[go: up one dir, main page]

    Calendário de lançamento250 filmes mais popularesFilmes mais popularesPesquisar filmes por gêneroMais populares no cinemaHorários de exibição e ingressosNotícias de cinemaFilmes indianos em destaque
    O que está na TV e no streaming250 séries mais popularesSéries mais popularesPesquisar séries por gêneroNotícias da TV
    O que assistirTrailers mais recentesOriginais do IMDbEscolhas do IMDbDestaque da IMDbFamily Entertainment GuidePodcasts da IMDb
    OscarsPride MonthAmerican Black Film FestivalSummer Watch GuidePrêmios STARMeterCentral de prêmiosCentral de festivaisTodos os eventos
    Nascido hojeCelebridades mais popularesNotícias de celebridades
    Central de ajudaZona do colaboradorSondagens
Para profissionais do setor
  • 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

Suave é a Noite

Título original: Tender Is the Night
  • 1962
  • Approved
  • 2 h 22 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,0/10
949
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Jason Robards and Jennifer Jones in Suave é a Noite (1962)
A Psychiatrist and his life with a patient he helped to recover.
Reproduzir trailer3:10
1 vídeo
51 fotos
Drama

Internada em uma clínica psiquiátrica na Suíça, a milionária americana Nicole Warren se recupera rapidamente de seus problemas com a ajuda de um psiquiatra. Os dois se apaixonam e se casam, ... Ler tudoInternada em uma clínica psiquiátrica na Suíça, a milionária americana Nicole Warren se recupera rapidamente de seus problemas com a ajuda de um psiquiatra. Os dois se apaixonam e se casam, mas não têm a menor ideia do que pode acontecer.Internada em uma clínica psiquiátrica na Suíça, a milionária americana Nicole Warren se recupera rapidamente de seus problemas com a ajuda de um psiquiatra. Os dois se apaixonam e se casam, mas não têm a menor ideia do que pode acontecer.

  • Direção
    • Henry King
  • Roteiristas
    • Ivan Moffat
    • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Artistas
    • Jennifer Jones
    • Jason Robards
    • Joan Fontaine
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,0/10
    949
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Henry King
    • Roteiristas
      • Ivan Moffat
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • Artistas
      • Jennifer Jones
      • Jason Robards
      • Joan Fontaine
    • 35Avaliações de usuários
    • 4Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Indicado a 1 Oscar
      • 1 vitória e 1 indicação no total

    Vídeos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:10
    Official Trailer

    Fotos51

    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    Ver pôster
    + 44
    Ver pôster

    Elenco principal69

    Editar
    Jennifer Jones
    Jennifer Jones
    • Nicole Diver
    Jason Robards
    Jason Robards
    • Dr. Richard 'Dick' Diver
    • (as Jason Robards Jr.)
    Joan Fontaine
    Joan Fontaine
    • Baby Warren
    Tom Ewell
    Tom Ewell
    • Abe North
    Cesare Danova
    Cesare Danova
    • Tommy Barban
    Jill St. John
    Jill St. John
    • Rosemary Hoyt
    Paul Lukas
    Paul Lukas
    • Dr. Dohmler - Psychiatrist
    Bea Benaderet
    Bea Benaderet
    • Mrs. McKisco
    Charles Fredericks
    Charles Fredericks
    • Mr. Albert Charles McKisco
    Sanford Meisner
    Sanford Meisner
    • Dr. Franz Gregorovious
    Mac McWhorter
    • Colis Clay
    Albert Carrier
    Albert Carrier
    • Louis
    Richard De Combray
    • Francisco Prado
    Carole Mathews
    Carole Mathews
    • Mrs. Hoyt
    Alan Napier
    Alan Napier
    • Señor Pardo
    Leslie Farrell
    • Topsy Diver
    Michael Crisalli
    • Lanier Diver
    Earl Grant
    • Piano Player
    • Direção
      • Henry King
    • Roteiristas
      • Ivan Moffat
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários35

    6,0949
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    9bkoganbing

    "We Loved Once In Spendor"

    Despite David O. Selznick's omnipresence whenever his wife was involved in a film even if it wasn't his own, director Henry King managed to make a fine film adaption of F. Scott Fitzgerald's celebrated autobiographical novel, Tender Is The Night. Jennifer Jones and Jason Robards, Jr. are nothing short of wonderful in the leads.

