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Premier amour

Original title: Change of Heart
  • 1934
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 17m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
376
YOUR RATING
Charles Farrell and Janet Gaynor in Premier amour (1934)
DramaRomance

After graduating from a West Coast college, four friends fly to New York City to seek employment.After graduating from a West Coast college, four friends fly to New York City to seek employment.After graduating from a West Coast college, four friends fly to New York City to seek employment.

  • Director
    • John G. Blystone
  • Writers
    • Sonya Levien
    • James Gleason
    • Kathleen Norris
  • Stars
    • Janet Gaynor
    • Charles Farrell
    • James Dunn
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    376
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • John G. Blystone
    • Writers
      • Sonya Levien
      • James Gleason
      • Kathleen Norris
    • Stars
      • Janet Gaynor
      • Charles Farrell
      • James Dunn
    • 16User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos60

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    Top cast35

    Edit
    Janet Gaynor
    Janet Gaynor
    • Catherine Furness
    Charles Farrell
    Charles Farrell
    • Chris Thring
    James Dunn
    James Dunn
    • Mack McGowan
    Ginger Rogers
    Ginger Rogers
    • Madge Rountree
    Dick Foran
    Dick Foran
    • Nick
    • (as Nick Foran)
    Beryl Mercer
    Beryl Mercer
    • Harriet Hawkins
    Gustav von Seyffertitz
    Gustav von Seyffertitz
    • Dr. Kurtzman
    Kenneth Thomson
    Kenneth Thomson
    • Howard Jackson
    Theodore von Eltz
    Theodore von Eltz
    • Gerald Mockby
    • (as Theodor von Eltz)
    Drue Leyton
    Drue Leyton
    • Mrs. Gerald Mockby
    Nella Walker
    Nella Walker
    • Mrs. Frieda Mockby
    Shirley Temple
    Shirley Temple
    • Shirley
    Barbara Barondess
    Barbara Barondess
    • Phyllis Carmichael
    Fiske O'Hara
    • T.P. Mc Gowan
    Jane Darwell
    Jane Darwell
    • Mrs. Mc Gowan
    Mary Carr
    Mary Carr
    • Mrs. Rountree
    Mischa Auer
    Mischa Auer
    • Smith
    • (uncredited)
    William Bailey
    William Bailey
    • Man in Street
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • John G. Blystone
    • Writers
      • Sonya Levien
      • James Gleason
      • Kathleen Norris
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.0376
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    Featured reviews

    7ldeangelis-75708

    Good Swan Song for Janet and Charles

    This short film had significance in more ways than one. It was the last pairing of that romantic duo from silent days, Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell. It was one of the last films from Fox Studios before it merged with 20th Century. It was one of the last films before the Production Code (which would kick in about two months later). And it might have been the first appearance (and a real quick one) of Shirley Temple.

    This movie also had some great scenes of New York City in the mid 1930's, that kind of made me wish for a time machine.

    As for the story, it was good, a love quadrangle of sorts, with four college friends hitting the big city after graduation: Kate (Janet), Chris (Charles), Madge (Ginger Rogers) and Mac (James Dunn). Kate's in love with Chris, Chris is in love with Madge, Madge flirts with both guys but prefers Chris while Mac seems to take nothing seriously but makes a play for Kate.

    They all have hopes, dreams, ambitions, and only Kate knows her own heart from the start, the others have to learn from their mistakes.

    Fun as well as touching, and worth checking out.
    drednm

    The Last Pairing of Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell

    Change of Heart is the last of 12 films Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell starred in together. From the late silent period til this 1934 film, they were among the most popular of screen teams. Here they play college graduates aspiring to make it in New York City along with pals Ginger Rogers and James Dunn.

    Pleasant story of ambition and love among the young set. The film also boasts some solid supporting players, including Jane Darwell, Beryl Mercer (excellent as the salvage lady), Mischa Auer, Dick Foran (billed as Nick?), Irene Franklin, Lillian Harmer, Bess Flowers, Gustav von Seyffertitz, Nella Walker, Mary Carr, Mary Gordon, Shirley Temple (on the plane) and James Gleason.

    This was one of Rogers' last supporting parts (same year she became a star in Flying Down to Rio). She plays (she's excellent) the selfish Madge who marries a rich man rather than stick with the group and find work. This is probably Rogers' most unsympathetic role. Dunn is a bit much as the Irish crooner. Farrell plays the lovesick goon, and Gaynor (one of the most sympathetic stars of the 30s) plays the fiery redhead who keeps everything going.

