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La Grande escalade

Original title: Climbing High
  • 1938
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
262
YOUR RATING
Jessie Matthews and Michael Redgrave in La Grande escalade (1938)
Comedy

Wealthy young man Nicky (Sir Michael Redgrave) pretends to be poor to be close to model Diana (Jesse Matthews) though he's nearly engaged to aristocrat Lady Constance (Margaret Vyner).Wealthy young man Nicky (Sir Michael Redgrave) pretends to be poor to be close to model Diana (Jesse Matthews) though he's nearly engaged to aristocrat Lady Constance (Margaret Vyner).Wealthy young man Nicky (Sir Michael Redgrave) pretends to be poor to be close to model Diana (Jesse Matthews) though he's nearly engaged to aristocrat Lady Constance (Margaret Vyner).

  • Director
    • Carol Reed
  • Writers
    • Lesser Samuels
    • Marion Dix
  • Stars
    • Jessie Matthews
    • Michael Redgrave
    • Noel Madison
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    262
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Carol Reed
    • Writers
      • Lesser Samuels
      • Marion Dix
    • Stars
      • Jessie Matthews
      • Michael Redgrave
      • Noel Madison
    • 10User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos4

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    Top cast24

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    Jessie Matthews
    Jessie Matthews
    • Diana
    Michael Redgrave
    Michael Redgrave
    • Nicky
    Noel Madison
    Noel Madison
    • Gibson
    Alastair Sim
    Alastair Sim
    • Max
    Margaret Vyner
    Margaret Vyner
    • Lady Constance
    Mary Clare
    Mary Clare
    • Lady Emily
    Francis L. Sullivan
    Francis L. Sullivan
    • Madman
    Enid Stamp-Taylor
    Enid Stamp-Taylor
    • Winnie
    • (as Enid Stamp Taylor)
    Torin Thatcher
    Torin Thatcher
    • Jim
    Tucker McGuire
    Tucker McGuire
    • Patsey
    Basil Radford
    Basil Radford
    • Reggie
    Athole Stewart
    Athole Stewart
    • Uncle
    Leo de Pokorny
    • Guide
    • (uncredited)
    Fred Groves
    Fred Groves
    • Doorman
    • (uncredited)
    Victor Harrington
    Victor Harrington
    • Passer-By at Traffic Accident
    • (uncredited)
    Philip Leaver
    Philip Leaver
    • Swiss Hotel Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    Gordon McLeod
    • Editor
    • (uncredited)
    Percy Parsons
    Percy Parsons
    • Lumber Camp Foreman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Carol Reed
    • Writers
      • Lesser Samuels
      • Marion Dix
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    6.0262
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    10

    Featured reviews

    7Penfold-13

    What the...?

    This is a very confusing comedy.

    The main plot line revolves around Michael Redgrave, unhappily engaged to a society lady, who falls for a lingerie model played by Jessie Matthews and her overbite. Much to-ing and fro-ing, playing of masquerades lead to the conclusion everyone expects, but the alarms and excursions are strange indeed.

    We have Alastair Sim doing a tremendous job as a poverty-stricken, bitter comic communist, but we also have a loony who is obsessed with opera-singing. His second appearance is completely inexplicable.

    Enough of the original plot shows through for the storyline to just about hang together - even if only with the assistance of a suspension bridge for the disbelief - but there's an awful lot of "what the...?" likely from an attentive viewer.

    Odd entertainment.
    5malcolmgsw

    The end of Gaumont British

    With the exception of a couple of films in the forties and fifties this was the last film produced by Gaumont British.It was the biggest production company in the UK but closed down in 1938.It ran into money troubles and closed down production.This was supposed to be a musical directed by Donnie Hale.Alas all the music was taken out and what we are left with is a sad epitaph to her starring career.Unfortunately this is a sad imitation of the screwball comedies then popular with Hollywood.Michael Redgrave is unsuited to his role .As for Alistair SIM and Francis Sullivan all one can say is,bizarre.
    4howardmorley

    "I'm worried about Jim"

    I could only give this farcical "comedy" 4/10 compared to the 5.2 on IMDb.com.I agree with the previous user comments and tuned into this film after searching on Michael Redgrave hoping for a similar experience to "The Lady Vanishes" (1938).As usual in Britsh comedy/farces there is a lot of running around, characters misunderstanding names and highly improbable sudden scene changes like when you are suddenly catapulted from London, England to alpine Switzerland.I must give a mention to Mary Clare, familiar to me from playing the baroness in "The Lady Vanishes" and the landlady in "A Girl Must Live" (1939).Here she plays Lady Emily Westaker who is trying to marry off her daughter, Lady Constance (Margaret Vyner), by any means to Michael Redgrave who plays a playboy who nearly runs Jessie Matthews over and almost immediately attempts to seriously woo her.It was at this point reality was left far behind.I had only ever heard Jessie when I was young playing Mrs Dale the wife of a doctor in "Mrs Dales Diary", whose memorable line was "I'm worried about Jim".I understand Jessie could sing and the producers contrived to give vent to her singing voice albeit in a strange farcical setting when Francis L Sullivan, playing an overweight opera loving madman, accosts Jessie and only lets her go when she shows her singing ability.