    A lot of the personal lives of both the leads went into roles of Nicole and Dick Diver. Jennifer Jones saw enough tragedy in her life for about five people and saw the inside of mental institutions a few times while on the mortal coil. And Jason Robards love of the grape was also well known.

    Robards purportedly is Fitzgerald himself who fell in love with a high flying millionairess Zelda Sayre and the easy living he became accustomed to sapped his creative energy. In this work Robards is a psychiatrist who forgot professional ethics and fell in love with his patient. Zelda Fitzgerald also saw the inside of an asylum, but no one ever affected a lasting cure for her.

    The two live in real luxury as American expatriates in Europe and 20th Century Fox spent no small expense turning the locations in Europe like the Riviera, Paris, and Zurich into what they looked like in the Twenties. Bernard Herrmann wrote a musical score that interwove more melodies from that era than I could count.

    Robards falls in love with the beautiful Jones as he helps bring her out of her mental illness. The Code was as omnipresent as David O. Selznick and the barest hint of the cause of her illness was made because talk of incest was still a big taboo. It would take Chinatown more than ten years later to bring that sin into the open on screen. One thing that wasn't included from the novel was a theme of miscegenation as well in deference to our Southern audiences still not the beneficiaries of the Civil Rights revolution. Fascinating as to what was considered worse by Hollywood box office standards in 1962.

    Joan Fontaine plays Jennifer's older sister and custodian of the family legacy. The father was one of those robber baron tycoons who committed suicide and of course it was that and the incest that drove Jones to her illness. Fontaine totally misreads Robards as a fortune hunter, but since he's pried the family's dirty secret from Jennifer's mind, better to have him in the family. Because of Jennifer's illness Fontaine controls the family purse strings.

    Loving Jones and at the same time resentful of being tied financially to her, Robards loses professional detachment. This was something he should have learned from his mentor Paul Lukas who has a small part. Tender Is The Night is an object lesson about not getting involved with a patient personally.

    Tom Ewell as a Broadway composer who has lost his muse in alcohol has a good role as a kind of hanger on to the Robards/Jones party world. He's a good ornament to have at a party. I believe his role might be based on Vincent Youmans who gave up his career to both tuberculosis and to a drinking problem. The theme song by Sammy Fain and Paul Francis Webster also serves as a symbol of a lot of unfinished lives. Ewell keeps playing the melody and he can't complete it. When someone else does he takes it all wrong and tragedy ensues.

    The title song Tender Is The Night is one of my favorite movie melodies. I have a recording of it by Tony Martin and it received the only Academy Award nomination the film had. The song lost to the title song of another fine film, The Days Of Wine And Roses. Personally I like Tender Is The Night much better.

    Tender Is The Night was the farewell directing assignment for Henry King who in his long career directed some of the best films 20th Century Fox ever made. For some reason he's not considered at the very top of his profession and I think it's because he was contracted to one studio and stayed there. I think the reasoning is that if you're the very best you can go from studio to studio and you must be the best if everyone wants you. A contract director like King just gets assignments. But King always did his films with a certain amount elegance to them and so what if he toiled only at one dream factory. Guys like King and Woody Van Dyke and Clarence Brown at MGM always get a short shrift when discussing directors.

    Fitzgerald purists will not be crazy about Tender Is The Night, but I think it holds up very well almost fifty years after its first release. Really top flight entertainment.
    7Boyo-2

    Jones, Robards shine in this Fitzgerald adaptation

    **spoiler alert**

    This movie does not have the greatest reputation in the world. I'd read that Jennifer Jones was too old to play Nicole, that she overacts, that she has no chemistry with Jason Robards, that it was too long, etc.

    Well don't believe it!

    It DID take me several attempts to watch the whole thing, but that nothing to do with the movie, that had to do with something else. When

    I finally saw the whole thing all the way through, I enjoyed it very much and questioned why it does not have more admirers.

