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IMDbPro

A Mundana

Título original: A Foreign Affair
  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1 h 56 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,3/10
9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Marlene Dietrich, Jean Arthur, and John Lund in A Mundana (1948)
Trailer 1
Reproduzir trailer1:01
2 vídeos
32 fotos
SatireComedyDramaRomance

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaIn occupied Berlin, an army captain is torn between an ex-Nazi café singer and the U.S. congresswoman investigating her.In occupied Berlin, an army captain is torn between an ex-Nazi café singer and the U.S. congresswoman investigating her.In occupied Berlin, an army captain is torn between an ex-Nazi café singer and the U.S. congresswoman investigating her.

  • Direção
    • Billy Wilder
  • Roteiristas
    • Charles Brackett
    • Billy Wilder
    • Richard L. Breen
  • Artistas
    • Jean Arthur
    • Marlene Dietrich
    • John Lund
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,3/10
    9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Billy Wilder
    • Roteiristas
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
      • Richard L. Breen
    • Artistas
      • Jean Arthur
      • Marlene Dietrich
      • John Lund
    • 80Avaliações de usuários
    • 62Avaliações da crítica
    • 75Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 2 Oscars
      • 2 vitórias e 3 indicações no total

    Vídeos2

    A Foreign Affair
    Trailer 1:01
    A Foreign Affair
    A Foreign Affair
    Clip 1:19
    A Foreign Affair
    A Foreign Affair
    Clip 1:19
    A Foreign Affair

    Fotos32

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    Elenco principal89

    Editar
    Jean Arthur
    Jean Arthur
    • Congresswoman Phoebe Frost
    Marlene Dietrich
    Marlene Dietrich
    • Erika Von Schluetow
    John Lund
    John Lund
    • Capt. John Pringle
    Millard Mitchell
    Millard Mitchell
    • Col. Rufus J. Plummer
    Peter von Zerneck
    • Hans Otto Birgel
    Stanley Prager
    Stanley Prager
    • Mike
    William Murphy
    William Murphy
    • Joe
    • (as Bill Murphy)
    Raymond Bond
    • Congressman Pennecot
    Boyd Davis
    • Congressman Giffin
    Robert Malcolm
    Robert Malcolm
    • Congressman Kramer
    Charles Meredith
    Charles Meredith
    • Congressman Yandell
    Michael Raffetto
    Michael Raffetto
    • Congressman Salvatore
    Damian O'Flynn
    Damian O'Flynn
    • Lieutenant Colonel
    Frank Fenton
    Frank Fenton
    • Maj. Mathews
    James Lorimer
    • Lt. Hornby
    • (as James Larmore)
    Harland Tucker
    • Gen. McAndrew
    Bill Neff
    • Lieutenant Lee Thompson
    • (as William Neff)
    George M. Carleton
    George M. Carleton
    • General Finney
    • (as George Carleton)
    • Direção
      • Billy Wilder
    • Roteiristas
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
      • Richard L. Breen
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários80

    7,39K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    rmax304823

    Dark Comedy.

    Billy Wilder goes back to Berlin after the war and doesn't like it much. If you're expecting a capricious romantic comedy, you won't find it here.

    Jean Arthur is an uptight Congresswoman from Iowa investigating conditions in the bare ruined choirs of Berlin. The Colonel in charge of wrangling the Congressional committee is Millard Mitchell. He hands the committee members, Arthur included, a piece of boilerplate about how we are teaching the Germans about democracy and baseball. "We teach them that if they steal anything it must be second base." It's all working out very well, if only they can get those damned kids to stop drawing swastikas every place they go.

    The occupation army isn't much better. It's 1948 and the Russians haven't yet become "real shifty" as they would in Wilder's "One, Two, Three," which appeared twelve years later, although even here they are pretty ugly, dumb, and given to vodka. At the climax, with a dead body on the floor, the night club is empty except for a couple of MPs and four Russians at one of the tables singing the Volga Boatman. But the American troops are taking advantage of the down-and-out Berliners as well, swapping chocolate bars and nylons for more tawdry treats. The Berliners, if they've learned nothing else, have learned the arts of survival under stress and they're very cooperative. Congresswoman Arthur notices how friendly the soldiers and Frauleins are and is perturbed.

