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La coqueluche de Paris

Original title: The Rage of Paris
  • 1938
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Mischa Auer, Danielle Darrieux, and Louis Hayward in La coqueluche de Paris (1938)
Comedy

Nicole has no job and is several weeks behind with her rent. Her solution is to try to snare a rich husband, and she enlists the help of her friend Gloria and the maitre d' to catch the eye ... Read allNicole has no job and is several weeks behind with her rent. Her solution is to try to snare a rich husband, and she enlists the help of her friend Gloria and the maitre d' to catch the eye of Bill Duncan.Nicole has no job and is several weeks behind with her rent. Her solution is to try to snare a rich husband, and she enlists the help of her friend Gloria and the maitre d' to catch the eye of Bill Duncan.

  • Director
    • Henry Koster
  • Writers
    • Bruce Manning
    • Felix Jackson
  • Stars
    • Danielle Darrieux
    • Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
    • Mischa Auer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henry Koster
    • Writers
      • Bruce Manning
      • Felix Jackson
    • Stars
      • Danielle Darrieux
      • Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
      • Mischa Auer
    • 22User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos13

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    Top cast59

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    Danielle Darrieux
    Danielle Darrieux
    • Nicole de Cortillion
    Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
    Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
    • Jim Trevor
    Mischa Auer
    Mischa Auer
    • Mike - The Head Waiter
    Louis Hayward
    Louis Hayward
    • Bill Duncan
    Helen Broderick
    Helen Broderick
    • Gloria Patterson
    Charles Coleman
    Charles Coleman
    • Rigley
    Samuel S. Hinds
    Samuel S. Hinds
    • Mr. William Duncan Sr.
    Nella Walker
    Nella Walker
    • Mrs. Duncan
    Harry Davenport
    Harry Davenport
    • Pop - The Caretaker
    Edwin August
    Edwin August
    • Receptionist
    • (uncredited)
    Edward Biby
    Edward Biby
    • Relative at Wedding
    • (uncredited)
    Wade Boteler
    Wade Boteler
    • Mr. Wright - Manager Of Modeling Agency
    • (uncredited)
    Sidney Bracey
    Sidney Bracey
    • Opera House Usher
    • (uncredited)
    Ralph Brooks
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (uncredited)
    James Carlisle
    • Man at Dock
    • (uncredited)
    Oliver Cross
    • Opera Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    Carl Deloro
    • Chef at Wedding
    • (uncredited)
    Edward Earle
    Edward Earle
    • Chief of Waiters
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Henry Koster
    • Writers
      • Bruce Manning
      • Felix Jackson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.91K
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    Featured reviews

    7bkoganbing

    Danielle Gets Her Man

    French film star Danielle Darrieux made her American debut in The Rage in Paris. She plays a fortune seeking gal who's set her cap for Louis Hayward, but has Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. running interference for his good friend.

    She got good notices for The Rage in Paris and deservedly so. She made the decision however to go back to her own country and got to spend four years with some uninvited guests. Who knows what direction her career would have taken had she stayed here.

    Anyway, Danielle is pretty but broke, desperate for a job she grabs a ticket from an employment office for what she thinks is a modeling job and gets to Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.'s office and proceeds to take her clothes off. She beats a hasty retreat however when she realizes the big boo-boo she made with Fairbanks, somewhat amused.

    Later on gal pal Helen Broderick and her friend head waiter Mischa Auer set her up with a suite at a really swanky hotel to trap millionaire Louis Hayward. It works, but he's a friend of Fairbanks as well.

    I think you can see the complications and if you're a fan of Thirties screwball comedy you know how this one will turn out.

    Darrieux is fresh and appealing and who would't want to Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Louis Hayward chasing you albeit for different reasons. Broderick carries on with the gal pal's best friend part that later on Eve Arden would perfect.

    The film itself was photographed though in that sometimes annoying sepia tint process. Sometimes that serves in good stead, the best example is Errol Flynn's The Sea Hawk when Flynn and his pirate crew are in the Panamanian jungle. In The Rage of Paris it starts out in sepia than switches to regular black and white and then back to sepia for no discernible reason.

