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Madame et ses flirts

Original title: The Palm Beach Story
  • 1942
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
13K
YOUR RATING
Mary Astor, Claudette Colbert, Joel McCrea, and Rudy Vallee in Madame et ses flirts (1942)
Theatrical Trailer from Paramount
Play trailer2:13
1 Video
55 Photos
FarceSatireScrewball ComedySlapstickComedyRomance

A New York inventor needs cash to develop his big idea, so his adoring wife decides to raise it by divorcing him and marrying an eccentric Florida millionaire with a capricious high-society ... Read allA New York inventor needs cash to develop his big idea, so his adoring wife decides to raise it by divorcing him and marrying an eccentric Florida millionaire with a capricious high-society sister.A New York inventor needs cash to develop his big idea, so his adoring wife decides to raise it by divorcing him and marrying an eccentric Florida millionaire with a capricious high-society sister.

  • Director
    • Preston Sturges
  • Writers
    • Preston Sturges
    • Ernst Laemmle
  • Stars
    • Claudette Colbert
    • Joel McCrea
    • Mary Astor
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    13K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Preston Sturges
    • Writers
      • Preston Sturges
      • Ernst Laemmle
    • Stars
      • Claudette Colbert
      • Joel McCrea
      • Mary Astor
    • 128User reviews
    • 73Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    The Palm Beach Story
    Trailer 2:13
    The Palm Beach Story

    Photos55

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    Top cast63

    Edit
    Claudette Colbert
    Claudette Colbert
    • Gerry Jeffers
    Joel McCrea
    Joel McCrea
    • Tom Jeffers
    Mary Astor
    Mary Astor
    • The Princess Centimillia
    Rudy Vallee
    Rudy Vallee
    • J.D. Hackensacker III
    Sig Arno
    Sig Arno
    • Toto
    Robert Warwick
    Robert Warwick
    • Mr. Hinch
    Arthur Stuart Hull
    Arthur Stuart Hull
    • Mr. Osmond
    Torben Meyer
    Torben Meyer
    • Dr. Kluck
    Jimmy Conlin
    Jimmy Conlin
    • Mr. Asweld
    Victor Potel
    Victor Potel
    • Mr. McKeewie
    William Demarest
    William Demarest
    • First Member Ale and Quail Club
    Jack Norton
    Jack Norton
    • Second Member Ale and Quail Club
    Robert Greig
    Robert Greig
    • Third Member Ale and Quail Club
    Roscoe Ates
    Roscoe Ates
    • Fourth Member Ale and Quail Club
    • (as Rosco Ates)
    Dewey Robinson
    Dewey Robinson
    • Fifth Member Ale and Quail Club
    Chester Conklin
    Chester Conklin
    • Sixth Member Ale and Quail Club
    Sheldon Jett
    • Seventh Member Ale and Quail Club
    Robert Dudley
    Robert Dudley
    • Wienie King
    • Director
      • Preston Sturges
    • Writers
      • Preston Sturges
      • Ernst Laemmle
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews128

    7.413.4K
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    Featured reviews

    10lqualls-dchin

    Delirious screwball/slapstick romance

    Even more dementedly frantic than The Lady Eve, this film is Preston Sturges's most delirious screwball/slapstick romance, with one of the most amazing bits of comic combustion in the Ale and Quail Club train sequence. It's not as neatly structured as The Lady Eve, but it's filled with hilarious gags, lines, and performances. Claudette Colbert and Joel McCrea are remarkably composed and relaxed, but Rudy Vallee, Mary Astor, and all the other performers outdo themselves in energetic tomfoolery. When Vallee complains, plaintively, that the problem with the world is that the men most in need of a beating are usually enormous, or when Astor slyly suggests that she grows on people, like moss, you know you're hearing Preston Sturges's wit at its peak.
    8Lejink