    It explores many themes, thoughtfully and without exploitation. Should a doctor romance his patient? When does the patient stop being a patient, exactly, and start being a person?

    Nicole meets Dick in a sanitarium. She's there for a variety of reasons, none of which sister Joan Fontaine really care to discuss. It has something to do with their father. Nicole eventually is released and runs into Dick years later, and they get married. They have a wonderful life and two children but it starts to fall apart. Not because of Nicole's mental state - actually, as it turns out, she becomes the stable one. But a friend of theirs (Tom Ewell, making a fool of himself as a chronic drunk) dies, their daughter almost dies from alcohol poisoning, and Dick is see with an actress (Jill St. John) at a brawl in a café and their picture makes all the front pages.

    Jennifer Jones is prone to be very mannered. In spite of them she's still a favorite, but here she's really very good, she's not too old to play the part, and her chemistry with Robards is believable. Fontaine doesn't do much but enjoy her own wardrobe. As I mentioned, Ewell is a drunk but his death scene (or, rather, the circumstances surrounding it) are the worse thing in the movie. Jill St. John is first seen as a youngster but she matures as the movie progresses..unfortunately, her acting does not improve.

    At over 2 1/2 hours, its an investment, but worth your time. Now I want to watch it again. 8/10.
    gregcouture

    Little more than European locations in CinemaScope.

    When this was released I managed to see most films first-run, except the ones clearly aimed at my age group. (Such a snob, n'est-ce pas?!?) So, being a fan of both Jennifer and Joan, I went to a Los Angeles-area theater with top-notch projection and sound. Back then Twentieth-Century Fox rarely stinted on sending companies to the actual locales of the stories being filmed, so this one has plenty of its share of gorgeous shots set in Switzerland and elsewhere on the Continent, as I recall.

    But, as other comments herein attest, the rest is somewhat of a disappointment. Henry King, the director, seemed to encourage Jennifer Jones in some of her less-attractive mannerisms which somehow were not so apt as a rendition of her character's mental distress. Jason Robards, Jr. was never much of a success as a romantic lead, in my opinion. And Joan Fontaine was assigned the rather thankless role of a rich "bitch." All in all it's a prime example of how the studio "system" was growing out of touch with an ever-younger movie audience. Nevertheless for those of us who have always appreciated luxurious eye candy, it was a fairly tasty treat.
    DrLenera

    Somewhat stiff but still worthwhile version of a moving romantic drama

    This movie was a flop at the time and has been pretty much forgotten, which is a shame. It's a faithful adaptation of F.Scott Fitzgerald's moving story which is a touch lifeless, but still worthwhile.

    The plot is ofcourse very good, a love story which is intriguing and very sad. There is perhaps not quite enough emotion throughout most of the film, but by the time the end comes the film has become pretty moving. Jason Robards was definately miscast as Dick Dyver [a good name for a porn star!]but Jennifer Jones shows what a good actress she sometimes could be ,especially when she is displaying her character's 'madness' ,if that's not too strong a word. None of the supporting characters are as interesting as they should be except Jill St John's aspiring actress and there is somehow little feel for the period, but the strength of the story just about carries one through. Mention should be made of Bernard Herrmann's often touching [if a bit self derivative!]music, but having the film's theme song [which he did not write] played endlessly on the piano by one character gets a bit annoying.

    Despite it's flaws ,this is a fairly solid romantic drama that probably seemed old fashioned even in 1962, but deserves some reappraisal.
    6krorie

    Oblique is the night

    The great 20th century American novelists all created books that were difficult to transfer to the big screen successfully. Hollywood had better luck adapting the short stories of Faulkner and Hemingway to the motion picture medium than with their master works. Fitzgerald was no exception. None of his masterpieces was a total success when rewritten as screenplays, even when directed by such skilled artisans as Henry King. Only John Steinbeck's works were ready-made for media exchanges. But who would place him on the same creative sphere as Faulkner, Hemingway, and Fitzgerald? "Tender is the Night" has its moments of greatness, in particular toward the end and who can fault the acting of such a stellar cast.

