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Cette nuit est notre nuit

Original title: Tovarich
  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
663
YOUR RATING
Charles Boyer and Claudette Colbert in Cette nuit est notre nuit (1937)
Comedy

After the Russian revolution, a married Russian couple of nobility must take up jobs in Paris in order to survive.After the Russian revolution, a married Russian couple of nobility must take up jobs in Paris in order to survive.After the Russian revolution, a married Russian couple of nobility must take up jobs in Paris in order to survive.

  • Director
    • Anatole Litvak
  • Writers
    • Jacques Deval
    • Robert E. Sherwood
    • Casey Robinson
  • Stars
    • Claudette Colbert
    • Charles Boyer
    • Basil Rathbone
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    663
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Anatole Litvak
    • Writers
      • Jacques Deval
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • Casey Robinson
    • Stars
      • Claudette Colbert
      • Charles Boyer
      • Basil Rathbone
    • 15User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Photos18

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    Top cast31

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    Claudette Colbert
    Claudette Colbert
    • Grand Duchess Tatiana Petrovna Romanov
    Charles Boyer
    Charles Boyer
    • Prince Mikail Alexandrovitch Ouratieff
    Basil Rathbone
    Basil Rathbone
    • Commissar Dimitri Gorotchenko
    Anita Louise
    Anita Louise
    • Helene Dupont
    Melville Cooper
    Melville Cooper
    • Charles Dupont
    Isabel Jeans
    Isabel Jeans
    • Fermonde Dupont
    Morris Carnovsky
    Morris Carnovsky
    • Chauffourier Dubieff
    Victor Kilian
    Victor Kilian
    • Gendarme
    Maurice Murphy
    Maurice Murphy
    • Georges Dupont
    Gregory Gaye
    Gregory Gaye
    • Count Frederic Brekenski
    Montagu Love
    Montagu Love
    • M. Courtois
    Renie Riano
    Renie Riano
    • Madame Courtois
    • (as Reine Riano)
    Fritz Feld
    Fritz Feld
    • Martelleau
    Heather Thatcher
    Heather Thatcher
    • Lady Kartegann
    May Boley
    May Boley
    • Louise
    Doris Lloyd
    Doris Lloyd
    • Madame Chauffourier-Dubieff
    Curt Bois
    Curt Bois
    • Alfonso
    Ferdinand Munier
    Ferdinand Munier
    • Mr. Van Hemert
    • Director
      • Anatole Litvak
    • Writers
      • Jacques Deval
      • Robert E. Sherwood
      • Casey Robinson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    7.1663
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    Featured reviews

    9bkoganbing

    Comes The Counterrevolution

    Adapted from a French play authored by Jacques Deval, Tovarich had a successful run on Broadway the year before the film came out for 356 performances. Robert Sherwood did the adaption and for the screen, the talents of Casey Robinson were brought in to adapt Tovarich to another medium. Usually these collaborative efforts tend to dilute, but in the case of Tovarich, it's bright sophisticated comedy that gives both Charles Boyer and Claudette Colbert two of their best screen roles.

    Boyer and Colbert play a couple of exiled Russian nobles living in genteel poverty in Paris as so many did after the Russian Revolution. She's a bit more noble than he, Colbert is actually a blood Romanov and Boyer only married into the royal family. Before he and the family were overthrown, Nicholas II gave Boyer a lot of Russian gold, smuggled out of the country which Boyer laundered to use the modern term and deposited in a French bank under his name. Although no one could have blamed him for occasionally dipping in just for the bare necessities, Boyer and Colbert have refused to do it.

    What they're sitting on it for, who can tell. They refuse an a request for money from another exile Morris Carnovsky for some wild scheme to restore the Romanovs. Boyer and Colbert have woke up and smelled the coffee, the Romanov restoration just ain't happening. But what to do with that money, especially when you're living one meal to the next.

    Colbert and Boyer take jobs as butler and maid to a wealthy Parisian family consisting of Melville Cooper, Isabel Jeans, Anita Louise, and Maurice Murphy. Reasoning after all that their former status has acquainted them somewhat with the finer things and how that life should be lived. It takes a bit of getting used to as far as the reversal of stations, but gradually they ingratiate themselves with the family.

    The big test comes when a dinner party is given and a Commissar from the Soviet Union played by smooth Basil Rathbone is invited. He's got some history with the Romanovs and things get both funny and tense at the same time. A real achievement for director Anatole Litvak.

