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Bonne blague

Original title: Wedding Present
  • 1936
  • Approved
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
782
YOUR RATING
Cary Grant and Joan Bennett in Bonne blague (1936)
ComedyRomance

When Charlie Mason is promoted from irresponsible reporter to hard-nosed city editor, it costs him his girlfriend, ace reporter Rusty Fleming. After he hears she's engaged to another, he qui... Read allWhen Charlie Mason is promoted from irresponsible reporter to hard-nosed city editor, it costs him his girlfriend, ace reporter Rusty Fleming. After he hears she's engaged to another, he quits and tries to win her back.When Charlie Mason is promoted from irresponsible reporter to hard-nosed city editor, it costs him his girlfriend, ace reporter Rusty Fleming. After he hears she's engaged to another, he quits and tries to win her back.

  • Director
    • Richard Wallace
  • Writers
    • Joseph Anthony
    • Paul Gallico
  • Stars
    • Joan Bennett
    • Cary Grant
    • George Bancroft
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    782
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Wallace
    • Writers
      • Joseph Anthony
      • Paul Gallico
    • Stars
      • Joan Bennett
      • Cary Grant
      • George Bancroft
    • 12User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos11

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    Top cast63

    Edit
    Joan Bennett
    Joan Bennett
    • Monica 'Rusty' Fleming
    Cary Grant
    Cary Grant
    • Charlie Mason
    George Bancroft
    George Bancroft
    • Pete Stagg
    Conrad Nagel
    Conrad Nagel
    • Roger Dodacker
    Gene Lockhart
    Gene Lockhart
    • Archduke Gustav Ernest
    William Demarest
    William Demarest
    • 'Smiles' Benson
    Inez Courtney
    Inez Courtney
    • Mary Lawson
    Edward Brophy
    Edward Brophy
    • Squinty
    Purnell Pratt
    Purnell Pratt
    • Howard Van Dorn
    Douglas Wood
    Douglas Wood
    • Willett
    George Meeker
    George Meeker
    • Gordon Blaker
    Damon Ford
    • Mike Haley
    Lois Wilson
    Lois Wilson
    • Laura Dodacker
    Mary Forbes
    Mary Forbes
    • Mrs. Dodacker
    George Offerman Jr.
    George Offerman Jr.
    • Sammy Smith
    John Henry Allen
    • Jonathan
    • (as J.H. Allen)
    Charles Arnt
    Charles Arnt
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Eddie Baker
    Eddie Baker
    • Motorcycle Cop
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Wallace
    • Writers
      • Joseph Anthony
      • Paul Gallico
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.2782
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    Featured reviews

    4robb_772

    Sporatically interesting film, ultimately undermined through muddled approach

    A rather undistinguished film, the sometimes incomprehensible romantic comedy WEDDING PRESENT contains a numerous amount of potentially interesting plot devices and story elements, but ultimately fails to capitalize on it's own potential and ends up making little to no real impression. Various characters and plot threads are introduced with great fanfare, only to be dropped with no explanation as the film wanders through it runtime with no clear direction. Cary Grant and Joan Bennett are fine in the leads, and even have a respectable degree of chemistry, but they are let down by the film's lack of narrative and structure. Not a bad film by any means, but certainly an unfortunate waste of enormous talent and considerable potential.
    7clemd

    Catch it if you can

    Screwball comedy reminiscent of His Girl Friday - which also starred Cary Grant. Zany reporters (Grant, Joan Bennett), an editor who can't live or without them, and some strictly-for-laughs gangsters. An open manhole gag worthy of any silent comedy, too. But the ending is a bit implausible. You can't really get away with that much malicious mischief, can you?
    tedg

    Stories, Sex, Writing, Image

    One thing I absolutely love about films from the 30s is the now obsolete devices around which some films are centered. Locomotives and ships of course. They're a bit obvious. Then, they were symbols of technology and modernity. Technology as physical power — something in everyone's cinematic imagination then — now made quaint by microchips we cannot even see. And films are the worse for it.

    Another device is the newsroom. We don't have these today in the same way. Reporters and cops don't mix it up as they used to. We don't actually "get the story," instead get some sort of manufactured fiction that glues facts together in appealing ways.

    But 70 years ago there was a magical confluence of what it meant to make or discover stories, what it meant to "see," and what it meant to be an American. Mixed in there was this notion of an alert woman.

    Its hard to impress on youngsters beyond a cartoonish awareness that women in society and film were extremely limited in options. Homemaker, secretary, teacher, nurse. Whore. If a woman was intelligent and witty and active, she was a reporter.

    Seeing and discovering was sexy. Its lost today, that effect. This is post-code; "Picture Snatcher" is a better example where the sexiness is darned explicit.

    Imagine a film that presents a woman far beyond your experience, what you know from real life. Imagine her witty and sexually available outside marriage, at least temporarily so. Smart, full of humor and ready to play severe and grand jokes. Its impossible to do today where Angelina can fight, Tilda can control and Julianne can affect.

    But just imagine the cinematic power of a newsroom with such juice. The folding, of course with them writing stories and we seeing stories simultaneously. Our admiration of her just as Grant's and both of us conspiring in creating a spectacle around her.