    It develops that two of the major players in this illicit system are an Army Capitain, John Lund, and a nightclub singer, Marlene Dietrich. They swap favors almost every night. Of course, Lund must wind up shepherding Arthur around and they fall in love. Dietrich is jealous about the fading interest of her meal ticket, but the two women know nothing of each other. It's just that their common interest is switching his affection from one to the other.

    The script by the patrician Charles Brackett and the Jewish refugee Billy Wilder crackles with subversive wit. Nobody comes out looking spotless. Human weaknesses and strengths abound -- mostly weaknesses. The plot changes as it moves along, from mostly funny to mostly dramatic and sad. When she finds out about her man's treachery, Arthur's sadness is palpable, helped along by the photography of Charles Lang, who manages to capture convincingly the wreck that the German capital has now become. People live in piles of rubble, and the script gives them a little humanity. "Do you know what it was like to be a woman when the Russians came in?", Dietrich asks Arthur -- who has no idea.

    The three songs sung by Dietrich sort of sum up the subject of the film and it's not funny romance -- "The Black Market," "Illusions," and "The Ruins of Berlin." It's funny, though. There are some good gags and amusing situations. But Billy Wilder lost his mother and some of his other family in the Nazi's genocide program, and the wisecracks seem to come out of some dark shadowy corner. It's hard to imagine how it could have been otherwise. His father's grave was buried under a heap of rubble and, when he arrived in Berlin, there were still thousands of putrefying corpses buried under the collapsed bricks.
    9s.knowles

    an excellent film

    This is a well written (Brackett and Breen) and directed (Billy Wilder) film with great performances. Marlene Dietrich is impressive as the Nazi chanteuse with loose morals, great legs and an eye for the main chance. Her songs e.g. Ruins of Berlin are sardonic and compelling. Jean Arthur is irresistible as the frustrated Congresswoman, throwing herself at John Lund with enthusiasm and gradually coming to see human behaviour in shades of grey, rather than black and white.

    John Lund is very good as the cynical army officer, attracted to Dietrich while repelled by her politics and prepared to romance Arthur in order to bury Dietrich's Nazi past. He has a nice way with underplayed humour e.g. "It can't be subversive to kiss a Republican!" Supporting actors, especially Millard Mitchell as Col Plummer are all good.

    Berlin makes a bleak impressive backdrop, making the behaviour of the occupying troops and the Berliners easy to understand. There are some lovely vignettes e.g. the German woman pushing a pram decorated with the US flag.

    Unfortunately the film was perceived as unpatriotic by many critics and did not do as much for the career of John Lund as it should.
    9bkoganbing

    Occupied Berlin in a Wilder Vein

    Although A Foreign Affair turned out to be a big success for all involved, biographies of Billy Wilder, Jean Arthur, and Marlene Dietrich all talk about the difficulties they had in this film. Especially Wilder and Arthur.

    Paramount put up some big bucks for this film, even including sending Billy Wilder and a second unit team to film the surviving city of Berlin from World War II. It all paid off quite nicely and you can bet the footage found it's way into films not half as good. It looks far better than the standard newsreel films that are often used as background for foreign locations.

    Marlene Dietrich plays the girlfriend of former Nazi bigwig Peter Von Zerneck who is presumed dead by the public at large, but the army knows is very much alive. How to smoke him out is the problem that Colonel Millard Mitchell of the occupying forces has. He decides to use the growing relationship that Captain John Lund has with Dietrich as Von Zerneck is the jealous type.

    But into the picture comes Jean Arthur, part of a group of visiting members of Congress touring occupied Berlin. Arthur departs from the group and starts conducting her own investigations and in the way Joseph Cotten was doing in occupied Vienna in The Third Man blundering his way into an investigation in the British sector there, Arthur threatens to blow up all of Mitchell's plans. Especially since Lund is starting to switch gears and drop Marlene for Jean.

    Dietrich comes out best in this film. Not only was she German, but she was born and grew up in Berlin. Marlene may have invested more of herself in her character of Erika Von Schluetow than in any other film she did. She gets three great original songs by Frederick Hollander, Black Market, Illusions, and The Ruins Of Berlin that speak not to just her character, but to the sullen character of a beaten people. By the way that's composer Hollander himself accompanying her at the piano.

