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Les Blanches Falaises de Douvres

Original title: The White Cliffs of Dover
  • 1944
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
2K
YOUR RATING
Irene Dunne and Alan Marshal in Les Blanches Falaises de Douvres (1944)
London based American nurse, Lady Susan Ashwood (Irene Dunne), is at a hospital awaiting the imminent arrival of wounded soldiers. She is hoping that her enlisted son, Sir John Ashwood II (Peter Lawford), who resembles his father in appearance and temperament, is not amongst those wounded. As she waits, she remembers back to World War I when her husband, the former Sir John Ashwood (Alan Marshal), was enlisted, and the waiting she endured on any news from and about him while he was away in battle. From a humble background, Sue almost didn't meet Sir John, let alone marry him, as she and her father, Hiram Porter Dunn (Frank Morgan), the publisher of a small daily newspaper, were only in London in April 1914 on a two week vacation - her first trip - that was not going very well when by happenstance she got invited on her last day in London to the King's ball, where Sir John was awaiting the arrival of another young woman with whom he was supposed to keep company for the evening. Despite being mutually attracted to each other, the patriotic Sue didn't know whether she could leave the United States and get accustomed to John's family's aristocratic manners, as well as the English customs in general. She also thinks back to approximately ten years earlier when she was urged by her father to return to the States on the inevitability that the Germans would once again be the aggressors in a war. Through it all, Sue is a proud American, despite having lived the better part of her adult life in England.
Play trailer2:36
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26 Photos
DramaRomanceWar

Susan travels with her father to England for a vacation. Invited to a ball, Susan meets Sir John Ashwood and marries him after a whirlwind romance. However, American Susan never quite adjust... Read allSusan travels with her father to England for a vacation. Invited to a ball, Susan meets Sir John Ashwood and marries him after a whirlwind romance. However, American Susan never quite adjusts to life as a new member of the British gentry.Susan travels with her father to England for a vacation. Invited to a ball, Susan meets Sir John Ashwood and marries him after a whirlwind romance. However, American Susan never quite adjusts to life as a new member of the British gentry.

  • Director
    • Clarence Brown
  • Writers
    • Claudine West
    • Jan Lustig
    • George Froeschel
  • Stars
    • Irene Dunne
    • Alan Marshal
    • Roddy McDowall
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Clarence Brown
    • Writers
      • Claudine West
      • Jan Lustig
      • George Froeschel
    • Stars
      • Irene Dunne
      • Alan Marshal
      • Roddy McDowall
    • 43User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:36
    Trailer

    Photos26

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    Top cast79

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    Irene Dunne
    Irene Dunne
    • Susan Ashwood
    Alan Marshal
    Alan Marshal
    • Sir John Ashwood
    Roddy McDowall
    Roddy McDowall
    • John Ashwood II as a Boy
    Frank Morgan
    Frank Morgan
    • Hiram Porter Dunn
    Van Johnson
    Van Johnson
    • Sam Bennett
    C. Aubrey Smith
    C. Aubrey Smith
    • Colonel Walter Forsythe
    May Whitty
    May Whitty
    • Nanny
    • (as Dame May Whitty)
    Gladys Cooper
    Gladys Cooper
    • Lady Jean Ashwood
    Peter Lawford
    Peter Lawford
    • John Ashwood II as a Young Man
    John Warburton
    John Warburton
    • Reggie Ashwood
    Jill Esmond
    Jill Esmond
    • Rosamund
    Brenda Forbes
    Brenda Forbes
    • Gwennie
    Norma Varden
    Norma Varden
    • Mrs. Bland
    Harry Allen
    • English Cabbie
    • (uncredited)
    Wilson Benge
    Wilson Benge
    • Chauffeur
    • (uncredited)
    Matthew Boulton
    Matthew Boulton
    • Immigration Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Edmund Breon
    Edmund Breon
    • Major Rupert Bancroft
    • (uncredited)
    Clifford Brooke
    Clifford Brooke
    • Indian Major in Boardinghouse
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Clarence Brown
    • Writers
      • Claudine West
      • Jan Lustig
      • George Froeschel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    7.01.9K
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    Featured reviews

    bettiem

    Great story of 2 World Wars with Irene Dunne is still not dated.

