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La féerie de la glace

Original title: The Ice Follies of 1939
  • 1939
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
James Stewart and Joan Crawford in La féerie de la glace (1939)
Showbiz DramaDramaMusicRomance

An ice skater jeopardizes her marriage after she becomes a movie star.An ice skater jeopardizes her marriage after she becomes a movie star.An ice skater jeopardizes her marriage after she becomes a movie star.

  • Director
    • Reinhold Schünzel
  • Writers
    • Leonard Praskins
    • Florence Ryerson
    • Edgar Allan Woolf
  • Stars
    • Joan Crawford
    • James Stewart
    • Lew Ayres
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Reinhold Schünzel
    • Writers
      • Leonard Praskins
      • Florence Ryerson
      • Edgar Allan Woolf
    • Stars
      • Joan Crawford
      • James Stewart
      • Lew Ayres
    • 29User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Photos38

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Joan Crawford
    Joan Crawford
    • Mary McKay
    James Stewart
    James Stewart
    • Larry Hall
    Lew Ayres
    Lew Ayres
    • Eddie Burgess
    Lewis Stone
    Lewis Stone
    • Douglas Tolliver Jr.
    The International Ice Follies
    • Ice Skating Troupe
    Bess Ehrhardt
    Bess Ehrhardt
    • Kitty Sherman
    Roy Shipstad
    • Roy Shipstad - Ice Follies Skater
    Eddie Shipstad
    • Eddie Shipstad - Ice Follies Skater
    Oscar Johnson
    • Oscar Johnson - Ice Follies Skater
    Lionel Stander
    Lionel Stander
    • Mort Hodges
    Charles D. Brown
    • Barney
    Louis Adlon
    Louis Adlon
    • Dress Designer
    • (uncredited)
    King Baggot
    King Baggot
    • Man in Audience
    • (uncredited)
    Marie Blake
    Marie Blake
    • Effie Lane - Tolliver's Secretary
    • (uncredited)
    Wade Boteler
    Wade Boteler
    • Policeman in Central Park
    • (uncredited)
    Truman Bradley
    Truman Bradley
    • Paul Rodney
    • (voice)
    • (uncredited)
    La Verne Busher
    • LeVerne Busher - Ice Follies Skater
    • (uncredited)
    Eddie Conrad
    Eddie Conrad
    • Hal Briggs
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Reinhold Schünzel
    • Writers
      • Leonard Praskins
      • Florence Ryerson
      • Edgar Allan Woolf
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    5.21.1K
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    Featured reviews

    4mukava991

    harmless fluff with a stellar cast

    This harmless piece of fluff is moderately interesting for reasons having nothing to do with its intentions, which must have been to tap into the lucrative ice skating fan base that was packing theatres to see Sonia Henie in 20th Century Fox features at the time. This opus does have a stellar cast (Joan Crawford, James Stewart, Lew Ayres, Lewis Stone) all at their best even though utterly wasted and a vivid Technicolor ice show sequence at the end in which we get to see the above-mentioned personages in color. It is also a way to satisfy the curiosity of MOMMIE DEAREST viewers who have always wondered what FOLLIES was about since it figures in the plot of that biopic. Well, it's about nothing much and was a good example of why Joan Crawford's career wasn't a bed of roses, even though she triumphed in THE WOMEN the same year. She's actually quite good in this, playing a nice girl who chooses marital bliss over movie stardom. For half the movie she is coiffed in an unusually severe and darkly tinted manner which accentuates the severity of her features, giving her a rather cruel and drawn appearance. In some of these scenes she strongly resembles Merle Oberon. Stewart gets a chance to practice pratfalls and inventive prop handling and excels at both. At one point after his character hears joyous news, he does a somersault from a chair onto a bed and back onto the floor like a skilled acrobat. He was a consummate actor even then.
    4bkoganbing

    Stewart&Crawford&Ayres On Ice

    Ice Follies of 1939 involves a trio of professional skaters, Joan Crawford, James Stewart, and Lew Ayres who have some creative differences and the act breaks up temporarily. So do Crawford and Stewart who are a romantic item.

    This was Stewart and Crawford's second film together, the first was The Gorgeous Hussy in which Stewart was only a supporting player. It's too bad that neither of them got anything better.

    I also can't put this any better, the three of them look plain ridiculous on skates and they probably felt just as ridiculous.

    This film was the brainchild of Louis B. Mayer who looked green with envy over at 20th Century Fox and the money that Darryl F. Zanuck was making with Sonja Henie. I say 'with' and not 'off of' Sonja Henie because Ms. Henie was a star before she signed a contract with Zanuck and Zanuck paid her dearly for her services. Something I'm not sure Mayer was prepared to do.

    To gloss over the trite backstage story, MGM did import a whole load of the top ice acts circa 1939 other than Sonja Henie. Interesting to see them and Sonja and compare them to Nancy Kerrigan or Johnny Weir or the infamous Tonya Harding.

