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Mon loufoque de mari

Original title: Her Husband's Affairs
  • 1947
  • Approved
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
526
YOUR RATING
Lucille Ball and Franchot Tone in Mon loufoque de mari (1947)
ComedySci-Fi

A scientist invents a formula that removes old, thinning hair and replaces it with thick new hair. Complications ensue.A scientist invents a formula that removes old, thinning hair and replaces it with thick new hair. Complications ensue.A scientist invents a formula that removes old, thinning hair and replaces it with thick new hair. Complications ensue.

  • Director
    • S. Sylvan Simon
  • Writers
    • Ben Hecht
    • Charles Lederer
  • Stars
    • Lucille Ball
    • Franchot Tone
    • Edward Everett Horton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    526
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • S. Sylvan Simon
    • Writers
      • Ben Hecht
      • Charles Lederer
    • Stars
      • Lucille Ball
      • Franchot Tone
      • Edward Everett Horton
    • 10User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos13

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    Top cast64

    Edit
    Lucille Ball
    Lucille Ball
    • Margaret Weldon
    Franchot Tone
    Franchot Tone
    • William Weldon
    Edward Everett Horton
    Edward Everett Horton
    • J.B. Cruikshank
    Mikhail Rasumny
    Mikhail Rasumny
    • Prof. Emil Glinka
    Gene Lockhart
    Gene Lockhart
    • Peter Winterbottom
    Nana Bryant
    Nana Bryant
    • Mrs. Winterbottom
    Jonathan Hale
    Jonathan Hale
    • Gov. Fox
    Paul Stanton
    Paul Stanton
    • Dr. Frazee
    Mabel Paige
    Mabel Paige
    • Mrs. Josper
    Frank Mayo
    Frank Mayo
    • Vice President Starrett
    Pierre Watkin
    Pierre Watkin
    • Vice President Beitler
    Charles Bates
    Charles Bates
    • Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Brooks Benedict
    Brooks Benedict
    • Man at Bill's Defense Table
    • (uncredited)
    Stephen Bennett
    • Vice President
    • (uncredited)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • Ike
    • (uncredited)
    Buz Buckley
    • Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Wanda Cantlon
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    John Cason
    John Cason
    • Heckler
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • S. Sylvan Simon
    • Writers
      • Ben Hecht
      • Charles Lederer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.0526
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    Featured reviews

    4SnoopyStyle

    bad Bill

    Margaret (Lucille Ball) and William Weldon (Franchot Tone) are newlyweds. Ad man Bill is selling a light weight hat. She saves his bacon and he's not that happy about it. He backs a scientist creating a hair remover but accidentally discovers a hair-growing formula. It only gets crazier.

    The businessmen getting scared about growing beards is the most unrealistic premise in the movie. These men should be overjoyed. They are about to become incredibly rich. Didn't people do crazy things to grow hair back in the day? I guess that it's saving the idea for Margaret but it's not smart writing. Bill comes off as a complete idiot. I have no idea what hair growing would mean back in 1947 but I can't see how anybody wouldn't get it. The movie is going fine until it hits this roadblock. The other problem is that Bill or this marriage is not worth rooting for. He goes too far. I actually like the invention getting crazier and crazier. I just want Bill to be nicer to Margaret.
    7ksf-2

    Lucy a couple years prior to her show

    Lucy had a bit part in Franchot Tone's "Moulin Rouge" ten years prior to this film, but this time she gets the female starring role up against Tone. Right from the beginning of "Her Husband's Affairs", we see that William Weldon (Tone) gets himself into jams, and wife Margaret (Lucy) has to get him out of them every time. William's boss JB, is the awesome Edward E. Horton, made up to look quite old and bald. (Viewers will recognize Horton's high, whining, voice from Fractured Fairy Tales and all those Fred Astaire films.) Our story seems to be an early version of the TV show "Bewitched", where hubby is an advertising man, and relies on the wife's quick thinking to save him. When one of the products they are involved with causes a major crisis, they must figure out a solution quickly before the newspapers get there to take pictures. Lucy had been getting starring roles for a few years now, and she does just fine in this lightweight one. The second half of the picture takes place in a courtroom, and feels like an episode of I Love Lucy (Oh Fred!)...Gene Lockhart is here as Mr. Winterbottom. Also look for a 13 year old Dwayne Hickman (played in his own show "Dobie Gillis") in the laboratory scene. Directed by Sylvan Simon, who died at age 41, just a couple years after this project. No big surprises here, but we get a fun, early look at Lucy being Lucy just a couple years before her TV show.
    6mark.waltz

    Lucy tries to help her husband get ahead---and it ain't Ricky Ricardo!

    Four years before "I Love Lucy", Lucille Ball had not yet found her niche as a movie star. Films had mostly typecast her as a hard boiled dame, and while she was called "Queen of the B's", she was not yet a household name. In this film, her first chance to show her talent as a comedienne, Lucy plays the wife of advertising exec Franchot Tone (real-life ex-husband of Joan Crawford). Lucy inspires her husband at every turn, eventually getting him attention as the man who advertised the most comfortable hat in the world. (So comfortable, in fact, a mayor was booed for wearing a hat during the Star Spangled Banner at a ballgame when he had no idea he was wearing one...) A wacky scientist convinces him to advertise a shaving and hair tonic which ends up causing more than its share of chaos.

