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Sa douce maison

Original title: The House on 56th Street
  • 1933
  • Approved
  • 1h 8m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
752
YOUR RATING
Ricardo Cortez and Kay Francis in Sa douce maison (1933)
Period DramaDramaHistory

Peggy Martin chooses to marry young, wealthy Monty, who she loves. They have a child together and an amazing relationship...until Peggy visits her ailing ex-boyfriend, Fiske, who threatens t... Read allPeggy Martin chooses to marry young, wealthy Monty, who she loves. They have a child together and an amazing relationship...until Peggy visits her ailing ex-boyfriend, Fiske, who threatens to commit suicide if she won't take him back.Peggy Martin chooses to marry young, wealthy Monty, who she loves. They have a child together and an amazing relationship...until Peggy visits her ailing ex-boyfriend, Fiske, who threatens to commit suicide if she won't take him back.

  • Director
    • Robert Florey
  • Writers
    • Austin Parker
    • Sheridan Gibney
    • Joseph Santley
  • Stars
    • Kay Francis
    • Ricardo Cortez
    • Gene Raymond
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    752
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Florey
    • Writers
      • Austin Parker
      • Sheridan Gibney
      • Joseph Santley
    • Stars
      • Kay Francis
      • Ricardo Cortez
      • Gene Raymond
    • 22User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos27

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    Top cast41

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    Kay Francis
    Kay Francis
    • Peggy
    Ricardo Cortez
    Ricardo Cortez
    • Bill
    Gene Raymond
    Gene Raymond
    • Monty
    John Halliday
    John Halliday
    • Fiske
    Margaret Lindsay
    Margaret Lindsay
    • Eleanor
    Frank McHugh
    Frank McHugh
    • Hunt
    William 'Stage' Boyd
    William 'Stage' Boyd
    • Bonelli
    • (as William Boyd)
    Hardie Albright
    Hardie Albright
    • Henry Burgess
    Sheila Terry
    Sheila Terry
    • Dolly
    Phillip Reed
    Phillip Reed
    • Freddy
    Philip Faversham
    Philip Faversham
    • Gordon
    Walter Walker
    • Dr. Wyman
    Nella Walker
    Nella Walker
    • Eleanor Van Tyle
    William Bailey
    William Bailey
    • Gambler
    • (uncredited)
    Helen Barclay
    • Sextet Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Symona Boniface
    Symona Boniface
    • Blackjack Player
    • (uncredited)
    André Cheron
    • Man at Roulette Table
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Darien
    Frank Darien
    • Justice of the Peace
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert Florey
    • Writers
      • Austin Parker
      • Sheridan Gibney
      • Joseph Santley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.5752
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    Featured reviews

    6bkoganbing

    Dated, But Decent Melodramatic Soap Opera

    The House On 56th Street is a Stella Dallas like melodramatic soap opera that Kay Francis did for Warner Brothers before Bette Davis made a specialty of them for that studio. This pre-Code film is laced with irony for Kay.

    Kay's a Floradora girl from the Ragtime Era who has all the men chasing her in 1905. She's the kept woman of ragtime rake John Halliday, but young Gene Raymond sweeps her off her feet and they marry and have a daughter. He takes her back to the family digs on East 56th Street in New York City and fancy digs they are.

    Halliday gets some bad news from his doctor that he's only got months to live and he wants to live them with Francis, whatever the scandal. Francis tries to prevent him from committing suicide, but when Halliday does in the struggle for the pistol, she goes up for manslaughter and gets 20 years.

    Fast forward to the Roaring Twenties and Kay's now free and living anonymously and making a living as a gambling lady with Ricardo Cortez and William 'Stage' Boyd. She gets an opportunity however to impart one really big favor on grownup daughter Margaret Lindsay and it's a beaut.

    Although Bette Davis would later do these kind of parts, I mention Stella Dallas because The House On 56th Street also involves a mother separating herself from her daughter for her own good. Francis's role which she does a fine job with seems to fit Barbara Stanwyck even better.

    Favorite scene here is the gambling scene on board a ship where Francis takes Cortez to the cleaners even though he's cheating. It reminded me a lot of the climax in Rounders with Matt Damon and John Malkovich.

    Though The House On 56th Street is dated, it's still an effective film. Note the sense of irony in Francis's final line in the film.
    6boblipton

    Kay Francis Suffers!

    Stage performer Kay Francis leaves wealthy lover John Halliday to marry society man Gene Raymond. Visiting Halliday after an operation, he says he should have married her, pulls out a gun, and tries to kill himself. Miss Francis tries to stop him, but fails, and is found guilty of his murder. Twenty years go by before she is released and gets a makeover. She meets gambler Ricardo Cortez and they fall in love, but returning to New York, they get jobs at the gambling house, where her daughter Margaret Lindsay, who thinks her dead, shows up. And then the story gets complicated.

    Miss Francis gets a lot of costume changes and a couple of hair-dye jobs, of course, from stage tights through high fashion, and does very well in her performance as usual. After her heyday, she got an undeserved reputation as a clothes horse and nothing more. Cortez, still trying to hang onto leading roles after sound revealed an accent unsuitable for his silent, Valentino-like roles, does also does very well. Director Robert Florey might have made this about the changing face of New York, and perhaps that story wound up on the cutting-room floor. With Frank McHugh, William 'Stage' Boyd, and Hardie Albright.
    6blanche-2

    like Madam X but with some twists

    Kay Francis stars in the melodrama "The House on 56th Street," also starring Gene Raymond, John Halliday, Ricardo Cortez, Margaret Lindsay, and Frank McHugh.

