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I Lived with You

  • 1933
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
246
YOUR RATING
I Lived with You (1933)
ComedyRomance

A young London woman meets an impoverished Russian prince. She brings him home to live with her middle-class family. The prince has diamonds from the last czar to sell. The money and his roy... Read allA young London woman meets an impoverished Russian prince. She brings him home to live with her middle-class family. The prince has diamonds from the last czar to sell. The money and his royal fame transform the family's lives.A young London woman meets an impoverished Russian prince. She brings him home to live with her middle-class family. The prince has diamonds from the last czar to sell. The money and his royal fame transform the family's lives.

  • Director
    • Maurice Elvey
  • Writers
    • Ivor Novello
    • George A. Cooper
    • H. Fowler Mear
  • Stars
    • Ursula Jeans
    • Ida Lupino
    • Minnie Rayner
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    246
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Maurice Elvey
    • Writers
      • Ivor Novello
      • George A. Cooper
      • H. Fowler Mear
    • Stars
      • Ursula Jeans
      • Ida Lupino
      • Minnie Rayner
    • 13User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast17

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    Ursula Jeans
    Ursula Jeans
    • Gladys Wallis
    Ida Lupino
    Ida Lupino
    • Ada Wallis
    Minnie Rayner
    Minnie Rayner
    • Mrs. Wallis
    Cicely Oates
    Cicely Oates
    • Flossie Williams
    • (as Cecily Oates)
    Molly Fisher
    • May Sawley
    • (as Mollie Fisher)
    Davina Craig
    • Maggie
    Beryl Harrison
    • Violet Bradshaw
    Eliot Makeham
    Eliot Makeham
    • Mr. Wallis
    Douglas Beaumont
    • Albert Wallis
    Jack Hawkins
    Jack Hawkins
    • Mort.
    Victor Bogetti
    • Thornton
    Ivor Novello
    Ivor Novello
    • Prince Felix Lenieff
    Hannah Jones
    Hannah Jones
    Agnes Imlay
    Maud Buchanan
    Gwen Floyd
    Margaret Yarde
    Margaret Yarde
    • Bit
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Maurice Elvey
    • Writers
      • Ivor Novello
      • George A. Cooper
      • H. Fowler Mear
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.3246
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    Featured reviews

    71930s_Time_Machine

    What a real surprise - it's actually a very funny comedy

    Ivor Novello was a composer, musician, playwright, screenwriter, theatre actor/producer ....and... as this shows, a genuinely funny comedy actor too. He wrote this as well confirming what a talented, witty and insightful writer he was.

    First of all, as a few others have said - what a surprise to find how funny he is. This is not what you'd expect from Ivor Novello. His very Welsh Russian accent is hilarious. His style is campy fabulosa - like a 1930s Kenneth Williams. Were he around today he'd have a weekly prime time tv slot. Like the best writers, he shares out to all of his cast equal funny lines and equal opportunities to shine. It's very democratic inasmuch that all the main cast have about the same amount of screen time and all have properly developed characters.

    Another surprise is what a well made film this is. It's produced, directed and acted much better than a lot of films from 1933. The reason for its high quality is due to a guy called Julius Hagen, an incredibly ambitious German emigre who for a short time ran his own British film studio, Twickenham Studios. Two things now happened at the same time. 1. The Depression in America resulted in the American studios cutting production so they needed to outsource films to fill their cinemas. 2. Noticing that Korda at London Films made a fortune with his big budget HENRY VIII, Hagen thought he'd do the same. So in 1933 when UA needed product for the cinemas he abandoned churning out cheap 'quota quickies' and invested heavily into making a few high quality films like this. There weren't too many English films in 1933 made this well so this is something quite special which is what makes it still so entertaining today.

    It's instantly engaging, intelligent and great fun. It's not the typical silly slapstick nonsense that was popular at the time but neither is it a high-brow, pretentious bore. In fact , it's got as many one-liners and subtle innuendos as you'd find in any Carry On film thirty years later. And one last observation - Ida Lupino sure was pretty!
    6robrobinson-06829

    Unusual for Novello

    I've never seen Ivor Novello like this before. Everything I've seen him in always seemed hammy, melodramatic, and over the top but here he is in a comic role and throwing out lines like Paul O'Grady - he even looks a bit like him. Quite a revelation. Mr Novello was gay at a time when you couldn't be out in the open about it apart from in theatrical circles and, even though this isn't a gay character he's playing, his performance is quite camp. I don't know how well this film did at the box office but I know this was quite a successful play on stage in London's West End. It's a shame he didn't do more films like this.
    didi-5

    dodgy accents and vanishing characters!

