to become big names in both Britain and Hollywood were young actors in the early part of heir career)'

    Mason and Lockwood were later to star together in another Gainsborough melodrama, "The Wicked Lady", probably the best remembered of the series. In that film too, Lockwood played a beautiful but ruthless and amoral woman with a more innocent friend, and Mason played her lover. Her Hesther, like Becky Sharp, is from a lower social station than her friend and an ambitious social climber, although she is more evil than Becky, or for that matter Scarlett, ever knew how to be. Lockwood, however, did not only play villainesses; she was to play the heroine in "Jassy", a third Gainsborough melodrama.

    Mason's Rohan is a particularly well-drawn character- a drinker, gambler, womaniser and brawler, an arrogant, cynical, dissolute libertine who never does an honourable thing and yet remains very touchy about his honour, so touchy that he is prepared to kill anyone whom he believes has dishonoured him. His family motto is "Who Dishonours Us, Dies." Lady Caroline Lamb's famous description of Lord Byron as "mad, bad and dangerous to know" could apply to Rohan- perhaps even better than it did to Byron.

    Today, Gainsborough melodramas like this one and "The Wicked Lady" can come across as very dated and more than a little camp, with their exaggerated emotion, their exaggeratedly black-and-white view of the world and their exaggerated style of acting. Our tastes in Regency drama today tend more to quiet, well-mannered adaptations of that quiet, well-mannered author Jane Austen, someone whom the British cinema ignored altogether in the forties. (The only screen adaptation of her work from the period was the American-made "Pride and Prejudice"). Yet, if we can make allowances for lurid, blood-and-thunder plots and stylised, non-naturalistic acting, they can still yield plenty of entertainment. 7/10
    7Lejink

    Don't Mess With The Rohan

    A good old-fashioned bodice-ripper, it was the first big success for Britain's Gainsborough Studios which decided to take on the big costume dramas of Hollywood with home-grown talent. Introducing to the masses soon-to-be-familiar names like Mason, Granger, Lockwood and Calvert, it set the template for succeeding and ever more successful variations on this particular formula, often employing different combinations of this same quartet of acting talent.

    High art it isn't, based as it is on a popular novel of the day, but it's easy to imagine its populist and escapist appeal to a wartime audience. James Mason, for one, hated the film and his own acting in it but the fact of the matter is that it's his presence in the titular role, as the misogynistic, sadistic and decadent Lord Rohan, who despite his despised and feared personal characteristics has the fabulous wealth and high status which make him the most desirable bachelor of the day. This is how he meets the pretty, sparky, trusting debutante Clarissa Marr, played by Phyllis Calvert, whose mother offers her to Rohan at what can only be described as a female cattle market, indeed just like all the other mothers and daughters of the day in attendance.

    However it's not long before the young bride comes to her senses after she does her wifely duty in siring him a son and heir at which opportune moment just when she feels doomed to a loveless marriage, into her life enters Granger's Peter Rokesby, an adventurer fallen on hard times but otherwise dashing, handsome and sincere in his feelings for her which she soon reciprocates.

    Soon she gets him a place as librarian, of all things, at Rohan Hall but there's a viper in this new love-nest in the shape of the darkly beautiful Hesther Shaw, played with relish by Lockwood. Of low birth but with high ambitions, she uses Clarissa's desire for one good friend in her life to also enter the household and usurp her position as Rohan's woman of choice, becoming effectively his live-in mistress. This ABBA-esque set-up with all four new and ex-lovers under the one roof of course can't last with machinations on all sides of the quadrangle leading up to not one but two murders, one of them infamous for its brutality as Rohan gets the whip-hand over his wife's murderer.

    Maybe I shouldn't have, but I really enjoyed this Regency romp. I found the "two-good, two-bad" interplay of the four main characters added a degree of psychological intrigue as the plot developed in sometimes surprising ways. It's not perfect, the young black boy (in obvious blackface, and why did he have to be black anyway?) who plays an important part in the denouement seems to be reading his lines off-screen, the background music is far too intrusive and I disliked the present-day framing device which threw together the descendants of Calvert and Granger to sweeten the ending.

