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Et la vie recommence

Original title: Forever and a Day
  • 1943
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
864
YOUR RATING
Brian Aherne, Charles Laughton, Ray Milland, Herbert Marshall, Robert Cummings, Ida Lupino, Anna Neagle, and Merle Oberon in Et la vie recommence (1943)
DramaHistory

During World War II, an American travels to Britain to sell an old house near London that belongs to his family. However, he meets Leslie Trimble who lives in the house and who is resolutely... Read allDuring World War II, an American travels to Britain to sell an old house near London that belongs to his family. However, he meets Leslie Trimble who lives in the house and who is resolutely against the sale. While they spend the night in an air-raid shelter she tells him the sto... Read allDuring World War II, an American travels to Britain to sell an old house near London that belongs to his family. However, he meets Leslie Trimble who lives in the house and who is resolutely against the sale. While they spend the night in an air-raid shelter she tells him the story of the building from its construction in 1804 until the present.

  • Directors
    • Edmund Goulding
    • Cedric Hardwicke
    • Frank Lloyd
  • Writers
    • Charles Bennett
    • Alan Campbell
    • Norman Corwin
  • Stars
    • George Kirby
    • Doreen Munroe
    • May Beatty
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    864
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Edmund Goulding
      • Cedric Hardwicke
      • Frank Lloyd
    • Writers
      • Charles Bennett
      • Alan Campbell
      • Norman Corwin
    • Stars
      • George Kirby
      • Doreen Munroe
      • May Beatty
    • 14User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos19

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    George Kirby
    • Wartime Newspaper Vendor
    Doreen Munroe
    • Wartime Londoner
    • (as Doreen Monroe)
    May Beatty
    May Beatty
    • Wartime Londoner Cook
    Connie Leon
    • Wartime Londoner
    Joy Harington
    Joy Harington
    • Wartime Bus Conductor
    • (as Joy Harrington)
    Kent Smith
    Kent Smith
    • Gates Trimble Pomfret
    Ernest Grooney
    • Hotel Manager
    Reginald Gardiner
    Reginald Gardiner
    • Assistant Hotel Manager
    Victor McLaglen
    Victor McLaglen
    • Archibald Spavin
    Billy Bevan
    Billy Bevan
    • Wartime Cabby
    Arthur Treacher
    Arthur Treacher
    • Second Air Raid Watcher
    Harry Allen
    • First Cockney Air Raid Watcher
    Aubrey Mather
    Aubrey Mather
    • Man in Air Raid Shelter
    Ethel Griffies
    Ethel Griffies
    • Wife of Man in Air Raid Shelter
    June Lockhart
    June Lockhart
    • Girl in Air Raid Shelter
    • (as June)
    Barbara Everest
    Barbara Everest
    • Girl's Mother in Air Raid Shelter
    Stuart Robertson
    • Air Raid Warden
    Ruth Warrick
    Ruth Warrick
    • Lesley Trimble
    • Directors
      • Edmund Goulding
      • Cedric Hardwicke
      • Frank Lloyd
    • Writers
      • Charles Bennett
      • Alan Campbell
      • Norman Corwin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.9864
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    Featured reviews

    31930s_Time_Machine

    Exactly as you'd expect from a charity film.

    This is the first charity fundraiser film. All the stars, directors and writers offered their services for free with all profits from the box office going to charity. Although such a project, written by 'a committee' isn't going to produce an innovative classic, this isn't too bad. These were after all, top stars, top directors and top writers with their reputations to preserve so this would have to be a classy affair. Jessie Matthews for example only spent three days on this but because this was a prestigious affair and for a very worthy cause, she and everyone else put 100% effort into it.

    The theme is: there'll always be an England so expect lots of blitz spirit, stiff upper lips and chirpy hat-doffing cockneys. It's told through the history of an old London house so is a perfect opportunity for virtually every English star to do a turn playing the sort of roles which made them famous. Everyone delivers the exact performance the audience would expect. C Aubrey Smith for example plays a compilation of every role he's ever played.

    Each story can stand on their own as separate stories but they're nicely blended together. The Victor Saville section is a sweet little comic interlude which is characteristically very Victor Saville. He has his former star, Jessie Matthews alongside Charles Laughton both raising a little chuckle. We're more used to seeing Jessie Matthews a decade younger in her Gaumont days but she still looks stunning.

    Getting all these English actors, directors and writers to put this together for free was a lovely idea. The resulting film is historically interesting but it's not a piece of entertainment. Unlike some other propaganda films, this one doesn't offer anything particular to a modern audience other than as a curiosity.
    GManfred

    This Old House

    This is the saga of a house handed down from generation to generation and the stories of each of the owners. The episodes range from good to better-than-good, but the value here is in the all-star cast; virtually any famous or near-famous British star from the 30's and 40's is in this picture, and even a few 'Yanks'. The nominal stars are Kent Smith and Ruth Warrick, she the present (1942) tenant. He stops in to sell it, and they swap stories about the different owners throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.