    Despite the reservations one has to have when a Russian prince has a Welsh accent barely disguised and a character disappears after a couple of scenes (young Albert the son takes 10 shillings to place a deposit on a wireless and is never seen again), this film is really sweet and extremely funny. To those of us who are familiar with Novello as a composer of luscious melodies of the likes of We'll Gather Lilacs it shows a new side to his genius. Great fun, especially the ladies' tea party and the early scenes in Hampton Court Maze.
    6boblipton

    The Comedy Does Not Mesh With The Drama, Despite A Great Novello Role

    Ursula Jeans meets a very elegant, very Russian Ivor Novello. He's broke, so she takes him home to her family's middle-class house, until he gets back on his feet. That will be a problem, because he's a Russian prince, and so not fitted for anything. All he has is a few sets of jewels worth thousands of quids. Since they were gift from the late Tsar, he can't spend them on himself. He can spend them on his new family, whose settled, decent lives he turns topsy-turvy.

    It's based on Novello's stage hit, and director Maurice Elvey does a fine job of opening it up, with a camera that moves, quick cuts, and close-ups. there are some wonderfully silly scenes, like the one where Novello gets the local snobs drunk on vodka-laced tea. Yet the serious segments are curiously at odds with the crazy-comic ones; they are two sets of stage conventions that do not mix well.

    It's a bit odd to see this out of Twickenham. That production company had been built on a series of quota quickies, subsidized by American companies who needed British production to play alongside their imported movies to comply with British law. the larger British integrated studios found the small studio useful for providing cheap second features to run in their big houses. the problem was that owner Julius Hagen had grown weary of the thin profit margins, and aware of the immense profits from A productions. So he cut back on the bread-and-butter productions and tried for prestige... and found himself shut out by the big, integrated companies, in Britain and the U.S.
    10bbmtwist

    Very funny Novello comedy with Ivor's best sound performance

    I approached I LIVED WITH YOU with trepidation. While Novello had appeared in 16 silent films, where his beauty and ability to act with good direction stood him in good stead, from his RAT trilogy to his two films with the budding Alfred Hitchcock. Talkies, however, were a different ball game. He made only six. His second, THE PHANTOM FIEND, was a remake of his silent Hitchcock film, THE LODGER, and he was just awful, as was the film, over-acting and emoting all over the studio sets. His next, a turgid melodrama with Ruth Chatterton, ONCE A LADY, gave him only a brief supporting role in twelve scenes.

    I LIVED WITH YOU is an adaptation of his own play, in which he starred on stage, and it is a revelation. Very funny, very well crafted, with great lines and astute observations of character and mood. Ursula Jeans is perfect as the good daughter, Gladys. Ida Lupino in her fifth film is unrecognizable, she is so fresh, minor her later mannerisms in voice and posture.

    The whole cast is full of great character acting and in the middle is Novello, totally charming and totally believable as a romantic Russian prince whose involvement in the lives of a poor but happy British family, upsets their lives in many ways. Later films to use this idea of a stranger entering family lives and changing them for ever were mainly comic (MY MAN GODFREY, MERRILY WE LIVE), but often moving and thought-provoking (BOUDU SAVED FROM DROWNING).

    Novello has lost all of his theatrical mannerisms and theatrical emoting. He is fresh, funny and ultimately very moving. Facial and vocal expressions are fit and apt to the sound film. I've never seen a better performance of his and the film is absolutely wonderful.

    Seek it out!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      One of Jack Hawkins' early films.
    • Connections
      Featured in Shepperton Babylon (2005)

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    FAQ14

    • How long is I Lived with You?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 29, 1934 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Russian
    • Filming locations
      • Twickenham Film Studios, St Margarets, Twickenham, Middlesex, England, UK(Studio, uncredited)
    • Production companies
      • Gaumont British Picture Corporation
      • Twickenham Films
      • Julius Hagen Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 40m(100 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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