    It is almost Christmas 2002, a difficult year for Americans and a perfect time for World War II nostalgia. I was 16 years old when this moviecame out, I am 76 now and "Cliffs" is as fresh today as it was then. The songs, English and American are marvelous, and Irene Dunne shines. Supporting cast is typical of the wonderful character actors of the time plus Elizabeth Taylor. We are moved by an American woman (Dunne) who loses a husband in World War I and a son in World War II. Frank Morgan, who is always Frank Morgan even in the "Wizard of Oz" is marvelous as Dunne's Father. Dame Mae Whittey, Gladys Cooper, Allain Marshall, C. Aubrey Smith as the very British Colonel -- everyone adds to the beauty of this movie, and we must not forget that Irene Dunne is the narrator of the famous poem of World War II, "The White Cliffs of Dover" which is still available in bookstores. I would put this movie in well-done Black and White, right up there with "Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo" (Van Johnson has a bit part in "Cliffs"), "Mrs. Miniver" with Greer Garson, and the magnificent World War 2 Series, "War and Remembrance" and "Winds of War". I am amazed that "black and white" is still effective. I hope this movie is presented as often as "It's a Wonderful Life" every year in the future.
    8HotToastyRag

    What a tearjerker!

    There's a lot to appreciate about The White Cliffs of Dover, but it's such a tragic story I can't imagine anyone wanting to watch it more than once. Irene Dunne takes the helm and turns her weepy eyes against the audience, reducing them to rubble by the end of the movie. This movie spans both World Wars, and shows the devastation that can befall one woman who has lived through both. She starts off as a fresh, young American going on vacation to England with her father, Frank Morgan, and she winds up a heartbroken, tired nurse who has seen too much sorrow.

    Along the way there are some great scenes and clever dialogue, especially when you consider that the entire movie was based on the titular poem-and that the poem really has nothing to do with the plot. Irene gets invited to a ball during her vacation by C. Aubrey Smith, who quickly guesses she'll be a great match for Alan Marshall. He sets them up, and they fall in love. Irene never returns from her vacation, but at least Frank visits often. He and C. Aubrey have some very funny scenes together.

    As WWI starts, Alan joins the army. When he's killed, Irene performs a touching, tragic scene as she holds her newborn son and defies the war. She vows no war will ever take her son away and kill him, as her mother-in-law Gladys Cooper and the baby's nurse Dame May Whitty tearfully look on. In another wonderful scene, the Americans march the streets of London, and Irene holds her son up to see the troops. She weeps tears of joy knowing the war will soon be over; for the Americans in the audience, it's very moving and patriotic.

    There's a lot more to this movie, and if you're brave enough to sit through it with a box of Kleenex, you'll get to see Roddy McDowall and Elizabeth Taylor, as well as Peter Lawford, June Lockhart, Miles Mander, and Van Johnson. You'll also get to hear beautiful music by Herbert Stothart. If you're an Irene Dunne fan, you're probably used to seeing her in very sad movies; you've got to watch one of her greatest performances in The White Cliffs of Dover.
    9nyescape

    White Cliffs of Dover

    This was an incredible War movie which spanned WWI and WWII. It was a romance/drama. Irene Dunne is the female lead who falls in love with and marries a man who soon goes off to fight in France during World War I. He dies and she had his child, a boy.

    The boy grows to manhood and is played by Peter Lawford. As the movie ends, Dunne is seeing her son, Lawford go off to fight in WWII. You can see the pain and the pride in Dunne's eyes.

    It was a fabulous movie. It dramatizes the great sacrifices made by the British in both World Wars. Britain lost so many of her sons in WWI, I believe the stats were approximately 50% of men between the ages of 18 and 45. The movies points up the fact that the loses, pain and suffering of the English were about to be revisited in WWII.