    Still though I think that even today's viewers will find the elegant world that Fairbanks and Hayward move in still quite appealing.
    6wes-connors

    Danielle Darrieux Loses Her Shirt in America

    After becoming an international sensation in "Mayerling" (1936), pretty French Danielle Darrieux (as Nicole de Cortillion) arrives in America. Mistaken for a nude model, Ms. Darrieux gets caught in the middle of undress by debonair Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (as Jim Trevor), who gets to utter the amusing line "I'm all ears" (while looking his Gable best). How director Henry Koster gets Mr. Fairbanks to keep his eyes glued upon Darrieux' face after she takes her shirt off is good acting.

    When Darrieux is about to be evicted from her room, she "adopted" as a "niece" by matronly Helen Broderick (as Gloria Patterson). "The only job for a woman is marriage," Ms. Broderick tells Darrieux, "There's nothing wrong with you that a nice rich husband couldn't cure." Broderick conspires to marry Darrieux and millionaire Louis Hayward (as Bill Duncan), with the help of busboy turned head waiter Mischa Auger (as Mike). But, Fairbanks has other plans for the French beauty.

    ****** The Rage of Paris (6/9/38) Henry Koster ~ Danielle Darrieux, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Helen Broderick, Louis Hayward
    EightyProof45

    The Ultimate Screwball Comedy

    Although it is rarely cited by critics, The Rage of Paris is one of the breeziest and most charming of all of Hollywood's screwball comedies. It stars the lovely French superstar Danielle Darrieux in her greatest American role and second-generation Hollywood legend Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Screwball films are famous for their attempts to push the censors to the limit. And The Rage of Paris does this amazingly. This type of comedy came about as a result of the Production Code, and the screenwriters and directors tried to go as far towards risqué as possible in them.

    This picture begins with a young wanna-be model, Nicole (Darrieux). She is given an assignment to pose for a photographer, but she objects to the clothing (actually the lack of clothing) she is being asked to pose with. So the boss asks another model to come into his office to offer her the job. Nicole overhears the salary the model is going to get, and she changes her mind. While the boss and the new model discuss the job, Nicole sneaks over to the boss' desk and grabs what she thinks is the address of the photographer. But, she grabs the wrong address. Instead, she winds up at the office of Mr. Trevor (Fairbanks). Told by his secretary to "make herself comfortable" until Mr. Trevor arrives, she misconstrues and is in the process of undressing when he enters. It is perhaps the finest "meet-cute" in film history. When she finally realizes she got the wrong address, she leaves the office and returns to her dump-of-a boarding house, where her best friend Gloria lives.

    Both desperate for money, Gloria and Nicole enlist the help of a head-waiter, Mike, to help them out. He has been saving some money to open his own restaurant, and he has $3,000 in the bank. Gloria proposes a scheme: use that money to buy Nicole some nice clothes, put her up in the hotel, and try to set her up with a rich husband; then, if they succeed, they will return his $3,000 and throw in the extra $2,000 he needs to open his restaurant. Reluctantly, Mike goes along with it.

    The man they decide to "catch" with their beautiful bait is Bill Duncan, who "has ten million dollars and owns half of Canada." In a hilarious meeting, Nicole "accidentally" mistakes Bill for her old next-door neighbor. She runs up to him, kisses him, and talks excitedly in French. He tells her she is mistaken, and, embarrassed, she drops a glove and runs back to her room. Bill picks up the glove and begins to follow Nicole...the scheme has worked, and the next thing they know, Bill takes Nicole to the opera. It looks as though everything is going according to plan.

    At the opera, Bill sees his best friend whom he hasn't met in a long time. He brings him back to his box, anxious to introduce him to his French aristocratic girlfriend. But it just so happens that his best friend is James Trevor, the same man Nicole was accidentally stripping for three weeks earlier. Instead of revealing her secret to his friend, James decides to see how the situation plays out.

    Eventually, he tries to tell Bill about Nicole, but Bill believes James is lying and only wants the beauty for himself. In haste, Bill agrees to marry the girl. At their engagement-announcement dinner, however, James 'kidnaps' her. He takes her to his secluded country home, and the two fall in love.