    What a soaper. Francis plays a chorus girl, Peggy, who is being wooed by two men -- Monty van Tyle (Raymond) and the older Lyndon Fisk (Halliday). She marries van Tyle. They move into a beautiful house on Park Avenue and E. 56th Street in New York City. They have a daughter, named Eleanor, after Monty's mother.

    So far, so good. Then Lyndon contacts her, begging to see her, as he's not a well man. Reluctantly she does visit. She rejects his advances, and he reaches for a gun to kill himself. They fight over the gun; it goes off, and Peggy goes to prison for 20 years.

    While in prison, Monty dies in action during World War I. When she is released, she learns her mother-in-law left her a decent amount of money and assumed she was not going to contact her daughter. Peggy promises she is out of her daughter's life.

    Peggy has an amazing makeover and goes on a cruise, looking for a fresh start. Her father was a gambler, and on the shop she meets Bill Blaine (Cortez), another card shark. She knows he's cheating and takes him to the cleaners. They fall in love and go to work in a speakeasy, running the gambling concession. The speakeasy happens to be located at the House on 56th Street.

    Peggy hasn't come full circle yet; but she's about to.

    Kay Francis is fabulous, giving a strong portrayal of a woman who has suffered a great deal, yet carries on. And as usual, her clothes are gorgeous. In fact, when Monty comes to see her in jail before they ship her off to the prison, she's in black with sequins.

    I have to admit I'm fascinated by the type of woman Kay Francis played in the '30s - strong, independent, smart, and vulnerable. She was perfect for these roles, which later would be played by people like Barbara Stanwyck and Bette Davis.
    41930s_Time_Machine

    What could be more 1933 than this!

    Every cliché, every stock character and every conceivable plot twist are knitted into this gloriously daft, frenetically fast early thirties ultra, ultra-soapy melodramatic melodrama.

    If you found yourself in 1933 and was asked to make something which you knew audiences would flock to, you'd make this. It's got everything 1933 wanted. Rose-tinted nostalgia for the gilded age, romance, tragedy, estranged daughters, murder, prison ...and Kay Francis. In many ways it is just a box ticking exercise, there's absolutely nothing special about this. There's too much happening in too short a time for you to become emotionally engaged but nevertheless it's enjoyable enough.

    Unlike something like NIGHT COURT, made a year earlier which makes you get up and rant at the screen with the injustice it portrays, this doesn't quite hit you where it's meant to. Although fortunately nothing like the awful STELLA DALLAS which ushered in the sentimental fluff of the forties, there are ominous clouds of that type of mush visible on the horizon in this. It's not helped by Robert Florey's bland direct-by-numbers approach, weird incongruous close ups and sloppy editing.

    But still, where else are you going to get so much squeezed into just over an hour than in a classic Warner pre-code?
    8a666333

    Short but successful

    I interpret this not as a full length feature but as a one hour front end of double feature (which would be preceded by a cartoon and a newsreel). In other words, you could call it a B movie. Seen that way, it is almost perfect. It is short and uncomplicated but manages to engage you and deliver a twist at the end.

    It starts out looking like it will be another Kay Francis light romantic comedy along with the usual accompanying fashion show. Certain, she parades quite a collection of hats in the opening 20 minutes or so. Then the melodrama and angst kicks in and it becomes clear that this is no comedy.

    It is not profound and opens no new paths in movie making. It sets out to entertain and deliver on expectations but manages to give something extra. You come away satisfied that you have seen a good movie but not so tired and engaged that you can't watch the back half of the double feature.

    Kay Francis delivers what you would expect from her. In 1933, people went to see her movies expecting certain things and they get them plus some additional and effectively portrayed moods and emotion as a bonus. However, I must say that she is not as stunning and glamorous as she was in many of her other movies but that could be appropriate and deliberate here. The rest of the cast is up to their tasks. There isn't enough material for any of them to actually shine. The movie moves quickly and covers more than one time period.

    Overall, a very successful B movie.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Francis turned the deck of cards sideways so she could check for shaved cards. Shaved cards allows the dealer to be able to feel the odd sized cards so they can tell the suit of the card.
    • Goofs
      Peggy is released in 1925 and she is show standing in bewilderment, near Times Square. In the following montage, a large billboard for Pepsodent toothpaste is visible, albeit backwards, but that billboard wasn't erected until 1930.
    • Quotes

      Bill Blaine: You know, Mrs. Stone, it's very seldom that ones finds a woman with a sense of gambling that you have. Have you played long?

      Peggy Martin Van Tyle: Since I was a child. I used to play with my father and my grandfather.

      Bill Blaine: I can believe that you play a man's game.

      Peggy Martin Van Tyle: That;s one of the nicest comments you could pay me, Mr. Blaine

      Bill Blaine: Not at all. The difference in our two stacks shows that it's more than just flattery.

      Peggy Martin Van Tyle: Let's hope the new cards change your luck.

    • Connections
      Featured in Complicated Women (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Forty-Five Minutes from Broadway
      (1906) (uncredited)

      Written by George M. Cohan

      Played during the opening credits

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 15, 1934 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The House on 56th Street
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Warner Bros.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $211,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 8m(68 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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