    I can appreciate this and other war movies as I am the mother of a Marine who is about to be sent to Iraq.
    Poseidon-3

    Another fine showcase for marvelous Irene Dunne

    One of the great crimes of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is that Dunne was never given an Oscar....not even an honorary one! Most of her performances transcend time and come off as fresh and natural today as when they were first delivered. She just must have made it look too easy. The woman could do everything! At any rate, this film features another strong performance from her. She plays a young American girl who comes to England with her father (the irascible Morgan) and is soon swept off her feet by dashing and wealthy Marshall. Before they can enjoy any sort of life together, he is called to serve in WWI and they are separated. This is only part of the story as her life unfolds through the next decades and she struggles with letting her son (McDowall, then Lawford) serve in WWII. The film is obviously patriotic and propaganda filled, but understandably so as WWII was still being waged! Dunne is luminescent in the role and is surrounded by a strong array of familiar supporting actors. Notable are Cooper (endlessly watchable in anything!) and Witty (wonderfully crotchety, yet sentimental.) It is a touch jarring to see Taylor grow into Lockhart (young Taylor barely says anything, but "Yes, Sir John".) Lawford is at his most youthful and appealing. The film has a lot of sentiment and melodrama, but also a lot of heart and a little humor. It winds up being quite touching at times and displays a time long gone, but a patriotism that can still be resurrected when events call for it.
    9jzappa

    An Unhurried Masterpiece of Tranquility

    Irene Dunne is all in all herself, tender, transformative and powerful as an American girl who travels to England and falls in love with an English member of the aristocracy. Beautiful Irene marries the Englishman but their honeymoon is cut short on its first day as World War I breaks out. Director Clarence Brown's leisurely mood effect causes us to feel as disrupted as they do. Perhaps it is the soothing joy derived from the old-style black-and-white 35mm Spherical look, a classicism in George J. Folsey's cozy cinematography, that creates such a peaceful atmosphere. Believe me: This feeling is augmented by seeing it on a VHS tape, almost as though you are watching a timeworn relic. When the film quietly, serenely begins, Irene reflects upon her feelings relating to her life in England, a life she never expected to lead from event to event beginning with her purely dabbling arrival. The moving musical score fits like a velvet glove over the sustained close shot of her gorgeous face and the iceberg-thawing sound of her voice.

    The backbiting between Irene and her English counterparts early in the film is funny, posing one of the movie's unanxious emotional successes which as well include strong romantic and maternal joys and longings, WWI, brief bursts of rage, mourning, WWII, and the like. A scene in the movie circa the early 1930s sends a chill down the spine, illustrating two polite adolescent German boys, part of an exchange program, staying at the English family's countryside manor. Intimating they were part of early Nazi invasion plans, the boys let it slip in a conversation's startling turn for the less comfortable that they are pondering how the estate's large green would be perfect on which for troop gliders to land.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance
    Frères d'armes (2001)
    War

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Irene Dunne reads a telegram from her Anglophobe father to a group of English people. Her father begs her not to marry an Englishman she is in love with and tells her "You're a Yankee through and through! Think of Paul Revere! Think of the Old North steeple! Remember the Alabama!" The viewer may become confused at this point. "Remember the Alabama"? Shouldn't it be "Remember the Alamo"? However, since the context of the telegram is anti-British any mention of the Alamo would be irrelevant. What Irene Dunne's father is apparently taking about is the C.S.S. Alabama, one of several Confederate warships that were built in British shipyards over United States protest during the Civil War. These ships attacked U.S. shipping in the Atlantic Ocean. Since Irene Dunne arrives in England in April of 1914 and married just before August 4, 1914 when Great Britain declared war on Germany, the telegram was probably sent close to the 50th anniversary of the sinking of the Alabama by the U.S.S. Kearsarge on June 19, 1864 in the English Channel. The United States sued Great Britain in 1869 over the building of the Confederate warships and was awarded $15.5 million.
    • Goofs
      A gift with a plaque dedicated to First Lady, Dolley Madison, misspells her name "Dolly Madison."
    • Quotes

      Susan Dunn's landlady: [Of Susan]

      Susan Dunn's landlady: Such a nice young thing! Not a bit like an American.

    • Alternate versions
      Elizabeth Taylor's scenes are often deleted in older TV prints.
    • Connections
      Featured in Twenty Years After (1944)
    • Soundtracks
      Auld Lang Syne
      (1788) (uncredited)

      Traditional Scottish 17th century music

      Lyrics by Robert Burns

      Played during the opening credits and often in the score

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 7, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Evocación
    • Filming locations
      • Clarence Brown Ranch - Las Virgenes Road, Calabasas, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 6m(126 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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