    Nice film with a good view of New York City in 1934.
    HarlowMGM

    Great Cast Wasted in Silly Film

    CHANGE OF HEART is a disappointing, by the numbers drama despite a good cast headed by Janet Gaynor, Charles Farrell, Ginger Rogers, and James Dunn. The foursome is shown on college graduation day as they plan to go as a group to New York to make their fortunes, Janet as a writer, Charlie in big business, Ginger as a stage actress, and James as a radio crooner. They room together in apartment but after several months in the Big Apple fail to make any headway. Curiously, none of the group has ever really dated although Janet is in love with Charlie who is in love with Ginger who is in love with James who is in love with Janet. It strains credibility than no one other James (gently rebuffed by Janet) has tried to make something of it.

    Ginger is successful in crashing social circles and is pursued by a millionaire and for awhile leaves the little clique. James achieves his dream of being a radio star in a ludricious plot twist by confronting a radio producer and demanding to be heard (which we hear about but don't see, it would have been too ridiculous as an actual scene). When Ginger announces her engagement to the millionaire, lovesick Charlie is suddenly at death's door with a vague sickness that leaves him bedridden and in need of Janet's constant attention and nursing. Charlie pulls through, announces he is in love with Janet now, she confesses her long crush on him and they become engaged. Meanwhile, fickle Ginger breaks off with the money man, writes Charlie a mush note confessing her love and while Charlie goes through with the marriage to Janet, he and Ginger start seeing each other for "lunch".

    It's disappointing to see this likable cast in this silly soap opera which consistently lacks credibililty. Janet and Charlie, of course, are one of the great screen teams yet it's absurd that he could suddenly fall in love with her after years of thinking of her as just a pal. The movie refuses to accept the possibility that his new affection is due to gratitude and sensitivity for all she did for him during his illness but the viewer won't be so unrealistic.

    Gaynor, Farrell, and Dunn were all in their late twenties playing young people just out of college and while it's acceptable for actors in that age range to play such, trouble is Dunn, basically a character actor, has no youthfulness in his persona and seems a decade older than his real age. Ginger Rogers, newly a "name" thanks to her first picture with Fred Astaire, does well in an atypical role as a blonde bombshell (though several of her early roles were also flirts) but her character lacks credibility as someone whose supposed to be a close friend yet also a potential homewrecker. She goes through three beaus in a film set in about a year's time and while there is a promise she will settle down with her first choice, can there be any doubt this gal will soon encounter man number four? And don't get me started on the insane subplot of Janet working at a charity shop with elderly Beryl Mercier which discreetly works as a means to find homes for orphaned babies, Mercier and Gaynor convincing the wealthy people who donate their old clothes that what they really want are kids of their own!

    Of note is the (very) fleeting appearance of Shirley Temple as the gang is on the plane to New York. Shirley is an extra in a scene that runs barely ten seconds, has no lines and is only seen in profile for a moment and then just the back of her head. Apparently filmed before but released after STAND UP AND CHEER, the film that was Shirley's big break, the producers of CHANGE OF HEART manage to give her end-credit billing for this, probably one of the tiniest parts ever in a movie to receive screen credit outside of films that billed a supporting actor who actually wasn't in the final cut of a film!
    6lugonian

    A Manhattan Melodrama

    CHANGE OF HEART (Fox, 1934), directed by John G. Blystone, reunites the ever popular love team of Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell for the 12th and final time. Their union, which began with the silent romance story of SEVENTH HEAVEN (1927), expanded successfully for its time through the sound era in an attempt to recapture the magic of their initial pairing. Throughout those seven years and ten additional romancers (one as guest stars in an early musical), their efforts ranged from good to satisfactory, with popularity solely due to the loyalty of their audiences. With each passing year, tastes change in favor for better constructed stories and newcomers on the rise. By 1934, Gaynor and Farrell were on the wane, while the supporting players of James Dunn and Ginger Rogers have juicer roles, especially Rogers, cast against type, as the selfish girl who really doesn't know what she wants in life, thus, jeopardizing her friendship to get what she wants at all cost.

