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Uniformes et jupons courts

Original title: The Major and the Minor
  • 1942
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
8.2K
YOUR RATING
Ray Milland and Ginger Rogers in Uniformes et jupons courts (1942)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:12
1 Video
99+ Photos
Screwball ComedyComedyRomance

A frustrated city girl disguises herself as a youngster in order to get a cheaper train ticket home. But little "Sue Sue" finds herself in a whole heap of grown-up trouble when she hides out... Read allA frustrated city girl disguises herself as a youngster in order to get a cheaper train ticket home. But little "Sue Sue" finds herself in a whole heap of grown-up trouble when she hides out in a compartment with a handsome Major.A frustrated city girl disguises herself as a youngster in order to get a cheaper train ticket home. But little "Sue Sue" finds herself in a whole heap of grown-up trouble when she hides out in a compartment with a handsome Major.

  • Director
    • Billy Wilder
  • Writers
    • Charles Brackett
    • Billy Wilder
    • Edward Childs Carpenter
  • Stars
    • Ginger Rogers
    • Ray Milland
    • Rita Johnson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    8.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Billy Wilder
    • Writers
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
      • Edward Childs Carpenter
    • Stars
      • Ginger Rogers
      • Ray Milland
      • Rita Johnson
    • 81User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
    • 73Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:12
    Trailer

    Photos139

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    Top cast69

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    Ginger Rogers
    Ginger Rogers
    • Susan Applegate
    Ray Milland
    Ray Milland
    • Major Philip Kirby
    Rita Johnson
    Rita Johnson
    • Pamela Hill
    Robert Benchley
    Robert Benchley
    • Albert Osborne
    Diana Lynn
    Diana Lynn
    • Lucy Hill
    Edward Fielding
    Edward Fielding
    • Colonel Oliver Slater Hill
    Frankie Thomas
    Frankie Thomas
    • Cadet Osborne
    Raymond Roe
    Raymond Roe
    • Cadet Anthony Wigton Jr.
    Charles Smith
    Charles Smith
    • Cadet Korner
    Larry Nunn
    Larry Nunn
    • Cadet Babcock
    Billy Dawson
    • Cadet Miller
    Lela E. Rogers
    Lela E. Rogers
    • Mrs. Applegate
    • (as Lela Rogers)
    Aldrich Bowker
    Aldrich Bowker
    • Reverend Doyle
    Boyd Irwin
    • Major Griscom
    Byron Shores
    • Captain Durand
    Richard Fiske
    Richard Fiske
    • Will Duffy
    Norma Varden
    Norma Varden
    • Mrs. Osborne
    Gretl Dupont
    • Mrs. Shackleford
    • Director
      • Billy Wilder
    • Writers
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
      • Edward Childs Carpenter
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews81

    7.38.1K
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    Featured reviews

    Topaz2

    Sounds ridiculous, but it really is good!

    I have to admit, when I first read the synopsis for this movie, it sounded so ridiculous I almost didn't watch it. I want to urge others not to make this mistake. This is one terrific film. Ginger Rogers is absolutely perfect. No, she doesn't really LOOK like she is 12, but who cares, it's a comedy. There are many humorous moments, and Rogers' character is quite well developed. Ray Milland also comes off well. This is one of Billy Wilder's finest efforts!
    timmauk

    cute funny film

    This Billy Wilder film stars Ginger Rogers as a grown thirty year old woman passing herself off as a twelve year old kid, PLEASE!! The storyline is unbelievable BUT....made very funny and watchable by its stars.

    Susan is a woman who is fed up with New York. She left her little hometown to find happiness in the big city, only to find it filled with disappointment. So she decides to head back home on the train. When she gets there she finds that she is short funds. Not knowing what to do she gets a hairbrained idea that she could simply pass herself off as a kid to pay less!! When the conductor on the train gets wise, she runs and hides in the compartment of Ray Milland. Ginger makes little SuSu(Susan) so cute and delightful and Milland is funny and sweet as the(obviously blind) military school teacher.

    It sounds stupid but it isn't really. Give it a chance and you'll love it. ENJOY!!
    8gavin6942

    One of Wilder's Best!

    Susan Applegate (Ginger Rogers) gives up on pursuing her dreams in New York, and decides to return home on the next train. Not being able to afford an adult ticket, she pretends to be 11 (12 next week). This plan is rough to start with, and gets more difficult when she meets a handsome military man (Ray Milland) on the train...

    Billy Wilder had gotten sick of his writing being taken by directors and butchered from his original vision. This marks his directorial debut, and it is a brilliant piece of film. Is it his masterpiece? Probably not. But I'd say it is better than many other of Wilder's works.

    Can Ginger Rogers pull off being 12? On one hand, clearly not. But, at the same time, any actress that could would probably not be able to be the woman that is hidden underneath the child disguise. For the most part, the transformation is impressive, even if not completely believable.

    I absolutely loved this film, and have not found myself more engrossed by a classic film in a long time (and I do watch plenty of classics). If you love Billy Wilder or Ginger Rogers, or want to get acquainted with either one, I would say this is the film for you.
    8bkoganbing

    Out Of Wet Clothes Into A Dry Martini

    Paramount Pictures finally gave Billy Wilder a chance to direct his own material with The Major And The Minor. This rather interesting comedy depends a great deal not on just Wilder's writing and directing, but on the considerable comedy talents of Ginger Rogers to put it over. It's not easy for an actress in the full flower of maturity to pretend to be an adolescent, but Rogers was certainly up to the task.

    Rogers plays Susan Applegate from Stevenson, Iowa who has had just about enough of New York. After trying several professions and making no headway in any of them, she's ready to cash it in and go back to Stevenson, maybe marry a local guy there. But cash is the problem when she comes up just short of the fare from New York to Stevenson. What to do, but pretend she's a child and travel for half fare.

