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IMDbPro

L'affaire Macomber

Original title: The Macomber Affair
  • 1947
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 29m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
967
YOUR RATING
Gregory Peck and Joan Bennett in L'affaire Macomber (1947)
AdventureDrama

In British East Africa, a fatal triangle develops involving a frustrated wife, a weak and cowardly husband, and an English big-game hunter who comes between the couple.In British East Africa, a fatal triangle develops involving a frustrated wife, a weak and cowardly husband, and an English big-game hunter who comes between the couple.In British East Africa, a fatal triangle develops involving a frustrated wife, a weak and cowardly husband, and an English big-game hunter who comes between the couple.

  • Director
    • Zoltan Korda
  • Writers
    • Ernest Hemingway
    • Seymour Bennett
    • Frank Arnold
  • Stars
    • Gregory Peck
    • Joan Bennett
    • Robert Preston
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    967
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Zoltan Korda
    • Writers
      • Ernest Hemingway
      • Seymour Bennett
      • Frank Arnold
    • Stars
      • Gregory Peck
      • Joan Bennett
      • Robert Preston
    • 23User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos23

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    Top cast12

    Edit
    Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck
    • Robert Wilson
    Joan Bennett
    Joan Bennett
    • Margaret 'Margo' Macomber
    Robert Preston
    Robert Preston
    • Francis Macomber
    Reginald Denny
    Reginald Denny
    • Police Inspector
    Jean Gillie
    Jean Gillie
    • Aimee
    Carl Harbord
    • Coroner
    Earl Smith
    • Kongoni
    Frederick Worlock
    Frederick Worlock
    • Clerk
    Vernon Downing
    • Reporter Logan
    Darby Jones
    Darby Jones
    • Masai Warrior
    • (uncredited)
    Hassan Said
    • Abdullah
    • (uncredited)
    Martin Wilkins
    • Bartender
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Zoltan Korda
    • Writers
      • Ernest Hemingway
      • Seymour Bennett
      • Frank Arnold
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.6967
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    Featured reviews

    8bkoganbing

    Safari Is A Man's Game

    According to the Michael Freedland biography of Gregory Peck, The Macomber Affair was the second of two films he owed Casey Robinson the screenwriter who occasionally produced and directed. The first was Peck's debut film Days Of Glory and for the second since Robinson did not know what he wanted to use Peck for, he let Greg pick the property. As he had just got around to reading the story which had been published a decade earlier in Cosmopolitan Magazine, Peck chose the Ernest Hemingway short story, The Short Unhappy Life Of Francis Macomber, the title shortened to The Macomber Affair for marquee purposes.

    Producing this film with Robinson was Benedict Bogeaus who usually did B films with real limited production. A second unit crew did go to Africa and got some real nice black and white jungle footage, but the cast did this one strictly on the back lot. I have to give Bogeaus and Robinson good marks for editing the film shot with the cast in with the background.

    In fact this film is a notch or so above Gregory Peck's second film with a Hemingway subject, The Snows Of Kilimanjaro which was shot in Africa. This one is no frills Hemingway with the exception of a changed and cop out ending to please the Code.

    Gregory Peck plays the white hunter who escorts Mr.&Mrs. Francis Macomber on a safari where they are trying to recapture the magic that has gone from their relationship. Peck warns them up front that women and safaris don't mix and what follows seems to confirm his point of view.

    The Macombers are played by Robert Preston and Joan Bennett and they have the much showier parts than Peck does and they make the most of it. Especially Bennett who essays one of the great bitch roles of all time, successfully poaching on a part that Bette Davis or Barbara Stanwyck would have gone to town with. How that woman just demeans Preston especially after he shows some understandable fear as a newbie in the jungle during a hunt for a wounded lion is really just sad.

    Under Peck's tutelage who is the ultimate machismo Hemingway hero, Preston starts losing his inhibitions which Bennett cannot stand. The result is tragedy.