    She hitch-hikes back to the city, where Bill has found out the truth about her. And since he will no longer marry her, the door is open for James!

    The story is typical of the times. Once Nicole is disrobed in front of Mr. Trevor, the audience knows they will fall in love. It's inevitable. But it is also so much fun watching it happen!

    Furthermore, the entire cast is sensational. In fact, it is one of the most perfectly cast films of all time. Towering above all is the delectable Danielle Darrieux! She is absolutely ideal, using her continental French personality to drive men mad. The way she dictates to Gloria what she wants to eat for breakfast is lovely. It is such a simple moment, yet the actress manages to turn it into one of the most memorable parts of the film. Still, the highlight is her pouty foibles at the home of James Trevor. Her facial expressions when she sees the two-sided photograph and her experience with the troublesome window are totally captivating.

    Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. is the quintessential debonair leading man. His performance here is one of his finest. His concern for his friend, as well as his slow albeit sure fall into Nicole's charms, make the character quite memorable. As Gloria, Helen Broderick is the cynical sidekick par excellence. And Mischa Auer suits the role of the headwaiter, Mike, so well, that it's hard to imagine another actor doing the part. Louis Hayward, playing Bill Trevor, gives one of the film's finest performances. And Harry Davenport has a part in the funniest portion of the movie, as the eccentric caretaker of James' country house.

    The sets are art deco dreams, particularly the hotel rooms and the hotel room doors. Darrieux's magnificent wardrobe accents the star's unbelievable figure, too. Quite honestly, Danielle Darrieux might be the most beautiful woman who has ever lived, and this film, made when she was a young and glorious twenty years old, captures her joie de vivre for all time. The direction is swift and deft, but it's the script that really provides the basis for the film's charm. The writing and scenario are both perfect, and at about 78 minutes, the film is fast and fun.

    Go to the ends of the earth to find this film. Buy it, watch it over and over again, and pass it on to everyone you know. It is the one film that will turn just about anybody on to classic films, and it ranks up top with Bringing Up Baby, The Awful Truth, It Happened One Night, and The Lady Eve as one of the five greatest screwball comedies of all time.
    8SimonJack

    Very likable comedy with French star

    The title of this film, "The Rage of Paris," may seem to most viewers at first not to fit the plot. But with a premise that pops up occasionally in the movie, it soon dawns on one (this viewer, finally) that it refers to a theme of the film that a woman's drive in gay Paris should be to snag herself a wealthy husband. OK! So, that out of the way, we have here a very enjoyable comedy with some good early film stars. The plot is fun, the acting is very good, and the direction and sets are good.

    Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Louis Hayward are very good in their respective roles as Jim Trevor and Bill Duncan. Most moviegoers know about Fairbanks, but few people today probably remember the name Louis Hayward. He did have a short leading period in Hollywood and later moved to television, but his star never rose very high. Hayward was born in South Africa and educated in England. He came to the U. S. in 1935 for a Broadway play, and soon moved to Hollywood.

    This is also one of the few American-produced films that stars Danielle Darrieux. This demure and versatile star of stage and screen was the leading actress in France for much of the eight decades during which she acted. Darrieux flew to Hollywood to make "The Rage of Paris" in 1938, and returned to France after it was released. She stayed there during the war and made three films through 1942, but nothing after the Nazi occupation. All were comedies. She resumed work in 1946, and has played starring roles in drama, suspense-thrillers, romance and comedies.

    She appeared is some other notable English films - made in Great Britain or on the continent, so Americans and others may have seen her in some of these. "Five Fingers" was a great 20th Century Fox espionage thriller filmed around Europe. In 2002, at age 85, she won honors for her role in "8 Women," a musical comedy produced in French and English. Darrieux continued acting until 2010, at age 93.

    One aspect of this film that stands out and is most enjoyable is the acting of the support cast. Mischa Auer played Mike, the head waiter. He was a Russian-born actor who had a distinguished film career, mostly in Europe, but with some films in the U. S. His English was quite good, and his accent was a natural for the many different supporting and leading roles he played as a man of various nationalities. He did mostly comedy films, but was equally good in serious roles.