    A rather interesting set of circumstances has her stopping off as a guest of Ray Milland whom she has 'fooled' into thinking she is only an early teen. That doesn't sit well with Milland's fiancée Rita Johnson, a real ice princess who suspects something's up. And Johnson's sister Diana Lynn knows there is, but doesn't care. Milland is an instructor at a boy's military school and the sight of his female guest sends the cadets into hormonal overdrive. Milland's feeling a bit antsy around Rogers though he can't quite figure out why.

    Wilder showed that even in his first film he was a master at slipping stuff by the censors. In a recent biography of Billy Wilder that was more important on this film than most because the subject matter was weaving dangerously close to pedophilia.

    Paramount was disposed to let Wilder have this project especially after another of their writers a couple of years earlier showed he had the directing chops. But Preston Sturges was given a tryout in the studio's B picture unit with The Great McGinty. The Major And The Minor was an A film all the way because Wilder was able to sell Ginger Rogers on the story. He also brought the film only slightly over budget which definitely insured he would have a directorial career at Paramount.

    Robert Benchley is also in the film as a lecherous old goat who is the one who finally sends Rogers packing to Iowa after putting the moves on her while she is trying the profession of masseuse. Wouldn't you know it, he turns out to be the father of a chip off the old block in the person of Cadet Frankie Thomas. Benchley's scenes in the film are precious indeed.

    The Major And The Minor still holds up very well after over 60 years, no doubt because of the risqué subject matter. It's a film definitely guaranteed to make you a fan of the talents of its director and its stars.
    8AlsExGal

    A great screwball comedy

    Ginger Rogers was lucky in that she wasn't pigeonholed into being a specific type of character and that she can play a variety of characters in different roles. She demonstrated a real knack for comedy here, in Billy Wilder's first job of direction. Ginger Rogers can't afford an adult train fare to Iowa, so she disguises herself as a pre-teen, and from there the film progresses into one long funny con-game.

    I loved watching Ginger assemble her little girl outfit in the bathroom of the train station. Granted, even without makeup and with her hair in pigtails, Rogers does not look 12. However, that is also part of the comedy of the film. Co-star Ray Milland's character has poor eyesight in one eye and as a result, he cannot tell that she simply looks too old to be 12. I thought Rogers looked very pretty with just minimal makeup and with the darker hair.

    Milland's character's fiancee's sister, Lucy, was hilarious and she was the one person who called Rogers out on her farce right away. Lucy is the real brains in the film and she actually says what the audience is thinking: "She doesn't look 12!" I loved how she blackmailed Rogers into helping out Milland whom Lucy seems to genuinely care about. She does not like her sister. And good for Rogers for being a 20-something ( actually a 30-something) who could still fit into a teenager's clothes! The squeaky voiced cadets at the school were funny with them all having the same pickup line about Sudan. I especially liked the cadet who thought he was more sophisticated because he was from New York. The actor played Nancy Drew's boyfriend Ted Nickerson (Ned Nickerson in the books) in the "Nancy Drew" films with Bonita Granville.

    Robert Benchley was great as Rogers' old customer who by sheer coincidence is the father of the New York cadet. He always did the befuddled sophisticate very well and with great dry humor.

    There were many things in this film that I recognized from I Love Lucy. 1) Rogers' hair treatment on Benchley with the oil, eggs and painful massage is similar to Lucy's scalp treatment on Ricky when he thinks he's losing is hair. 2) The cadets sing "Sweet Sue" on the way to picking up Rogers. That song was the song that the Ricardos and Mertzes sing in the "Breaking the Lease" episode. 3) Benchley's character's wife played Mrs. Benson in the episode where Lucy and Ricky moved into the 2-bedroom apartment.

    What was so interesting was the whole angle of an adult pretending to be a child who is falling in love with an adult who thinks she's a child. I thought it was strange when Milland complimented "12 year old" Rogers on her legs saying that they were a "nice shape" (or something like that). That seems like a strange comment to make toward a child. It's not something you'd see today in film.

    I liked that Milland's character kept meeting Rogers at all these different ages: 12, 20s, presumably 40s-50s and didn't really seem to question it, only that it was remarkable how all these ladies look so much alike.

    I saw this on the Universal DVD (although it's actually a Paramount film) the other night, and Robert Osborne's introduction is great, but it is a bit sad seeing him looking so hearty and strong in this eight year old DVD release versus the downturn his health has taken recently.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The role was very close to Ginger Rogers' heart. When she was touring America with her vaudeville act and chauffeured by her mother, Lela E. Rogers, they could not afford to pay the full fare. Ginger had to pretend to be younger by rolling her stockings down and holding her old dolly to look like a young child in order to get a cheaper fare.
    • Goofs
      At the dance, every girl from Mrs. Shackleford's academy, who are seen sitting in a chair, has her hair hanging over half of her face in a parody of the hair style of Veronica Lake, but when they are dancing, none of them is wearing her hair this way.
    • Quotes

      Conductor #1: You're from Swedish stock, eh?

      Susan Applegate: Yes, sir.

      Conductor #2: If you're people are Swedish, suppose you say something in Swedish.

      Susan Applegate, Conductor #2: I vant to be alone.

    • Crazy credits
      "The Dutch bought New York from the Indians in 1626 and by May 1941 there wasn't an Indian left who regretted it."
    • Connections
      Featured in Billy Wilder: confessions (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Isn't It Romantic?
      (1932) (uncredited)

      Music by Richard Rodgers

      Played on the radio in Mr. Osborne's room

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 20, 1946 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Uniformes et jupon court
    • Filming locations
      • St. John's Military Academy - 1101 North Genesee Street, Delafield, Wisconsin, USA(Wallace Military Institute exteriors)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $928,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $184
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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