    (For those who haven't seen it the story is Cary and Joan are lovers — copulation is obvious — and both are star reporters. They decide NOT to marry as not to "ruin things." He advances to control the paper (the story) and she becomes engaged to a book writer. The books in question are vapid "self-help" books that lack the vim of "real" stories. Grant, drunk and with the help of a gangster pal, conspires to give her firetrucks, policecars, ambulances, even a hearse, all responding to the house where she will wed. That's the present: life.)

    Oh how I wish we had such power to pull from in film today! Where's the sex in story, the newsroom of today?

    Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
    Michael_Elliott

    Too Uneven to Be a Complete Success

    Wedding Present (1936)

    ** 1/2 (out of 4)

    Reporters Charlie (Cary Grant) and Rusty Fleming (Joan Bennett) are set to be married but after his messing around costs them a marriage license, she begins to think twice about it. Soon he is made editor and she quits her job, which sets off a chain of events that has her eventually engaged to another man (Conrad Nagel).

    WEDDING PRESENT was the second straight film that Grant and Bennett did together and it would turn out to be Grant's final picture with Paramount until his return in 1955 with TO CATCH A THIEF. A lot of people including Leonard Maltin think of this as an underrated gem but I'm not certainly I'd go that far. A lot of others have noted that the film has a lot of common things with HIS GIRL Friday, which of course would go down as one of the greatest screwball comedies ever made.

    For my money, this film was way too uneven to fully work and a lot of the issues come in the second half. The story has all sorts of characters thrown in and our two leads are constantly having new things done to them and I just found the majority of it uninvolving and at times rather boring. The screenplay tries to keep things moving and as I said, it's constantly throwing loops into the story but I just didn't find it all that funny no matter how hard the cast was trying.

    As far as the cast goes, I thought most of them did a very good job and that includes Grant. He's charming, fast-talking ways would eventually make him a legend and his performance here was pretty good. I also thought Conrad Nagel and George Bancroft were good in their supporting bits of Gene Lockhart is also very good in his bit as the Archduke. As far as Bennett goes, she too is in fine form here but the screenplay certainly didn't do her any favors.
    7bkoganbing

    'Almost Married'

    Wedding Present was the second of two films Cary Grant co-starred with Joan Bennett and the last one of his original Paramount contract. He would not return to Paramount until 1955 when he did To Catch A Thief for Alfred Hitchcock.

    Grant and Bennett play a couple of free spirits who happen to be reporters on a Chicago paper and while they get the stories, they are bad for discipline and the bane in the existence of their editor George Bancroft. In fact the couple almost get married as the film begins, but Grant's clowning around pushed the deadline past the official closing time and you know how officious some civil servants can be. They stay 'almost married' for most of the film.

    But Grant gets promoted to city editor when a harried and harassed Bancroft quits and he turns into a hardnose. So much so that he fires Bennett when she tries to break up the city room. That leaves Grant disillusioned and he quits and follows Bennett to New York where she has now taken up with and is about to be married to stuffy Conrad Nagel, a fate worse than death in Cary's eyes.

    Some have compared this film to His Girl Friday. But there is a vast difference, the humor in that classic derives from the fact that Grant in that film is all business and will do anything to keep Rosalind Russell on the job and on the story. In this one the good time is the virtue prized above all others.

    Paramount gave Grant and Bennett a great supporting cast in this topped by William Demarest, a New York gangster who Grant saves from drowning in Lake Michigan. Demarest is looking to pay him back and in the end really does come through for him.

    Screwball comedy fans will love the ending as an inebriated Grant and Demarest decide to give Bennett a Wedding Present. What they do is for the viewer to see, but I promise they pull all the stops out.

    This was a good picture to leave Paramount with and enter into superstardom with the next set of roles Grant would have as a free lance artist.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      One of over 700 Paramount Productions, filmed between 1929 and 1949, which were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution, and have been owned and controlled by Universal ever since. Its earliest documented telecast took place in Asheville Sunday 2 August 1959 on WLOS (Channel 13), followed by Omaha Saturday 22 August 1959 on KETV (Channel 7), by Minneapolis 8 November 1959 on WTCN (Channel 11), by Johnstown 23 November 1959 on WJAC (Channel 6), by Seattle 9 December 1959 on KIRO (Channel 7), by Columbus 2 February 1960 on WBNS (Channel 10), by Phoenix 3 March 1960 on KVAR (Channel 12), by Wichita 3 August 1960 on KTVH (Channel 12), by Detroit 25 August 1960 on WJBK (Channel 2), and by Palm Beach 3 November 1960 on WPTV (Channel 5). It was released on DVD 19 April 2016 as one of 18 titles in Universal's Cary Grant - the Vault Collection.
    • Quotes

      Marriage License Clerk: [Reviewing a marriage license] Do you solemly swear that the statements are?... Say! What's the matter with you? You've got the day of your birth down here August 4, 1934. That makes you two years old!

      Charlie: That;s right. Next year I'll be eligible for the Kentucky Derby... and if you were marrying a girl like mine, you'd feel that young yourself.

    • Connections
      Featured in L'univers du rire (1982)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 26, 1937 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wedding Present
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 21m(81 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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