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IMDbPro

Everything Happens at Night

  • 1939
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
263
YOUR RATING
Ray Milland, Robert Cummings, and Sonja Henie in Everything Happens at Night (1939)
ComedyDrama

Two competing reporters fall in love with the daughter of a Nobel Prize winner living in hiding.Two competing reporters fall in love with the daughter of a Nobel Prize winner living in hiding.Two competing reporters fall in love with the daughter of a Nobel Prize winner living in hiding.

  • Director
    • Irving Cummings
  • Writers
    • Art Arthur
    • Robert Harari
    • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Stars
    • Sonja Henie
    • Ray Milland
    • Robert Cummings
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    263
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Irving Cummings
    • Writers
      • Art Arthur
      • Robert Harari
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • Stars
      • Sonja Henie
      • Ray Milland
      • Robert Cummings
    • 12User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos3

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    Top cast38

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    Sonja Henie
    Sonja Henie
    • Louise
    Ray Milland
    Ray Milland
    • Geoffrey Thompson
    Robert Cummings
    Robert Cummings
    • Ken Morgan
    Maurice Moscovitch
    Maurice Moscovitch
    • Dr. Hugo Norden
    • (as Maurice Moscovich)
    Leonid Kinskey
    Leonid Kinskey
    • Groder
    Alan Dinehart
    Alan Dinehart
    • Fred Sherwood
    Fritz Feld
    Fritz Feld
    • Gendarme
    Jody Gilbert
    Jody Gilbert
    • Hilda
    Victor Varconi
    Victor Varconi
    • Cavas
    William Edmunds
    • Hotel Clerk
    George Davis
    George Davis
    • Bellhop
    Paul Porcasi
    Paul Porcasi
    • Bartender
    Michael Visaroff
    • Woodcutter
    Eleanor Wesselhoeft
    • Woodcutter's Wife
    Christian Rub
    Christian Rub
    • Telegrapher
    Ferdinand Munier
    Ferdinand Munier
    • Conductor
    Holmes Herbert
    Holmes Herbert
    • Featherstone
    Rolfe Sedan
    Rolfe Sedan
    • Waiter
    • Director
      • Irving Cummings
    • Writers
      • Art Arthur
      • Robert Harari
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    6.0263
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    Featured reviews

    7guswhovian

    Everything happens while skating

    Two reporters, one American (Robert Cummings) and one British (Ray Milland), track a presumed dead Nobel Prize winner Dr. Norden (Maurice Moscovitch) to a remote Swiss village. They both fall in love with Louise (Sonja Henie), who they don't realize is actually the doctor's daughter.

    This was the first Sonja Henie film I've seen, and while it as an inconsequential piece of fluff, it was enjoyable. Henie has an engaging screen presence and Ray Milland is charming as always. Robert Cummings is really annoying though.

    Henie only gets one skating number, an excellent number to the Blue Danube Waltz. The rather serious script, which somehow manages to involve the Gestapo, is rather bad at places, but it's all good fun.
    8tavm

    Everything Happens at Night marked a nice change-of-pace for star Sonja Henie

    Previous Sonja Henie vehicles had comedians doing their shtick, some songs meant to possibly become hits, and many skating routines from the star. This one's different in that the humor comes from the characters-in this case, a couple of reporters (Ray Milland, Robert Cummings) looking for her father while romancing her. Actually, that father figures in a more dramatic shift later in the narrative that I won't reveal here. Let's just say it's a reason there are no songs or slapstick comedy that had been in previous Henie movies and Henie herself only performs one skating dance in a dream sequence this time. It's a nice change of pace so on that note, I recommend Everything Happens at Night. P.S. Among the supporting cast is one William Edmonds as the hotel clerk. If you're familiar with my IMDB reviews, you know I always like to cite when players from my favorite movie-It's a Wonderful Life-are in something else and in IAWL, Edmonds appeared there as Mr. Martini.
    10Ron Oliver

    Lots of Romance - Not Much Skating

    Two rival journalists in Switzerland search for a missing Nobel Peace Prize laureate - but instead discover a lovely young nurse who teaches them that EVERYTHING HAPPENS AT NIGHT.

    Sonja Henie was Norway's ice queen when she won Olympic gold medals in 1928, 1932 & 1936. After going professional, she began a celebrated movie career at 20th Century Fox in 1936 with ONE IN A MILLION, which was her American film debut. Beautiful & talented, as well as being a natural in front of the cameras, she carved out her own special niche during Hollywood's Golden Age. Although Miss Henie's ice routines may look antiquated by comparison to modern champions, there was nothing antique about her dazzling smile or sparkling personality. In this regard, some of today's snowflake princesses could still learn a great deal from her.

    As her career progressed, it became increasingly difficult for Fox to find decent stories for Miss Henie and the excuses for the lavish ice dancing numbers were often implausible. No matter. Audiences did not flock to her films to watch Sonja recite Shakespeare. The movies were meant to be pure escapist fantasy, plain & simple.

    EVERYTHING HAPPENS AT NIGHT is no exception and its story is often quite silly. Also, unbelievably, Sonja is only given one skating sequence in the film. Incomprehensible omission! One has to wonder what the bosses at 20th Century Fox were thinking?

    On the plus side, the movie must be credited as one of the first of Hollywood's films to depict the Gestapo as evil villains - a full two years before America's entry into the Second World War.