    One distraction for this viewer was the failure of the director and cinematographer to capture on film the essence of The Jazz Age the way Fitzgerald did in his novel. This version of "Tender is the Night" has the 1960's written all over it from the clothes worn to a jet-set aura rather than the Lost Generation expatriate ambiance of the Fitzgerald masterpiece. Even the music is more 1930's swing than 1920's jazz. The only saving grace in the music department is the original score provided by virtuoso composer Bernard Herrmann.

    All that remains of Fitzgerald is the bare bones story of the cosmopolitan Divers, focusing on Dr. Dick Diver, played with élan by Jason Robards Jr, a psychiatrist, married to Nicole (Jennifer Jones), who has suffered a mental breakdown. The good doctor becomes both a husband and an analyst to his mentally unbalanced spouse. On the French Riviera just before the stock market crash of 1929, Dr. Diver, near middle age, meets and falls for a rising starlet, Rosemary Hoyt (Jill St. John). As the plot thickens, Dr. Diver slides into a maelstrom of drunken escapades until he hits rock bottom. The story somewhat parallels Fitzgerald and his wife Zelda's own experiences, though Fitzgerald claimed it was based on friends Gerald and Sara Murphy's struggles.

    By all means read the novel before watching this screen adaptation. I recommend the film only as a supplement to the book, perhaps Fitzgerald's best work.

    Mais itens semelhantes

    Duelo de Paixões
    6,0
    Duelo de Paixões
    O Bem Amado
    6,0
    O Bem Amado
    Amar é Sofrer
    7,2
    Amar é Sofrer
    Ama-me com Ternura
    6,2
    Ama-me com Ternura
    Um Certo Capitão Lockhart
    7,3
    Um Certo Capitão Lockhart
    O Matador
    7,7
    O Matador
    Tender Is the Night
    8,0
    Tender Is the Night
    Desafiando o Assassino
    6,7
    Desafiando o Assassino
    A Face Oculta
    7,1
    A Face Oculta
    O Leão
    6,1
    O Leão
    Marnie, Confissões de uma Ladra
    7,1
    Marnie, Confissões de uma Ladra
    Os Corruptos
    7,9
    Os Corruptos

    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The Divers are based on real-life couple Gerald and Sara Murphy, friends and patrons of the famous, including the author of this story, F. Scott Fitzgerald. Poet Archibald Macleish once said of the Murphys that "there was a shine to life wherever they were".
    • Erros de gravação
      The American flag adorning the child's sand castle has its stars arranged in the staggered rows of 5 and 6 stars as in the current 50 stars arrangement. An American flag of the 1920's would have had its stars in the 6 rows of 8 arrangement.
    • Citações

      Mr. Albert Charles McKisco: What's your place in the economy of life, Barban?

      Tommy Barban: I shoot

      Mr. Albert Charles McKisco: Just any old thing, huh?

      Tommy Barban: Well, er... buffalo in Africa, tigers in India, Bolsheviks in Europe...

      Mr. Albert Charles McKisco: Don't you ever get the urge to do anything?

      Tommy Barban: Yes. I would like to restore the Holy Roman Empire.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Os Primeiros 50 Anos da 20th Century-Fox (1997)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Tender Is the Night
      Music by Sammy Fain

      Lyrics by Paul Francis Webster

      Sung by an off-screen vocal group during the opening credits

    Principais escolhas

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

    Perguntas frequentes16

    • How long is Tender Is the Night?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 23 de fevereiro de 1962 (Alemanha Ocidental)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Tierna es la noche
    • Locações de filme
      • Itália
    • Empresa de produção
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 3.900.000 (estimativa)
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      2 horas 22 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

    Contribua para esta página

    Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente
    Jason Robards and Jennifer Jones in Suave é a Noite (1962)
    Principal brecha
    By what name was Suave é a Noite (1962) 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 app IMDb
    Faça login para obter mais acessoFaça login para obter mais acesso
    Siga o IMDb nas redes sociais
    Obtenha o app IMDb
    Para Android e iOS
    Obtenha o app IMDb
    • Ajuda
    • Índice do site
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • Dados da licença de IMDb
    • Sala de imprensa
    • Anúncios
    • Tarefas
    • Condições de uso
    • Política de privacidade
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, an Amazon company

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.