    Fortunately the next films for Stewart and Crawford were, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington and The Women. The future was going to get better for both.
    2wrk6539

    Easily Crawford's Worst "Golden Age" film

    Experts tell us that MGM had high hopes for this strange movie pastiche, but it's hard to believe that from the tired on-screen shenanigans. With Sonia Henie making millions for 20th Century Fox in her kitschy skating musicals, Metro imported (at no small cost) the famed International Ice Follies and paired them with Crawford, one of their top-ranked, but skidding, stars.

    I still find it hard to fathom WHY Metro executives could ever have thought that this lumbering, tired film could serve any use in reversing Crawford's diminishing box-office drawing power. She, James Stewart, and Lew Ayres, seem to be walking through their roles in a most obvious case of movie-making by the numbers, with a plot that is nothing but insulting to its audience.

    This is not to say that certain pleasures can't be found in the film, if you want to take the time to look. Joan is as beautiful as ever and the Ice Follies finale (in which Joan does NOT skate) looks great in Technicolor. Happily and ironically, it was this film's total failure that brought Crawford one of her best screen roles, that of Crystal Allen in George Cukor's THE WOMEN. Reckless and with a feeling of nothing to lose, Crawford went after that unsympathetic part with a vengeance, AGAINST the advice of LB Mayer, who said it would finish her (but then again, what did HE know.....he LIKED the idea of this one!!)Not nearly as interesting as either THE BRIDE WORE RED (1937) or THE SHINING HOUR (1938), Crawford's other box-office flops of the period, this one is strictly for Crawford or Stewart completists.
    Poseidon-3

    They should've kept the script on ice.

    This is one of those horrible films that sounds so bizarre it holds the promise of actually being good in a bad way when one finally finds it on television. It doesn't deliver on any level, though. The whole notion of Stewart and Crawford as ice skating stars is hilarious. But they are never really shown skating at any point in the film. What's left is a hackneyed, contrived plot about them falling in love and then separating to follow their careers. He tries to create the first Ice Follies and she (quite easily!) becomes a major film star. The actual Ice Follies troupe shows up in the middle of the film to do a few twirls and spins. The whole thing is capped by a 3-strip Technicolor finale featuring massive quantities of skaters and Joan in a humongous ball gown singing a forgettable song. It's so rare to see early Joan in color, yet she is given no close-ups. Joan was supposed to sing three songs in the film, but two of them were cut. She dons a black Hedy Lamarr-style wig for a lot of the film which gives her a distinctive, if not natural for her, look. Even though the film is ludicrous and trite, money WAS spent on it. The banquet scene in which Crawford gives a speech is lavish in it's decor and her clothes, though often bizarre, are also expensive. (One scene has her in a kooky art deco headdress which makes her look like a parking meter come to life.) This film is of note these days primarily because it's the film "Joan" is being made up for at the beginning of "Mommie Dearest". If not for that plug, it may have fallen into even greater obscurity than it already was. One of her hilarious recollections from the book Conversations with Joan Crawford was, "Christ! We all must have been out of our collective minds!" She describes how she and Stewart "skated around on our ankles". She tried to inject some flair and life into the film, but it was doomed on the page. Fortunately, "The Women" was on the horizon to keep her in good stead.
    5ftljeff40

    Technicolor Ending worth sitting through the rest

    Poor Joan, I can see why she worked so hard for the role of Crystal Allen in "The Women" her next picture after this dreg.

    Bad script bad director just bad everything, the only part worth watching is the Technicolor ending which is quite interesting and it is Joan's first color picture. Joan's drunken scene is also good and Lew Ayres was such a cu-tie when he was young but the rest of it is pure yuck! and I thought Trog was bad. For true Joan fans only. I suggest renting it NOW ON DVD, the transfer is very good and the sound quality is good. This has to be the worst picture Joan was in and it didn't have to be, minor changes to the script would have helped this picture a lot. Minor reworking to the "Joan becomes a star overnight" storyline could have worked out in a believable fashion. The story seems thrown together and I don't think anyone at MGM actually watched it before it was released. This was no cheap budget either, the sets are impressive but everyone seems to know they are in a clunker.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      None of the three main stars could skate; the screenplay was written with this in mind.
    • Goofs
      Bess Ehrhardt is billed and introduced as 'Kitty Sherman', but an advertising placard in the movie uses her real name along with character names of some other actors.
    • Quotes

      Larry Hall: Stars are a million miles apart; they never touch. They live away from each other, cold and lonely - like we'll have to do.

    • Connections
      Edited into Frisson d'amour (1945)
    • Soundtracks
      It's All So New to Me
      (1938)

      Music by Bernice Petkere

      Lyrics by Marty Symes

      Played in the finale and sung by Joan Crawford (uncredited) and chorus

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 20, 1939 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Ice Follies of 1939
    • Filming locations
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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