    But with its handsome and pretty leads, whirlwind action and impressive sets, it's easy to see why it was so successful in its day.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    The Gypsy Portent and the Woman of Deadly Nightshade.

    The Man in Grey is directed by Leslie Arliss and adapted to screenplay by Margaret Kennedy and Doreen Montgomery from the novel of the same name written by Eleanor Smith. It stars Margaret Lockwood, James Mason, Phyllis Calvert and Stewart Granger. Music is By Cedric Mallabey and cinematography by Arthur Crabtree.

    A forerunner of Gainsborough's Wicked Women movies, The Man in Grey is a delicious slice of British noir pie.

    Proudly decked out in period attire, story is ripe with dastards, narcissists, connivers, the selfish and the cruel. Headed up by Mason's Lord Rohan and Lockwood's Hesther Shaw, these people will stop at nothing to get what they want in life. It doesn't matter who is around them, friends and family etc, if they can in any way hinder their respective selfish goals then they will be trampled upon and not a further thought will be given. It all simmers to the boiling point where lives will not just be ruined, but also ended.

    The four principal players are great, their respective careers well on the way to leaving behind considerable bodies of work. Arliss (The Night Has Eyes) keeps the story simple in spite of the many character strands and traits jostling for meaty exposure, and photographer Crabtree (Waterloo Road) accentuates the miserablist ambiance with sharp black and white lensing.

    The use of black-face on white actors is awfully out dated, as is some of the dialogue, but don't hold these things against The Man in Grey. It's a darn fine bodice botherer, resplendent with characters straight out of noir's dark alleyways. 8/10
    10calvertfan

    The first and the best

    'The Man In Grey' was the first film in the cycle of Gainsborough costume melodramas (which ended in 1948 with 'The Bad Lord Byron') and it's easily one of the very best. At the time, it was the pairing of a superstar (Lockwood), a star (Mason), a rising star (Calvert) and a newcomer (Granger), a combination which catapulted all four to the top of their profession, and made them the four names most associated with the costume. It's a pity that the four never made another movie all together!

    Margaret Lockwood as Hesther was just pure evil - a cold, calculating woman. One does get the idea that there is a small glimmer of kindness inside her, but she squashes it pretty quickly. Phyllis Calvert was as sweet as honey, as usual the beloved heroine. Her Clarissa is the main character of the tale - married off to Lord Rohan (Mason) because he desires an heir, she soon tires of his indifference and falls for traveling player Rokeby (Granger). Hesther (Lockwood) in turn falls for Rohan and he for her. And of course you know that's set for trouble. A hint of how much trouble? THIS is the film with the infamous horse-whip thrashing scene.

    What's also interesting is the whole story is told in flashback, when Calvert and Granger, descendents of the Rohan and Rokeby families, meet at an auction of the Rohan estate. Nice to see a bit of modern dress for a change!

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      James Mason was originally cast as Rokeby, but he took over the villain's part of the Marquis of Rohan, replacing Eric Portman. Stewart Granger inherited the role of Rokeby.
    • Erros de gravação
      Toby does not age. He remains a young boy throughout the film.
    • Citações

      Hesther Shaw: You say you love her; well, so do I him; and if anyone comes between, so much the worse. I've no quarrel with those that don't interfere; but if you love her, keep her from getting in my way.

      Peter Rokeby: Pretty speech but dead in character. For once you've spoken the truth, my dear, I do believe you'd stop at nothing.

      Hesther Shaw: Then remember it!

      Peter Rokeby: There's one factor you've overlooked... me! You see, I'm not a gentleman. I swear but that if she comes to harm through you, I'd break that lovely little neck of yours with less regret than I'd stamp on a snake.

      [He slaps her and departs]

    • Conexões
      Featured in James Mason: The Star They Loved to Hate (1984)

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    Perguntas frequentes

    • How long is The Man in Grey?
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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 6 de agosto de 1943 (Reino Unido)
    • País de origem
      • Reino Unido
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • The Man in Grey
    • Locações de filme
      • Gaumont-British Studios, Lime Grove, Shepherd's Bush, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Gainsborough Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

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    • Orçamento
      • £ 90.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 56 minutos
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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