    Dietrich and Wilder got along just great, both being refugees from Nazism. They got along so good that Arthur felt she was being frozen out and Wilder was favoring Dietrich.

    Both Frank Capra and Cecil B. DeMille spoke of the difficulties in working with Jean Arthur and Billy Wilder also echoes what his colleagues said in their memoirs. Arthur was a terribly insecure person and it took a lot of patience to work with her. The results were usually worth it to the movie going public, but for her fellow workers on the film it could be painful. A Foreign Affair may have been good training for Wilder when he later had to get performances out of another diva, Marilyn Monroe.

    Wilder came in for a lot of criticism showing our occupying forces in a less than perfect light and also making fun of a member of Congress and a Republican at that as Jean was in the film, most definitely not in real life. Millard Mitchell's a smart and tough professional soldier, but he's a bit of fathead as well as extols the virtue of teaching German youth baseball as a method of deNazification. As if it were that simple. But A Foreign Affair has held up very well over 60 years now and is Billy Wilder at some of his satirical and cynical best.
    8pzanardo

    An outstanding, interesting, entertaining movie

    The main impression left by "A Foreign Affair" is Billy Wilder's nobility toward German people. With authentic magnanimity, he chooses to represent Germans as a pitiful people struggling to survive, not a cruel enemy to hate. The movie has an intrinsic historical interest, since it was filmed in 1948 Berlin, completely destroyed by bombs. As usual in Wilder's works, the plot is beautifully constructed, the dialogue is witty and funny, irony, sarcasm and anti-rhetoric are spread along the movie. In the opening scenes we see army captain John Lund at the black-market, selling a cake, hand-made by his American sweetheart and coming from the States, to buy a gift for his Berliner lover Marlene Dietrich. By the way, Dietrich and most Berliner women seem to be on the verge of prostitution, just to get primary goods to survive in post-war disaster. Lund meets Jean Arthur, a US congresswoman committed in hunting nazi war criminals. As a matter of fact, we follow Lund's attempts to destroy evidence of Dietrich's nazi past: a behavior by the captain not exactly patriotic, nor ethic. The finale is deeper than it appears at a first sight: brutal tyranny, based on terror and slaughter, is doomed to be annihilated, buried under the rubble; pretty girls remain, helping us to spend our life on this unhappy earth.
    drednm

    A Moment in Cinema: Dietrich Sings "Black Market"

    in this excellent and underrated Billy Wilder film. Dietrich plays a former Nazi trying to hide behind a post-war American boyfriend. Jean Arthur plays a spinster American congresswoman, and John Lund is the man they both fall for. The scenes of bombed-out Berlin are astonishing, and the 3 stars are wonderful in this sly comedy that gets better with every viewing. The highlights tho are Dietrich's musical numbers sung in a basement speakeasy. She sings the great "Black Market" with composer Frederick Hollander at the piano. She sings LIVE and it's electrifying. She also sings "The Ruins of Berlin" and "Lovely Illusions." Jean Arthur is also good in one of her last films. Millard Mitchell, Bill Murphy, Stanley Prager, and Gordon Jones co-star. A must!

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    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Billy Wilder said that John Lund "was the guy you got after you wrote the part for Cary Grant and Grant wasn't available."
    • Erros de gravação
      Though Phoebe, the American Congresswoman played by Jean Arthur is not married, the actress's real wedding ring is visible in many scenes especially closeups during the latter part of the film.
    • Citações

      Erika von Schluetow: We've all become animals with exactly one instinct left. Self-preservation. Now take me, Miss Frost. Bombed out a dozen times, everything caved in and pulled out from under me. My country, my possessions, my beliefs... yet somehow I kept going. Months and months in air raid shelters, crammed in with five thousand other people. I kept going. What do you think it was like to be a woman in this town when the Russians first swept in? I kept going.

    • Conexões
      Edited into O Segredo de Berlim (2006)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Black Market
      (uncredited)

      Written by Friedrich Hollaender

      Sung by Marlene Dietrich

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    Perguntas frequentes18

    • How long is A Foreign Affair?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 20 de agosto de 1948 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Alemão
    • Também conhecido como
      • A Foreign Affair
    • Locações de filme
      • Berlim, Alemanha(Exterior)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 1.500.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 157
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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

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