    Classic screwball comedy

    A real hoot from Preston Sturges, a rollicking watch which is over all too soon. From the brilliant stop-start sequence over the titles, confusing right until the last frame which at last makes crazy sense (I'm sure Preston would forgive the oxymoron!) of it all, taking in a madcap menagerie of characters, every bit as eccentric as their names or nicknames indicate, for example get these; the Wiener King, the Ale and Quail Club, Princess Centimillia not to mention John D Hackensacker the Third. The set-piece comedic set-ups at the couple's flat, train station, on-board the train and on Hackensacker's yacht are played to the hilt with lightning fast delivery of dialogue so good you take for granted the comic timing so effortlessly achieved. Star of the show is the lovely effervescent Claudette Colbert, almost 40 at the time of making this movie but looking years younger in a variety of differing costumes, taking in over-sized men's pyjamas to the very best costumes that Hackensacker can buy.She's an audio-visual treat, putting into effect her madcap idea for the betterment of her unlucky, under-achieving, unrecognised husband, played with straight-laced, straight-faced aplomb by previous Sturges alumni, Joel McCrea. There are far too many other minor highlights amongst the supporting cast along the way to mention, with almost everyone in the cast getting to make some kind of wisecrack and the whole is served up as a riotous upper-class Marx Brothers-type confection for the 40's replete with a sub-Harpo stooge as Princess Centimillia's adoring numb-skull suitor. There are so many scenes which just fizz and crackle with wit and occasionally bawdy humour, as Sturges takes pot-shots at sexual mores and the idle rich. Rudy Vallee is great in his role as the hopelessly smitten, hapless multi-millionaire and Mary Astor equally winning as his caustic, man-mad sister. To summarise, 90 minutes of sheer Hollywood bliss topped off with that magic Sturges touch.
    7gavin6942

    A Fun Classic

    An inventor (Joel McCrea) needs cash to develop his big idea. His wife (Claudette Colbert), who loves him, decides to raise it for him by divorcing him and marrying a millionaire.

    One of the more interesting things about this film is the trouble it had getting made thanks to the censorship office. Although there is no explicit sexuality or foul language, it does have some questionable themes. There is talk of prostitution, and apparently the censors did not like the way marriage and divorce were handled so lightly. Even after the necessary cuts, this remains a strong central part of the plot and humor.

    Interestingly, the Bill Hader interview on the Criterion disc adds a lot. You might not think of Hader as a film historian or critic, and maybe he is not. But he really understands Sturges and how Sturges wrote his scripts. He connects the dots between Sturges and the Coen brothers, as well as explaining how each character, no matter how minor, is important to the story.
    8blanche-2

    Funny, wacky comedy of the '40s

    Claudette Colbert is a knockout who knows it. She wants the good life, which her inventor husband can't give her. So she leaves him, intending on marrying someone who can support her and finance his invention. Things don't quite work out.

    The opening of "Palm Beach Story" is a bizarre scene that only makes some sense (and I'm emphasizing some) at the very end of the film. It's certainly an original way to start a movie. There are some hilarious scenes in this film - desperate to get to Palm Beach for a quickie divorce, but with no money, Colbert accepts the invitation of the gentlemanly Ale and Quail Club to ride in their private train car as their guest and mascot. Unfortunately, the emphasis in this club is the ale and not the quail - shooting sugar cubes will do - also blowing out train windows, trashing whole train cars - you get the idea. Running from them, Colbert soon meets up with Rudy Vallee, who gives an absolutely delightful performance as a filthy rich man. He serenades her at one point, and it's great, hearkening back to his days as a crooner! Mary Astor is his many times married sister, and when Colbert's husband shows, in the form of Joel McCrea, Astor sees her next mark.

    McCrea has a funny slapstick fall down a flight of stairs, but otherwise, doesn't have much to do except be angry and jealous of his wife. Colbert in her glorious clothes, Vallee, and a vivacious Astor upstage him a bit. A very funny film, produced during World War II to give America a much-needed laugh.
    jdeamara

    Seeing it in its cinematic context

    One element of this film that shouldn't be ignored is that it, like "Sullivan's Travels" and "The Miracle of Morgan's Creek," is a conscious lampooning of earlier movies from the 1930s. It takes a standard, conventional plot from those movies and turns it on its ear. The same plot can be seen for example in the Paramount movie from 1931, "Up Pops the Devil," with Carole Lombard and Norman Foster (who coincidentally was Claudette Colbert's first husband). In that movie, a wife who still loves her husband wants to divorce him for his own good; she thinks she's just a noose around his neck, and once rid of her, he'll become a success. It's set in the same upper crust of society as "The Palm Beach Story," with a millionaire suitor for the wife and a nymphomaniac girl for the husband. Here, everything is played straight, with as much pathos and melodrama being milked out of the situation as can be. In "The Palm Beach Story" though, the same basic plot and characters are used, but it's the comedic potential and wackiness of the situation that's emphasized, to marvelous effect.