    Basil Radford made an appearance playing Michael Redgrave's best friend, and for once he didn't have his partner Naunton Wayne in tow.Basil did films on his own like "The Galloping Major".The funniest scene was pure slapstick when the speed control of a wind machine in the advertising studio is set to maximum and mayhem inevitably results.It was strange seeing Alastair Sim playing a purposely out of work communist and showing his torso!Another actor not lost on me was Torin Thatcher who played Bentley Drummle in the acclaimed 1946 version of "Great Expectations" in David Lean's classic film.Comedy could be rather infantile in the 30s.
    61930s_Time_Machine

    You can't help but love this

    You would never guess that this picture was plagued by such horrendous production difficulties because it feels such a fun, silly hour and a half of pure happy enjoyment.

    This film marked the end of an era; it was the last of those wonderfully frivolous 1930s romantic comedies starring the gorgeous Jessie Matthews. Despite the problems of making this and considering that it didn't perform too well at the box office, it's actually pretty good and surprisingly just as enjoyable as her other pictures. Gaumont-British officially went bust during filming and its original director (and husband of Jessie Matthews) was fired during the takeover by Rank. All of this turmoil makes this feel quite different to her earlier films - but not in a bad way.

    The modus operandi of the new studio wasn't the same as G-B's opulent style. This was rushed, there's less attention to detail, the sets look cheaper, there doesn't seem to be any budget for Jessie's usual designer dresses and most significantly of all, the there's no musical numbers. That the new regime dropped all of her song and dance numbers signalled the end of her career as a musical film star. The silver screen would never again glow with the incandescence of her incredible and exceptional sensuous dancing or hear her singing - times were changing. Like Joan Blondell (who like Jessie Matthews was also the sexiest woman in the world!), she was a superstar in the 30s but as time moved on she found herself just getting bit parts. Both she and Joan Blondell personified that cheerful naïve optimism in the face of adversity which was so necessary through the 1930s but that mood would not fit in the 40s when people realised that the world was a much darker place.

    What would have been a musical romantic comedy is now relegated to being just a comedy but that focus actually makes this a funnier faster-paced comedy - a very funny and cheerful comedy. Michael Redgrave, who was parachuted into this at the last minute makes a far better and authentic male lead than Barry MacKay who'd been in her last few films. What makes this almost close to comic genius is that Redgrave and everyone else play their parts completely straight and seriously even as the story gets more and more absurd. Alastair Sim is hilariously bonkers and just so weird then just as you think it can't get any more crazy, Mr Jaggers from GREAT EXPECTATIONS tuns up swinging off a Swiss mountain thinking he is a bird bellowing 'tweet, tweet, tweet.' It's almost Monty Python!
    5bkoganbing

    Her Impression Of Him Requires A Pseudonym?

    Climbing High is a British attempt to make an American style screwball comedy and while it has a few amusing moments it will never threaten something like My Man Godfrey or It Happened One Night. It was Michael Redgrave's second film and a bit of a let down from his debut in the Alfred Hitchcock classic The Lady Vanishes. But it did have the distinction of introducing Redgrave to Carol Reed who had been doing a lot of light fluff at the time. A year later Reed and Redgrave teamed to direct and star in The Stars Look Down which was Reed's first critically acclaimed film.

    Michael Redgrave plays a young rich playboy who like in so many American films of this accidentally runs into Jessie Matthews who is not knowing where the next job is coming from. Redgrave's been linked in the society columns to titled woman Margaret Vyner. She'd dearly love to marry him because while she has the title, he has the pound sterling. He's not really interested in her, especially after he sees Matthews, but not thinking it's worth the time and trouble to issue denials to the tabloids. And he gives a fictitious name to Matthews because of the tabloids and her impression of him through what she reads there.

    Not to say there aren't a few good scenes and some real laughs like Redgrave turning on a wind machine full blast at a modeling shoot that Matthews is at, or later he and Matthews humoring lunatic Francis L. Sullivan who just escaped the rubber room. But the whole premise of this one is more silly than funny. If Redgrave just told Matthews who he was it would have solved everything. But then there wouldn't be a picture.

    One should also make note of American Noel Madison in the cast who plays an advertising executive, who plays it Madison Avenue style for the British public. Usually Madison was featured in gangster films in the USA. Also Torin Thatcher is here as Matthews stern brother who wants to get the guy who wronged his sister. Last but not least is Alastair Sim who plays Matthews Communist friend who will turn capitalist if it suits him on occasion, but with a tear for Lenin.

    Climbing High is an amusing enough film, but doesn't come close to American screwball comedies of the time.

    Related interests

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    Comedy

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Filming originally started in April 1938, as "Asking For Trouble", a musical directed by Sonnie Hale, and starring Jessie Matthews, Kent Taylor, and Noel Madison, but was abandoned.
    • Quotes

      Patsey: Say, will you stop scribbling in that precious book of yours while I insult my best friend?

      Max: If you mean comrade Diana, I don't agree. She spurns money rightly. In the coming civilization, money as we know it will cease to exist.

    • Soundtracks
      It's Good To Be Alive
      (uncredited)

      Music by Arthur Johnston

      Lyrics by Eddie Pola

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 1, 1938 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Climbing High
    • Filming locations
      • Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK(studio: produced at Pinewood Studios England)
    • Production company
      • Gaumont British Picture Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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