    Helen Broderick played Gloria Patterson. This long-time comedienne acted with some top stars over the years. She was best as the wisecracking sidekick of the lead female star - as in this film. Broderick was married to another vaudeville and stage performer, Lester Crawford. They were the parents of Oscar-winning actor Broderick Crawford (her last name and her husband's last name), who was born in 1911.

    Here are the best comedy lines from this film.

    Nicole de Cortillion, " Why are you always so good to me?" Gloria Patterson, "Oh, I suppose you have to be good for something, and my dog died a week before you moved in here."

    Mike - The Head Waiter, "Uh, Uh, young lady in your party forgot her wrap." Jim Trevor, "It wasn't my party, and she's not a lady." Mike, "Oh, I'm sorry, sir. But I'm sure you know your friends better than I do."

    Nicole, "He meant I was dishonest." Gloria, "Darling, all women are dishonest. If they weren't, the world would be divided into two classes of people - old maids and bachelors."

    Mike, "I started out to get a restaurant and I'll be lucky if I wind up with a ham sandwich."

    Jim Trevor, "Did you hear that, Rigley?" Rigley, "Did you want me to, sir?" Trevor, "I do." Rigley, "I did." Trevor, "Good."

    Jim Trevor, "Rigley!" Rigley, "Yes, sir?" Trevor, "If this young lady is not here when I get back, you're fired." Rigley, "Thank you, sir."

    Trevor, "Now, you do as you're told. You're on borrowed time anyway. I should have fired you last Tuesday." Rigley, "Well, why don't you fire me now, sir?" Trevor, "Well, if you do a good job tonight, perhaps I will." Rigley, "Oh, thank you very much, sir."
    10JLRMovieReviews

    The Rage is Where Has This Film Been All My Life!

    Danielle Darrieux and friend Helen Broderick are jobless and have plans on marrying men with money. At least Danielle does. Helen tells her "that ship has sailed for me, dearie." But in trying to get a job as a model, Danielle discovers she has to wear nothing but drapes. No, she says. But when someone else has no qualms about it, she reconsiders and snatches the company card off the executive's desk. The only trouble is she picked up the wrong card in her haste. She goes to Douglas Fairbanks' work and thinks she's in the right place and starts to undress! When Douglas sees this, we find that his character has none and that's he's no gentleman. He's only loving this and gazes on and on… She eventually leaves and she and Helen find a name in the news who's scandalously rich. They set their sights on him with some financial assistance from waiter and friend Mischa Auer. Posing as a rich socialite from Paris, she innocently meets Louis Hayward, who just so happens to know Doug. The rest of the film is about Doug warning Louis about the kind of woman Danielle is, because he knows better. Or, does he? Right from the very beginning, this film is flamboyantly funny and tres, tres chic. I found this off Amazon and am so glad I did. How could I not know about such a fun and entertaining film as this, which is worthy of being compared to "The Awful Truth"! It was sweet and romantic one moment and then uproariously funny the next. I don't have to tell you what happens. Can't you guess? Can't you? With zippy one-liners and a great cast, including Charles Coleman, who made a career of being a man's man in films and Harry Davenport, this is one screwball comedy to discover today.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film was given a "B" rating by the National Legion of Decency - morally objectionable in part for all .
    • Quotes

      Gloria Patterson: [to Nicole] I married a hoofer. All he had was a time step and a 'shuttle off to Buffalo.' Later in life he became ambitious... and got 20 years.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits are in a box brought out by a girl; the title is made from streamers, and the name credits are on curtains or 'drapes' that she throws up into the air. At the conclusion, "The End" appears on a 'drape' in a similar fashion.
    • Connections
      Featured in Danielle Darrieux: Il est poli d'être gai! (2019)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 29, 1938 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • The Rage of Paris
    • Filming locations
      • Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Universal Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 18 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Mischa Auer, Danielle Darrieux, and Louis Hayward in La coqueluche de Paris (1938)
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    By what name was La coqueluche de Paris (1938) officially released in Canada in English?
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