    The subplot with the twins, glanced at in the beginning and end of the picture, is another conscious lampooning of conventional movies, here a lampooning of the structure of movies themselves, of their conventional beginnings and endings. It's not meant to be taken seriously; as McCrea's character casually says at the end, it's all stuff "for another movie."

    No words can be found to adequately praise Claudette Colbert's performance. Joel McCrea is good too, as the prototypical wooden 1930s leading man. Rudy Vallee is absolutely hilarious as a "momma's boy" version of John D. Rockefeller, as is Mary Astor as his rich nymphomaniac sister. Her eunuch, Toto, played by Sig Arno, seems straight out of an Ernst Lubitch picture, perhaps a Sturges nod to the master. Quite a few scenes of the film, in their settings and atmosphere, pay homage to Lubitsch. Sturges does the "Lubitsch touch" proud, especially in those two scenes when Colbert sits on McCrea's lap so that he can undo the back of her dress, with the two of them both times melting into a kiss, and the scene ending with a fade out, leaving little doubt as to what will happen next. The second scene is particularly romantic, done as Rudy Vallee sings "Good Night Sweet Heart," itself a standard of the 1930s. Vallee also sings a line of "Isn't It Romantic," a song introduced in the luminous 1932 film "Love Me Tonight," directed by Rouben Mamoulian. The music in the film itself hearkens back to those great romantic comedies of the 1930s.

    It's nice to see Sturges's stock company of actors popping up here as well. I noticed William Demarest say his name was "Bill Docker," the same name his character had in Preston Sturges's "Christmas in July."

    In short, "The Palm Beach Story" is a wonderful film, whose richness can really be appreciated when seen in context, in the context of those old 1930s Paramount films, both the melodramatic ones like "Up Pops the Devil," that it lampoons, and the comedic, romantic ones like "Love Me Tonight" and "One Hour with You," that it pays homage to.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      In the long dolly shot of Joel McCrea and Mary Astor strolling on the pier from Rudy Vallee's yacht, Preston Sturges makes a rare Alfred Hitchcock-style appearance as the chubby, moustachioed leader of the crew toting Claudette Colbert's luggage.
    • Goofs
      On the train, the men with the shotguns shoot out the glass of the same window several times.
    • Quotes

      Wienie King: Cold are the hands of time that creep along relentlessly, destroying slowly but without pity that which yesterday was young. Alone our memories resist this disintegration and grow more lovely with the passing years. Heh! That's hard to say with false teeth!

    • Crazy credits
      While the opening credits are running, a prequel story about the two leads' wedding is being shown that is only hinted at in the last few minutes of the movie and the words, "And they lived happily ever after...or did they?". The movie comes full circle at the end to another wedding with the the same phrase "And they lived happily ever after...or did they?"
    • Alternate versions
      There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA Srl: "RITROVARSI A PALM BEACH (1942) New Widescreen Edition + DONNE E VELENI (1948)" (2 Films on a single DVD, with "The Palm Beach Story" in double version 1.33:1 and 1.78:1), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Beverly Hills Cop II/Amazing Grace and Chuck/Ishtar/The Chipmunk Adventure (1987)
    • Soundtracks
      Isn't It Romantic?
      (1932) (uncredited)

      Lyrics by Lorenz Hart

      Music by Richard Rodgers

      Played by a dance orchestra during the ballroom sequence

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 20, 1946 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Palm Beach Story
    • Filming locations
      • Penn Station, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(second unit)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • £438,200
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 28 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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