    Tovarich was also the source of a Broadway musical from 1963 in which Vivien Leigh starred in the Claudette Colbert role.

    If you think you've figured out who the good and bad people are than you are in for a surprise. Tovarich takes no sides in the politics, it presents the Bolsheviks and Romanovs with all the warts showing. It does it with sparkling humor as well. Try to catch it when broadcast next.
    10robbiebourget

    An enthusiastic review.

    "Tovarich" was the sort of film Hollywood loved making -- light entertainment, a piece of fluff -- but with a subtle edge lacking in many other films of its era. This is a film that will make you smile, laugh and even choke up a bit. The performances are all brilliant and you would be hard pressed to dislike any character for long, even the 'villain' of the piece. This film even manages to convey its 'message' without being overbearing and destroying the humour. One of my all-time favourites.
    9madwriter

    This is a delightful and stylish thirties comedy well worth viewing.

    Claudette Colbert and Charles Boyer make a delightful team in this stylish thirties comedy. This film is creative and amusing in much the same manner as My Man Godfry. For anyone who enjoys black and white films this will be enjoyable. It has something about it of the grace and style of the old Fred Astaire/Ginger Rogers films.
    9zhonu

    This is a witty and charming comedy of manners.

    If anyone could see the scene of the Colbert and Boyer serving at a party and not laugh, I would like to meet him. This is a stylish comedy concerning two noble emigrees who are in possession of a Bank account worth 10 billion gold francs, and who sign on as butler and chambermaid to a Parisian couple and the adventures that ensue.
    7Lejink

    If I Tovarich Man...

    Sort of "My Man Godfrey" meets "Ninotchka", this is a frothy, entertaining comedy directed by Anatole Litvak, whose Hollywood movies I'm currently working my way through. The plot is pretty contrived, but no more than with other screwball comedies of the time. Boyer and Goddard had been in two movies before, neither of which I've seen, and are very comfortable together playing a now impoverished Russian noble couple, displaced by the revolution to Paris, where they live a literally hand to mouth existence. Boyer is a Russian prince in exile, apparently entrusted by the Tsar with a fortune in Russian currency for safekeeping, Goddard his duchess wife. They live anonymously in a cheap Parisian garret, with a broken bed and Goddard reduced to pilfering foodstuffs from the local market, but they resolutely refuse to tap into the fund to ease their plight.

    Instead, they wind up taking jobs as a butler and maid in the grand house of wealthy French aristocrats where they put their reverse-knowledge of servitude to good use by quickly making themselves indispensable to the middle-aged scatterbrain husband and wife at the head of the house and their spoilt young-adult son and daughter. In fact, it's not long before father and son fall for the effervescent Colbert while mother and daughter form separate crushes on the debonair Boyer but things get complicated when a former Bolshevik general now elevated to high-ranking civil status, in the form of Basil Rathbone, turns up to a household soirée thrown by the Parisian couple. Rathbone's character has a stormy history with Boyer and Goddard, having persecuted and prosecuted them back in the homeland, to the extent of once perpetrating torture on Boyer in the past and who now wants his hands on the treasure-trove the couple are safeguarding.

    It all comes to a head at an amusing scene where the duo have to serve food to Rathbone and other Russian dignitaries at an evening meal, who, to mix matters up further, immediately recognise their former betters.

    While some of the humour is a little forced and the denouement a bit too pat, as the formerly gentrified couple meekly accept their new positions of servitude in Western democracy, once the action moves to Paris, there are some amusing scenes and situations along the admittedly cliched upstairs - downstairs / capital - communism lines.

    I like Goddard in almost everything in which I've seen her and was genuinely surprised at Boyer's facility with comedy. I also liked the madcap family who adopt them. Director Litvak shows an equal aptitude for staging comedy in a little-known film I'm rather glad I was able to track down.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This was the first Warner Brothers film to begin with Max Steiner's famous fanfare, which had a bombastic beginning and, by design, no end, as it was meant to transition into the main title of whichever picture it introduced.
    • Quotes

      Tatiana: Do you love your pigeon?

      Mikail: Every feather, my darling!

    • Connections
      Featured in Breakdowns of 1938 (1938)
    • Soundtracks
      Chto Mne Gore
      (uncredited)

      Russian folk song

      Lyrics by Samuel Pokrass

      Sung by Claudette Colbert

      Played as part of the score

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 25, 1937 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tovarich
    • 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
      • $1,400,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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