    The story linked with CHANGE OF HEART has nothing to do with medical students performing heart transplants, but the focus on two couples just graduating from a California college and leaving their roots to fulfill their life's ambition in New York City: Catherine Furness (Janet Gaynor), an orphan, yearns to be a writer. The only luck she has is obtaining employment at a salvage shop making clothes for orphaned babies under the supervision and care of Harriet Hawkins (Beryl Mercer); Chris Thring (Charles Farrell), wants to be an lawyer; Mac McGowan (James Dunn), a radio crooner like Rudy Vallee; and Madge Roundtree (Ginger Rogers), a Broadway actress. In true soap-opera tradition, Mac loves Catherine who secretly loves Chris, who loves Madge, who gives up Chris to move back to California, becoming a "companion" to wealthy producer Howard Jackson (Kenneth Thomson), in order to advance her acting career. Despondent, Chris becomes ill with high fever, leaving Catherine to nurse him back to health. After they marry, Madge, realizing the error of her ways, returns to New York to reclaim Chris, regardless of how Catherine might feel about it.

    During the 1960s and early 70s, TV Guide magazine used to label this version of CHANGE OF HEART in its schedule. Quite confusing since THE HIT PARADE OF 1943 (Republic) starring John Carroll and Susan Hayward has been retitled CHANGE OF HEART (taken from a hit song from that movie) for television. In Leonard Maltin's earlier edition to his "Movies on TV" book published in the 1980s, he critiques CHANGE OF HEART with a "BOMB" rating, later eliminating his review from subsequent editions. While this can be labeled a companion piece of the much better GENTLEMAN ARE BORN (Warners, 1934) starring Franchot Tone and Jean Muir, having very much the same theme, CHANGE OF HEART does have its flaws, such as accepting these slightly older principal players as college graduates; Dunn's obnoxious personality (which he is supposed to be anyway); Rogers in an unsympathetic role; extensive scene involving Gaynor nursing the bedridden Farrell back to health, each reciting some sappy dialog while she gives him a shave; or Gaynor speaking out her emotions through facial gestures as she did in her silent movies, but on the whole, it's really not that bad.

    What makes CHANGE OF HEART even more worthy of recommendation for film buffs is the assortment of familiar actors, whether receiving screen credit for their work or not, in smaller roles, including James Gleason as a Coney Island vendor; silent screen's Mary Carr with Jane Darwell each playing mothers during the opening graduation sequence; Gustav Von Seyffertitz as the kindly doctor; Mischa Auer as a party guest; Dick (billed as Nick) Foran taking time to sing, "Who Cares?"; and of course, Shirley Temple. Temple's performance in circulating prints that show on either Fox Movie Channel or Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: August 12, 2016) comes as a bitter disappointment for Temple fans due to the fact that she's hardly in the movie at all. She's actually in for a fraction of a second on the TWA airliner as a little girl who's given a paper airplane. While billed as Shirley during the closing cast listing, chances are that her scene(s) and spoken dialog were cut, an severe oversight from the film editor who didn't have the foresight this child was to become one of Hollywood's biggest/littlest legendary stars.

    For all it's worth, CHANGE OF HEART is very nostalgic in the way it presents itself: Imagine taking an airplane ride from California to New York in just 15 hours; the cost of 5 cents for the use of a public pay phone; earning $70 a week or paying $30 a month for an apartment. It also succeeds in recapturing New York City the way it was during the Depression era 1930s through its use of montage footage. These reflections of the times gone by makes CHANGE OF HEART, a rarely seen item from the old Fox Studio vaults, a worthy time capsule piece. (***)
    8mphillips50

    A sweet and sincere movie

    I thought this was a sweet and sincere movie, capturing a sense of New York in the 1930s. Both Janet Gaynor and Charlie Farrell are perfect as the innocent lovers, and Ginger Rogers nails the role of the egotistical yet classy "friend." I did think the last scene was a bit abrupt, but otherwise, a well-done movie. For those who enjoy heart-warming light romances, this is a treat.

    Along with Janet Gaynor, Charlie Farrell and Ginger Rogers, the cast is filled with stellar talent, not the least of which is Shirley Temple in the airplane scene. Beryl Mercer, Jane Darwell, James Dunn and Mischa Auer all do laudable jobs, although Dunn's role is unevenly scripted.

    I found the close-ups in this movie to be very well done. The shaving scene with Farrell and Gaynor is a classic--full of sentiment yet composed. Also, the scene between the doctor and Gaynor, with the camera just catching Gaynor from the back of her head, was masterful.

    It's a joy to watch understatement so beautifully played!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The was the last of 12 pictures that Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell starred together as a romantic couple.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Hollywood Hist-o-Rama: Janet Gaynor (1962)
    • Soundtracks
      All Hail Alma Mater
      (uncredited)

      Composer unknown

      Sung by the college graduates with organ accompaniment

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 4, 1935 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Change of Heart
    • Production company
      • Fox Film Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 17m(77 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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