    A couple of script inclusions may need a bit of elucidation. The BEN-HUR film which is suggested (and rejected) would be the silent 1925 MGM version starring Ramon Novarro; by 1939 it would be considered quite passé. Also, notice the sly reference to 'Ferdinand.' This would be an allusion to Ferdinand the Bull, the flower-sniffing hero of Munro Leaf's 1936 story (and made into an Academy Award winning cartoon by Walt Disney in 1938).

    Ray Milland & Robert Cummings are very enjoyable as the ambitious reporters; viewers will be wondering which gentleman will walk away with Sonja at the fadeout - both are heroic, cunning and equally deserve her.

    A smattering of familiar faces fill small roles (George Davis, Frank Reicher, Paul Porcasi, Christian Rub). Fritz Feld is especially humorous as an officious gendarme. Jody Gilbert steals a scene or two as an abundantly sturdy Swiss miss.

    Ultimately, though, this is Sonja's show. She glides effortlessly into the viewer's heart, while balancing on a thin edge of silver, suspended over frozen water.
    6blanche-2

    Sonja as a Swiss caretaker

    Rival reporters compete for the love of a girl (Sonja Henie) and search for a Nobel Prize winner who's in hiding in "Everything Happens at Night," a 1939 film also starring Ray Milland and Robert Cummings.

    The two men are hot on the trail of a Dr. Norden, a man supposed to be dead but actually alive in a small Swiss village hiding from various political factions who are after him. While there, they both meet pretty Louise, a young woman who's the caretaker for an old man. She also knows how to skate.

    This is more of a dramatic turn for Henje. It only has one big number for the multiple Olympic gold winner. Today, Henje's skating may not look like much, but she was very musical, had great speed, excellent spins, and danced on her toes on ice like a ballerina. She was a dazzling entertainer.

    The comedy is provided by Milland and Cummings, both of whom are very charming and funny. For some reason, a lot of people slam Cummings. He wasn't a compelling dramatic actor; his foray was comedy, which he did well.

    Milland looks quite handsome and he flirts beautifully: "6'3, blue eyes, 28 years old" he murmurs in Henie's ear with that knockout accent - pretty sexy!

    As for Henje, acting wasn't her thing; she was a specialty performer, and one keeps waiting for her to do her specialty. Instead, she spends a lot of time skiing up and down mountains.

    I'm not even sure she skied - Otto Lang, who recently died at 98, donned a blond wig and skied for her in "Thin Ice," and in "It Happened in Sun Valley," her stand-in for skiing was a 14-year old boy. So someone kept busy, and it wasn't Sonja.

    "Everything Happens at Night" isn't much of a movie. People expect a light, thin story from a Henje film since she'll be skating a lot. Well, the story is thin but it's a comedy that turns dramatic when the Nazis show up in the Swiss village looking for the doctor. I thought Switzerland was a neutral country - wouldn't this man be safe once he was there?

    Sonja should have stuck to films like "Thin Ice," "One in a Million," and "Second Fiddle" which were more her speed. In short, not a great movie and not a great Sonja Henie movie.
    Kalaman

    Typical Sonja Henie fluff with Robert Cummings & Ray Milland

    Like all of Sonja Henie's vehicles, this fun-filled 1939 Fox whimsy works like a cheery blend of comedy, romance, and ice skating dances. The main difference is that the plot is less focused on the skating scenes than the suspense and romance concerning Henie and her two leading men, Robert Cummings & Ray Milland.

    I was surprised to see "Everything Happens at Night" has only one skating scene for Henie, quite an aberration considering that most of her movies are fraught with dances and skating. Cummings and Milland play two competing reporters that are sent to a small Swiss town to investigate a Nobel Prize winning commentator who is believed to be dead. Both find themselves falling for his daughter played by Henie. Cummings is a bit eccentric and rowdy while Milland comes off as a serious and straight-forward sort of fellow. They exchange roles courting her. Their scenes are irresistibly funny, charming, and merry. Then all of a sudden the movie becomes a spy thriller when a band of Gestapo villains arrive in the Swiss village to wreak havoc.

    "Everything Happens at Night" is my fourth Henie after "Sun Valley Serenade"(1941), "One in a Million"(1936) and "My Lucky Star"(1938) and all rank as her very best.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Lester Matthews as "Philip" and Roger Imhof as "Judge" are in studio records/casting call lists, but they did not appear or were not identifiable in the movie.
    • Quotes

      Hilda: So, you're an American!

      Ken Morgan: Yes.

      Hilda: Are you a millionaire?

      Ken Morgan: Well, a few of us aren't.

      Hilda: Is it true that in America they have buildings as high as this mountain?

      Ken Morgan: Oh, higher.

      Hilda: Why do they build them so high?

      Ken Morgan: I beg pardon?

      Hilda: Why...do they build 'em...so high?

      Ken Morgan: Oh! Well, that's so the people that build them and can't seem to rent them have a nice place to jump off.

    • Connections
      Featured in Frances Farmer Presents: Everything Happens at Night (1958)
    • Soundtracks
      The Blue Danube Waltz, Opus 314
      (1867) (uncredited)

      Written by Johann Strauss

      Background music for a skating sequence by Sonja Henie

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 22, 1939 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Lov na senzaciju
    • Filming locations
      • Sun Valley, Idaho, USA(backgrounds)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $193,100
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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

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