AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,0/10
356
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAt the fiftieth anniversary of his town's founding, the town's first barber recalls his long-dead, spirited bride and the flaw in his own character that helped bring about her loss and other... Ler tudoAt the fiftieth anniversary of his town's founding, the town's first barber recalls his long-dead, spirited bride and the flaw in his own character that helped bring about her loss and others.At the fiftieth anniversary of his town's founding, the town's first barber recalls his long-dead, spirited bride and the flaw in his own character that helped bring about her loss and others.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
Bill Walker
- Trooper Robert Waverly Ferris
- (as William Walker)
Merry Anders
- Adeline Halper
- (não creditado)
Hutchinson Municipal Band
- Sevillinois Band
- (não creditado)
David Bauer
- Sam Eichenbogen
- (não creditado)
Marie Benson
- Townswoman
- (não creditado)
Danny Borzage
- Accordionist
- (não creditado)
John Butler
- Traveling Salesman
- (não creditado)
Harry Carter
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
I lived in Hutchinson, Kansas during the filming of this motion picture. With Jean Peters, David Wayne and Hugh Marlowe along with director Henry King in our home town was a great compliment to our state. Then, later, to see familiar sites on the big screen and portrayed in classic premiere photography made Kansans very proud. It was one of the exciting times of our history with Hollywood in Kansas.
It is a big disappointment that this film is NOT available on DVD. The plot is upbeat and positive and needs to be shared with the present generation.
Please, review and consider the value of availability on DVD.
Dudley
It is a big disappointment that this film is NOT available on DVD. The plot is upbeat and positive and needs to be shared with the present generation.
Please, review and consider the value of availability on DVD.
Dudley
10ottoflop
It will be fifty years ago this summer (1952) that I first saw this film. I was eight years old at the time and have never forgotten it. The bittersweet tale of one man's life told through the history of a small town in mid-west America at the turn of the 20th century. Both David Wayne and Jean Peters handled their roles with conviction avoiding any sticky sweet sentimentality. All to soon we lose Miss Peters and Wayne carries the film to a somewhat happy ending. I would love to see this superb film once again.
I came to this film via Karina Longworth's excellent podcast series "You Must Remember This" which I recommend to one and all. She did a mini-series on the women in the life of Howard Hughes and where this movie figures on this is because of course, main female lead Jean Peters was for many years Mrs Howard Hughes. Although not betrothed to the billionaire at the time of the film's release, she was already in the background as one of his pet starlet-girlfriends. Other than that however, Hughes had nothing to do with this particular movie but egged on by Ms Longworth's warning of a major plot twist halfway through the film, I duly tracked it down.
Taking its title from a popular song from the late 19th Century, which you hear frequently during its running time, the film certainly isn't the light-hearted, frothy musical you might have expected, although it starts a bit like that as we meet young David Wayne's Ben Halper character, a gentleman's barber to trade and his pretty young wife, Nellie, played by Peters. Newly-wed, she thinks he's taking them to an exciting new life in bustling Chicago, but no, the more practical and parochial Wayne has decided to set up both his business and family home in the small town of Sevillinois.
This doesn't go well with the ambitious Nellie even as she assures Wayne of her love and duly bears him a son and daughter, so that it's not long before she's attracting the attention of flash-harry married man-about-town Ed Jordan. Meanwhile, hubby further entrenches himself in the community by joining both the local band and when the First World War comes around, the town's army battalion. Then, while he's away from home, Nellie and Jordan decide to take a fateful train journey together to the big smoke of Chicago, where they both feel they belong.
What happens next is that unexpected plot shift which I can say no more about without getting into spoiler territory, but what I will say is that the film ends up as an up-and-down fifty-year biography of a little man who pays the price for not considering the dreams and ambitions of those he loves but still comes across as an agreeable and believable human being, just an ordinary average, play-safe kind of guy.
Unusually for a B-movie, with cast to match, it's shot in a very dark-hued technicolour rather than cheaper black and white and is directed by the worthy Henry King. Wayne does a good job carrying the narrative on his shoulders from start to finish, ageing considerably as he goes and Peters makes a big impression too as his starry-eyed wife. Clearly Wayne hasn't heard the old phrase, "Happy wife, happy life" and pays the price for his own selfishness. He's not a bad man, he just thinks he's always right and is obviously a slow learner from his experiences as we later see in his testy relationship with his grown-up son.
