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IMDbPro

Ciel de gloire

Original title: Lilac Time
  • 1928
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
761
YOUR RATING
Gary Cooper and Colleen Moore in Ciel de gloire (1928)
DramaRomanceWar

All of those handsome young men in their flying machines are billeted in a field next to the Widow Berthelot's farmhouse in France. Her daughter Jeannine is curious about the young men fight... Read allAll of those handsome young men in their flying machines are billeted in a field next to the Widow Berthelot's farmhouse in France. Her daughter Jeannine is curious about the young men fighting for England in World War I and their airplanes. Then one of the aviators is killed. Hi... Read allAll of those handsome young men in their flying machines are billeted in a field next to the Widow Berthelot's farmhouse in France. Her daughter Jeannine is curious about the young men fighting for England in World War I and their airplanes. Then one of the aviators is killed. His replacement is Captain Philip Blythe, who can't help but notice Jeannine: when he lands ... Read all

  • Directors
    • George Fitzmaurice
    • Frank Lloyd
  • Writers
    • Jane Cowl
    • Guy Fowler
    • Willis Goldbeck
  • Stars
    • Colleen Moore
    • Gary Cooper
    • Eugenie Besserer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    761
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • George Fitzmaurice
      • Frank Lloyd
    • Writers
      • Jane Cowl
      • Guy Fowler
      • Willis Goldbeck
    • Stars
      • Colleen Moore
      • Gary Cooper
      • Eugenie Besserer
    • 9User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos39

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    Top cast26

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    Colleen Moore
    Colleen Moore
    • Jeannine Berthelot
    Gary Cooper
    Gary Cooper
    • Capt. Philip Blythe
    Eugenie Besserer
    Eugenie Besserer
    • Madame Berthelot
    Burr McIntosh
    Burr McIntosh
    • Gen. Blythe
    Kathryn McGuire
    Kathryn McGuire
    • Lady Iris Rankin
    Cleve Moore
    Cleve Moore
    • Capt. Russell (flight commander)
    Arthur Lake
    Arthur Lake
    • The Unlucky One
    Richard Jarvis
    • Aviator
    Jack Stoney
    Jack Stoney
    • The Kid
    Dan Dowling
    • Aviator
    Dick Grace
    Dick Grace
    • Aviator
    Stuart Knox
    • Aviator
    Jack Ponder
    • Aviator
    Harlan Hilton
    • Aviator
    George Cooper
    George Cooper
    • Sergeant Hawkins
    Edward Dillon
    Edward Dillon
    • Corporal 'Smithie'
    Emile Chautard
    Emile Chautard
    • The Mayor
    Eddie Clayton
    • The Enemy Ace
    • (as Edward Clayton)
    • Directors
      • George Fitzmaurice
      • Frank Lloyd
    • Writers
      • Jane Cowl
      • Guy Fowler
      • Willis Goldbeck
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.5761
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    Featured reviews

    9nielshell

    Provides comedy and drama

    British and American pilots launch attacks during World War I from a small town in France. A caring Colleen Moore is dedicated to providing moral support to these pilots. Gary Cooper replaces a downed pilot. Antagonism between Moore and Cooper precedes romance and provides a comic beginning. As romance develops, the pilots, including Cooper, are sent on a dangerous mission. A commercially available release of this film allow interested viewers to find Cooper's fate and the end result of Moore's trials and tribulations to also find his fate. This end of the silent era movie is worth the effort to ferret out for viewing.

    The theme song of the motion picture, "Jeannine, I Dream of Lilac Time," is commercially available. It was recorded by well over a hundred top artists, including Louis Armstrong, Skitch Henderson, Guy Lombardo, The London Symphony Orchestra, opera star John McCormack, Mitch Miller, The Platters, Lawrence Welk, and Paul Whiteman. Many of these recordings have been transferred to commercially available CDs. For example, a recording by the composer, Nat Shilkret, is included in the ASV CD "Dancing With Tears In My Eyes," which is available from amazon.com.
    7JoeytheBrit

    Lilac Time review

    Dashing young WWI pilot Gary Cooper falls for village girl Colleen Moore in this late silent. It's well-staged and the aerial fights and crashes are shot well, but I can't shake the feeling that they shied away from the tragic ending towards which the movie seems to be heading.
    8lugonian

    Passion Flower

    LILAC TIME (First National Pictures, 1928), a John McCormick Presentation under the direction by George Fitzmaurice, became the studio's contribution to current trend of war related themes that rebirth the cycle with THE BIG PARADE (MGM, 1925). Borrowing the aerial battle used heavily from Paramount's WINGS (1927) and the romantic angle highlighted from either WHAT PRICE GLORY (Fox, 1926) or SEVENTH HEAVEN (Fox, 1927), LILAC TIME benefits from the aforementioned titles right down from borrowing Gary Cooper from his few minutes in WINGS to co-starring status opposite Colleen Moore, then one of the most popular actresses of the silent screen. Though Moore is remembered most as a flapper hair-styled comedienne, she demonstrates her great ability in heavy dramatics as proven in LILAC TIME. Coming late into the silent era that would soon end with the new medium of talkies, LILAC TIME, regardless of its age, holds up remarkably well today, in spite of how forgotten it has become through the passage of time.