    Hemingway's timeless writing and subject matter hold up well for today's viewer. We get a realistic portrayal of Africa that you normally don't see from American studios. The Macomber Affair is a film that fans of all the principal players and Papa Hemingway will appreciate centuries from now.
    9telegonus

    White Hunter, Black Hearts

    This Zoltan Korda adaptation of Hemingway's bitter tale of big game hunting and marital infidelity is the best movie adaptation of this author's work I have ever seen. Only Gregory Peck seems miscast in what is basically a Trevor Howard part, but this doesn't bring the movie down, it merely limits it. As the superficially charming, boyish, gregarious and basically not very nice Macomber, Robert Preston is brilliant, and he gives a daring, emotionally open performance. Joan Bennett is good as his wife, better than Peck but not perfect casting, either. What makes the movie work is its nasty story, and Casey Robinson's excellent and correct interpretation of it. The Hemingway mood, macho and misogynist, and misanthropic more than anything else, is caught to such perfection one might almost suspect that he was technical adviser (he wasn't). British East Africa is given the Tarzan treatment on screen, typical of the forties but for some difficult to take now. I find that it works, as Tarzan and Hemingway weren't a million miles apart in temperament and values, though I imagine that Tarzan was nicer fellow to get along with.
    5rose_lily

    A Hemingway primer on what it is to be a "man"

    Based on a Hemingway short story. And Hemingway knew how to craft stories that epitomized realms of male supremacy. His world was one of combat, African safaris, bull rings… all the places where "real men" constantly had to prove masculine courage. Women were an accessory… the old "Can't live with them, Can't live without them" philosophy.

    In this movie, all that comes across in spades. Robert Preston is Francis Mocamber, led around by the nose on a chain by his wife Margaret, played by Joan Bennett. They hire great white hunter Robert Wilson, portrayed by Gregory Peck, to guide them on safari. In the Mocamber marriage it's the wife who wears both the pants and the skirt. The trip is no picnic in the jungle but a miserable, forced emotional trek where the two men just get worn out by Margaret's constant authoritarianism and general bitchiness. Tragedy ensues…who woulda guessed it?!

    Not much more to be said. If you subscribe to the Hemingway universe, this movie is for you.
    8jjnxn-1

    The performers make this

    Taking into account the shortcomings of the period: rear projection and non location filming this is a solid adventure film. Really a three person chamber piece the success or failure of the film rests on the performances of its leads and there it's on solid ground. Both Peck and Preston do good work but the standout is the under-appreciated Joan Bennett. Always at her best as a conflicted character here as a woman turned into a hard article by a bad marriage though subtle gestures and sly looks she gives the film a tough grounded center and she has rarely looked so beautiful. Not having read the book I'm not sure how closely it follows but the film does have a Hemingway feel.
    6blanche-2

    miscast

    From 1947, "The Macomber Affair" is based on a Hemingway short story about a safari. I watched it knowing full well I didn't want to see animals hunted down, so I admit a certain prejudice.

    Joan Bennett and Robert Preston are Margaret and Francis Macomber, an unhappy husband and wife who go on a safari guided by hunter Robert Wilson, played by Gregory Peck. Margaret is openly derisive of her husband, whom she considers somewhat of a coward, and he apparently is on this safari to prove his masculinity. It isn't very successful at first, as Francis runs like a rabbit when he's charged by a lion. I don't know who wouldn't, frankly.

    Margaret is attracted to Wilson -- again, who wouldn't be, it's Gregory Peck -- and he falls for her. I don't know why because she's a very unpleasant woman. When a tragedy occurs, Wilson has to decide what really happened - was it an accident or deliberate? This film is somewhat miscast, as it required a Peter Finch or Trevor Howard in the Peck role. Peck doesn't come off as much of a big game hunter. Joan Bennett's character is a little too harsh, which I blame on the director, Zoltan Korda. There doesn't seem to be any reason for his attraction to her; she comes off as emasculating.

    The film has an ambiguous ending. I didn't care how it ended, which is a major problem -- you should be invested in the characters.

    This is an old-fashioned macho Hemingway story that received better treatment than most of his work. Still -- Hemingway is very difficult to film due to his spare language and all that subtext.

    If you like seeing animals shot and killed (though I realize they really weren't) so someone can prove his masculinity, this is the movie for you.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      For the African scenes, Reginald Denny invented the first radio-controlled model airplane and, with Osmond Borradaile, put a camera on board in 1946.
    • Goofs
      When Margaret and Robert start out on their safari driving across the country, in close shots they are shown looking out the right side of their truck at wildlife, but the shots of the animals they are presumably viewing are taken out the left side of a moving vehicle.
    • Connections
      Featured in O ziliarogatos (1956)

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    FAQ13

    • How long is The Macomber Affair?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 17, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Macomber Affair
    • Filming locations
      • Tecate, Baja California Norte, Mexico(doubling for the African Veldt)
    • Production company
      • Benedict Bogeaus Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 29m(89 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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