Director King keeps the story moving from one major event to the next in Wayne's long life, taking in drama and tragedy by turn, even culminating in a good old fashioned Chicago gangster shoot-out, which reminded me of the old Tyrone Power-starring feature "In Old Chicago" which King helmed several years before.
It's always good to find a watchable old movie you've never heard of before and so it was here. This isn't the first vintage movie I've viewed on Ms Longworth's recommendation and on the evidence here, it won't be the last.
Taking its title from a popular song from the late 19th Century, which you hear frequently during its running time, the film certainly isn't the light-hearted, frothy musical you might have expected, although it starts a bit like that as we meet young David Wayne's Ben Halper character, a gentleman's barber to trade and his pretty young wife, Nellie, played by Peters. Newly-wed, she thinks he's taking them to an exciting new life in bustling Chicago, but no, the more practical and parochial Wayne has decided to set up both his business and family home in the small town of Sevillinois.
This doesn't go well with the ambitious Nellie even as she assures Wayne of her love and duly bears him a son and daughter, so that it's not long before she's attracting the attention of flash-harry married man-about-town Ed Jordan. Meanwhile, hubby further entrenches himself in the community by joining both the local band and when the First World War comes around, the town's army battalion. Then, while he's away from home, Nellie and Jordan decide to take a fateful train journey together to the big smoke of Chicago, where they both feel they belong.
What happens next is that unexpected plot shift which I can say no more about without getting into spoiler territory, but what I will say is that the film ends up as an up-and-down fifty-year biography of a little man who pays the price for not considering the dreams and ambitions of those he loves but still comes across as an agreeable and believable human being, just an ordinary average, play-safe kind of guy.
Unusually for a B-movie, with cast to match, it's shot in a very dark-hued technicolour rather than cheaper black and white and is directed by the worthy Henry King. Wayne does a good job carrying the narrative on his shoulders from start to finish, ageing considerably as he goes and Peters makes a big impression too as his starry-eyed wife. Clearly Wayne hasn't heard the old phrase, "Happy wife, happy life" and pays the price for his own selfishness. He's not a bad man, he just thinks he's always right and is obviously a slow learner from his experiences as we later see in his testy relationship with his grown-up son.
Director King keeps the story moving from one major event to the next in Wayne's long life, taking in drama and tragedy by turn, even culminating in a good old fashioned Chicago gangster shoot-out, which reminded me of the old Tyrone Power-starring feature "In Old Chicago" which King helmed several years before.
It's always good to find a watchable old movie you've never heard of before and so it was here. This isn't the first vintage movie I've viewed on Ms Longworth's recommendation and on the evidence here, it won't be the last.
7dcs
This is a movie that can grab at your heart while it offers a glimpse at fifty years in the life of a small town barber. It's not a well known movie. I first saw it by accident on a local TV station, back when they showed older movies. It's never been released on video but it has been on cable sometimes and I managed to tape it once but hadn't watched it for awhile. Just finished and it has a strong emotional impact, as previous reviewers have also said. Maybe it's a little corny by "modern standards," and to people used to modern movies its pacing may feel a little slow. But it feels true to the time period it covers. The characters and their situations are believable. David Wayne, who usually seemed to play supporting parts, is terrific in the lead. Jean Peters, whom I don't remember seeing in other movies, is gorgeous. If you have a chance, watch this movie. It's really a wonderful film.
This is the story of a martyr barber starting in the 1890's in a small town and spaning forty years. He suffers one disaster after another - and if you pay attention it was his own fault, such as lying to his wife right at the start. Nonetheless, David Wayne, a major Bdwy star who lost role after role to the movie versions, does a nice job, and Jean Peters is pulchritudinous - and Howard Hughes wife. Never on video - too bad. I'd like to see it again after twenty years or so when it appeared on late-night/early morning TV.
Você sabia?
- Curiosidades"Lux Radio Theater" broadcast a 60 minute radio adaptation of the movie on May 4, 1953 with Jean Peters and David Wayne reprising their film roles.
- Trilhas sonorasWait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie
Written by Andrew B. Sterling and Harry von Tilzer
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Seein' Nellie Home
- Locações de filme
- New Jerusalem Church, Kansas, EUA(Pretty Prairie, Kansas)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 48 min(108 min)
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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