    Taken from the popular 1917 stage play by Jane Cowl and Jane Murfin, the story, set during the Great War in 1918, opens in a Lilac farm near a French village where lives Jeannine Berthelot (Colleen Moore) and her Aunt Marie (Eugenie Besserer). British fliers land their airplanes nearby to use their farmhouse for rest and relaxation until orders are given for them to fly out the next day. Jeannine is a young French girl with her love for lilacs and passion for Joan of Arc. Her biggest fear is seeing the lives of seven British fliers diminish with few returning from their dangerous air battle. After a crashlanding that puts the "Unlucky One" (Arthur Lake) out of commission, he is soon substituted by Captain Philip Blythe (Gary Cooper). Because Jeannine accidentally caused him to crash land on her farm, Philip, not knowing she's a girl dressed in mechanic's clothes, gives her a swift kick. Forming a strong dislike for one another, Philip, who happens to be engaged to Lady Iris Rankin (Kathryn McGuire) begins to have second thoughts about Jeannine. As the pilots receive orders to fly a suicide mission where they are not to return until all enemies are killed, Jeannine promises to wait on the farm for Philip. During his absence however, Jeannine and the other villagers are forced to evacuate with no means of knowing where they are going and whether she'll ever see Philip again. Co-starring Burr McIntosh (General Blythe); George Cooper (The Mechanic's Helper); Cleve Moore (Captain Russell); Emile Chautard (The Burgomaster) and Paul Hurst.

    Although a straight drama with well-acted love scenes, LILAC TIME includes some amusements, including that from George Cooper (no relation to Gary) as a mechanic's helper, to Colleen Moore lifting the spirits of the fliers by dressing herself as a mustached soldier juggling champagne bottles.

    Reportedly released with original musical scoring, sound effects and theme song to "Jeannine, I Dream of Lilac Time," circulating prints, either accompanied by organ (90 minutes) or piano scoring (110 minutes) bearing different length times are currently available either on Youtube or DVD from a private collector. To date, LILAC TIME has never been televised. It had been scheduled to show on Turner Classic Movies in 2016 only to be cancelled and substituted by another movie instead. If LILAC TIME should ever be televised, be sure not to miss it. (***)
    10Alf-23

    A perfect love story.

    How great can a film be? This is one of the answers to that. Sweet Colleen Moore and Gary Cooper are a perfect couple, and Lilac Time a perfect love story. Forget Titanic! Bring a handkerchief when you see this.
    7bkoganbing

    Jeannine, I Dream Of Lilac Time

    Lilac Time which starred Colleen Moore was a big boost to the career of Gary Cooper. He played the British flier who was stationed on a base at Colleen Moore's farm during the World War. He cuts quite a dashing figure as a British air ace and son of British General Burr McIntosh.

    This film is a great example of the universality of silent films where the very American speaking Cooper and Moore could get away with playing a British and a French national respectively. In Cooper's career afterward, when playing in a foreign setting it was always explained he was Canadian, he was one of the first of Hollywood leading men to have that gambit used when sound arrived. But in the silent era the only demand was that one be photogenic and no one was more photogenic than Gary Cooper.

    Lilac Time was a play written by and starring Jane Cowl on Broadway during the 1917 season. It was one of Cowl's bigger hits on Broadway and a pity she didn't do the screen version. It concerns a small base of the Royal Flying Corps established on the farm of Eugene Besserer and her daughter Colleen Moore. Moore is something of a mascot to the men, but when she spots Cooper she doesn't want to be thought of as a pet.

    As for Cooper he's got a fiancé back home, one of those aristocratic arranged marriages and his fiancé is played by Kathryn McGuire. At first he and Moore do not get along, he regards her as a nuisance. But the chemistry kicks in after a while.

    Lilac Time made at the tail end of the silent era was one of the first films to have a music score written for it. The copy I have is a compilation of old World War I era ballads, but with the popular standard written expressly for this film, Jeannine, I Dream Of Lilac Time. This was one of the first songs written directly for the screen, albeit for a silent film. It and the rest of the score is done on a Wurlitzer organ and the song makes this film a candidate for revivals at festivals. Gene Austin had a big selling record of this song in 1928 when the film came out.

    Viewed over 80 years after it came out, Lilac Time still holds up very well, a bit melodramatic, but a nice romance.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      To enhance the viewing experience, a Boston theater put oil of lilac in the ventilation system during the showing of this film in 1929.
    • Quotes

      Jeannine Berthelot: [inter-title] I cannot let you go, my Philip - I cannot let you go.

      Capt. Philip Blythe: [inter-title] Jeannie, I'll come back no matter what happens. I will get back somehow.

      Jeannine Berthelot: [inter-title] I will wait for you, my Philip - all my life I'll wait here for you.

      Jeannine Berthelot: [inter-title] Goodbye, Lilac Time, my very heart says - je t'aime - I love you - I love you.

    • Connections
      Edited into L'aigle et le vautour (1933)
    • Soundtracks
      Jeannine, I Dream of Lilac Time
      (uncredited)

      Music by Nathaniel Shilkret

      Lyrics by L. Wolfe Gilbert

      Performed by John McCormack

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 5, 1929 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Les Ailes blessées
    • Production company
      • First National Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)

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