    In all, seven directors and 21 writers are given credit for working on the film, as well as 79 actors and actresses. It is a "sentimental story with some amusing and affecting passages, but as the story is somewhat hackneyed it is well-served by some superb performances" (Bosley Crowther, NY Times, 3/43). But I think to arrive at the most satisfactory effect one should necessarily be from the Sceptered Isle. I am a 'Yank' and didn't get that effect, but it was still good entertainment. It was shown at the Columbus,O. Cinevent, 5/12.
    9mysterymoviegoer

    Great Wartime Tribute

    This remarkable film was largely the brainchild of Sir Cedric Hardwicke, who had the idea that British ex-patriates in Hollywood donate their services to make a stirring film with a strong nationalistic theme. He rounded up a lot of potential contributors including actors and directors and writers, but by the time he found a home for this at RKO, some of them like Cary Grant and Ronald Colman and Alfred Hitchcock were no longer available. Some Americans and Canadians pitched in their services and the result is the very entertaining tale of two distant cousins and and a house that survives into the blitz told in flashbacks as London is bombed. Hardwicke and Buster Keaton steal the show as two bumbling plumbers, but there are excellent contributions by Sir C. Aubrey Smith, Dame May Witty, Ida Lupino, Charles Laughton, Roland Young, Dame Gladys Cooper and others. Some material was deleted, perhaps because of the length and leisurely pace of the story-telling. For those who love Downton Abbey and Upstairs, Downstairs, this will appeal. It was a miracle it got made. Most of the contributors gave their time for the war effort. Worth a look.
    5bkoganbing

    The House and the generations who lived there.

    This was one unusual project especially for a relatively minor major studio like RKO. In Forever And A Day they assembled a whole bunch of players from the Hollywood British colony, imported a couple like Anna Neagle and Jessie Matthews who did their work across the pond and put them all in one film that was directed by a half dozen directors or so. That many hands in the creation usually is a recipe for disaster. Usually that spells incoherent, but in the case of Forever And A Day it's just ponderous.

    Kent Smith and Ruth Warrick meet during the blitz, she owns a house he'd like to buy. It turns out he's distantly related to Warrick. The house was built by their common ancestor C. Aubrey Smith who was a retired admiral during the Napoleonic Wars. He built the place in an area that was rural then, London hadn't spread out that far. Warrick then starts telling the story, warts and all, of the house and the generations who lived there.

    I'm amazed the film was as good as it was. Still the story is slow moving and definitely parts are better than the whole. The only villain in the piece is really Claude Rains who was an ancestor, but a conniving schemer who had his ward stolen from him by Ray Milland as he was about to make a profitable match for her. A lot of women really were chattel in 1804. Rains is never bad in anything.

    Charles Laughton had a small role as a butler to one of the generations that lived in the house. Watch Laughton in this tiny role, it's one of the best examples of a consummate actor making something out of a nothing role.

    Forever And A Day is interesting, but that's the best I can say for it. It was good wartime propaganda, it's not the kind of film to ever be remade. If it is, hopefully with one good director and one creative vision.
    3HotToastyRag

    Different than the usual variety shows

    Boasting a cast of 78 movie stars, performers from every corner banded together for the troops in Forever and a Day, another "variety show" movie that was popular during WWII. Join Dame May Whitty, Edmund Gwenn, Arthur Treacher, Victor McLaglen, Herbert Marshall, C. Aubrey Smith, Buster Keaton, Gene Lockhart, Reginald Owen, Halliwell Hobbs, Charles Laughton, Elsa Lanchester, Nigel Bruce, Una O'Connor, Richard Hayden, Brian Aherne, Claude Rains, Ray Milland, Edward Everett Horton, Patric Knowles, June Duprez, Cecil Kellaway Ida Lupino, Eric Blore, Merle Oberon, Queenie Leopard, Jessie Matthews, Gladys Cooper, Robert Cummings, Donald Crisp as they act out a script contributed to by 22 writers, and directed and produced by seven skilled men.

    In one of his earlier films, Kent Smith stars as a young man interested in the history of an old British house. Told through vignettes, the house's owners and ancestors are explained. This has an entirely different feel than the usual "variety show" movies from the time period. There isn't song after dance after skit; instead, it's dramatic British scene after mildly comical British scene after neutral British scene. Unless you can keep up with the different accents and class distinctions and tongue-in-cheek about modern conveniences like bathtubs and motor cars, you probably won't like this one. It is fun to see Charles Laughton playing a butler and Brian Aherne trying out for Cary Grant's part in None But the Lonely Heart, though.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Alfred Hitchcock prepared the sequence involving Ida Lupino, and was to have directed it; scheduling prevented him, and it was directed by René Clair, who used Hitchcock's script.
    • Goofs
      In the first scene, which takes place on March 8, 1941, a newsboy announces that Germany has invaded Greece. However, the invasion did not begin until April 6, 1941.
    • Quotes

      [Opening narration]

      Narrator: St. Paul's Cathedral, London. That's right! Happily still standing after so much that has taken place in recent years. And to many of us, it's a symbol of something that will surely survive any other trials that may yet be in store. This may be the reason why a number of people banded themselves together to make this picture possible.

      [Screen fills with the names of the cast]

      Narrator: In the order of their appearance, these are the players who took part. Many others offered their services, but did not eventually appear through no fault of their own. The main point was the eagerness of everyone to take part in a job of real teamwork. Of course it takes more than actors to make a picture. And we were fortunate in being able to make use of many offers of assistance, among them these writers:

      [21 writers' names appear]

      Narrator: Also these directors and producers contributed their time and skills:

      [Names of Clair, Goulding, Hardwicke, Lloyd, Savile, Stevenson and Wilcox]

      Narrator: We have called the picture:

      [Title appears]

      Narrator: "Forever and a Day" was finally made possible only through the cordial cooperation of all the Hollywood studios and the technical branches of the industry. May we hope that this truly cooperative effort may symbolize the common effort of ourselves and our allies to make secure the ideals for which this picture stands.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Turner & Hooch: Forever and a Dog (2021)
    • Soundtracks
      Down at the Old Bull and Bush
      (uncredited)

      Written by Andrew B. Sterling (as Andrew Sterling) and Harry von Tilzer

      Sung in the air raid shelter

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 18, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Forever and a Day
    • Filming locations
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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