    While Lucy had done comedy before on-screen ("Go Chase Yourself" and "A Girl, A Guy, and a Gob" were typical RKO comedys of the late 30's and early 40's), she never had a chance to really be anything more than a hard-boiled wisecracker. These movies make her less likable than the equally wisecracking Eve Arden and did not portray her in a positive or feminine light. When both Eve and Lucy went onto do radio shows, their future as the first queens of primetime TV comedy were set in stone. (Check out Lucy and Eve in the drama with wisecracks, "Stage Door", and the entertaining comedy "Having Wonderful Time", both starring the more glamorous wisecracker, Ginger Rogers).

    "Her Husband's Affairs" is a fast moving, but formula comedy, filled with some hysterical comic bits, but not as well done as her best pre-TV comedy, "The Fuller Brush Girl". Both films involve comic sequences involving hair. While "The Fuller Brush Girl" is hysterical throughout, there are only fleeting moments of hysterical laughter in this film (most memorably the scene where the defects of the shaving lotion is revealed). This film was made during her declining days at MGM at the then not yet major Columbia studios where Jean Arthur reigned as comedy queen and probably turned this film down before departing a few years before it was released. Shabbily treated by L.B. Mayer after some colorful "A" musicals, Lucy ended up on the bottom of the bill in secondary features such as this. The film features such great character actors as Grant Mitchell and Edward Everett Horton (here quite bald). Featured in a cameo is Columbia's biggest star Larry Parks as himself. "Her Husband's Wife" is sure to entertain as an example of what Lucy was really good at. If only the script was a little better.
    HarlowMGM

    When The" Little Lady" is The Brains of The House

    This somewhat black comedy is from the pen of Ben Hecht and may remind you a bit of his classic NOTHING SACRED although it's more in the tone of the Hepburn & Tracy films. Lucille Ball stars as a newlywed, newly retired from a successful career writing ad copy but now "just married" to her former co-worker Franchot Tone. Trouble is Tone was never quite the "ad man" his wife was and is hell bent to prove his worth to the company. When an eccentric scientist friend of his invents a new embalming fluid (to turn corpses into permanent glass statues!) he mentions as a side note, it can also be used for an "instant shave" on facial hair. Tone sees this use as his ticket to success and fortune and promotes it in a big time product premiere inviting dignities and the famous (including actor Larry Parks in a cameo as himself) to try the product. They all rave about it but the trouble is that it GROWS hair thicker and worse than before within 24 hours. The day after is a major fiasco for the corporation but it's Lucy to the rescue as she cleverly points out this "new" turn is perhaps an even bigger market - selling it to men bald or with thinning hair - and a new campaign starts much to her husband's irritation. (This particular plot twist the viewer can see miles away given supporting actor Edward Everett Horton is fitted with a very phony looking skull cap to play bald for the first several reels. You can see the edges lines of it on the small screen, can't imagine how obvious it was on the big screen). Determined to be back in the driver's seat, Franchot plots more behind the scene maneuvers which ends up having him on trial for the presumed murder of the professor.

    The comedy is hit and miss but Lucy is always excellent and she looks a vision in some very attractive fashions. Tone is over the top at times but does well, the trouble is the brazen sexism of his character is more than a little unpleasant to latter-day viewers and likely to more than a few 1940's ones as well. There's also delicious irony with the movie's theme that Lucy is far more talented than he as "ad man" as the movie starts off with Tone twiddling with lots of unfunny shtick as he plots out his newest ad copy while that goes on for several minutes but Lucy merely raises her eyebrow in sleepy exhaustion as is far funnier showing - to no surprise of course - she's also his superior as a comic and an actor. Among the supporting cast Columbia character contractee Nana Bryant stands out as a socialite who can't help but take a discreet dip in the miracle product during it's premiere to rid herself of a touch of facial hair and lives to regret it.
    5Doylenf

    Lucy stars as scatterbrained wife with some bright ideas...

    There's a lot of the Lucy Ricardo personality in the wife LUCILLE BALL plays in HER HUSBAND'S AFFAIRS--only here the husband who gets exasperated with her brainstorms is FRANCHOT TONE. It starts out with an amusing idea about a scientist MIKHAIL RAHSUMNY whose embalming lotion can be used to remove beards without shaving. It does so very efficiently until several hours have passed--and then it grows abundant amounts of hair.

    FRANCHOT TONE is an advertising man who thinks he's going to have some successful products to launch with the help of the mad scientist, except that most of the plans go haywire thanks to the manipulations of his scatterbrained wife. The plot fizzles out after the first half-hour or so and after that it just gets sillier until the courtroom ending when things finally get straightened out in time for a happy ending.

    Summing up: Below average vehicle for Lucy five years before she made her big splash on TV as an even more troublesome wife in America's most beloved situation comedy I LOVE LUCY. Some laughs but the jokes wear thin long before the conclusion.

    Trivia note: LARRY PARKS has a bit part as himself in a scene where various big shots gather to try the new product.

    Related interests

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    Comedy
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in L'Empire contre-attaque (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Rare occurrence of showing a couple in what seems to be separate beds but pushed together. They are even shown in bed cuddling, very rare for the times.
    • Goofs
      Shadow of boom mic visible as the mayor unknowingly wears a hat during the ball game.
    • Quotes

      Margaret Weldon: Oh, darling. I'm sorry if I've done wrong. I apologize. I admit I lost my head. I'm an idiot. You could put my brains in a thimble and have enough room to cook an egg in it. But I... I love you.

    • Soundtracks
      Marines' Hymn [From the Halls of Montezuma]
      (uncredited)

      Lyrics by Unknown

      Music by Jacques Offenbach

      Whistled by Douglas D. Coppin

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 1, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "benswife13" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "SpitzPrincipal4" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Her Husband's Affairs
    • Production company
      • Cornell Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 24m(84 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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