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Arise, My Love

  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Claudette Colbert and Ray Milland in Arise, My Love (1940)
ComedyDramaRomance

A dashing pilot and a vivacious reporter have romantic and dramatic adventures in Europe as World War II begins.A dashing pilot and a vivacious reporter have romantic and dramatic adventures in Europe as World War II begins.A dashing pilot and a vivacious reporter have romantic and dramatic adventures in Europe as World War II begins.

  • Director
    • Mitchell Leisen
  • Writers
    • Charles Brackett
    • Billy Wilder
    • Jacques Théry
  • Stars
    • Claudette Colbert
    • Ray Milland
    • Dennis O'Keefe
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mitchell Leisen
    • Writers
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
      • Jacques Théry
    • Stars
      • Claudette Colbert
      • Ray Milland
      • Dennis O'Keefe
    • 19User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 4 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos46

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    Top cast82

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    Claudette Colbert
    Claudette Colbert
    • Augusta Nash
    Ray Milland
    Ray Milland
    • Tom Martin
    Dennis O'Keefe
    Dennis O'Keefe
    • Shep
    Walter Abel
    Walter Abel
    • Phillips
    Dick Purcell
    Dick Purcell
    • Pink
    George Zucco
    George Zucco
    • Prison Governor
    Frank Puglia
    Frank Puglia
    • Father Jacinto
    Esther Dale
    Esther Dale
    • Susie
    Paul Leyssac
    • Bresson
    Ann Codee
    Ann Codee
    • Mme. Bresson
    Stanley Logan
    • Col. Tubbs-Brown
    Lionel Pape
    Lionel Pape
    • Lord Kettlebrook
    Aubrey Mather
    Aubrey Mather
    • Achille
    Cliff Nazarro
    Cliff Nazarro
    • Botzelberg
    Rafael Alcayde
    Rafael Alcayde
    • French Correspondent
    • (uncredited)
    Rudolph Anders
    Rudolph Anders
    • Prussian Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Carmen Bailey
    • Woman at Maxim's
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Bastin
    Charles Bastin
    • Elevator Boy
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mitchell Leisen
    • Writers
      • Charles Brackett
      • Billy Wilder
      • Jacques Théry
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.81.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10skimari

    Just one of the best romances ever captured on film.

    I loved this film from beginning to end. It made me laugh and it made me cry, and it left me with the feeling that I had watched one of the best screen romances ever. The script was so wonderfully written, the dialogues really sparkled like diamonds and ... Ray Milland was handsomer here than in any other film I have seen him!! He treated Clodette Colbere with a mixture of humor ,tenderness and respect, that was very endearing and touching. At moments, he seemed like an insecure little boy, and I am sure that he was never like that with any other of his co-stars. Needless to say, I loved this aspect of his very much!!! Something else that I found interesting is that the film was made almost simultaneously with the historical events it describes. This adds to its authenticity and gives us a sense of watching history in the making. The mixing of comedy and drama does not annoy me. It is more than realistic and in fact welcome, here. We deal with two very smart and out of the ordinary people, living very unusual lives, taking active parts in what goes on around them, so it is to be expected that they will have an acute sense of humor as well as forceful feelings about the war and about each other. In our lives there is place for both comedy and drama, why it should not be so for a movie, who depicts life? Just to add that the DVD now available, (spanish edition but with English audio)has very good quality of sound and picture, and does justice to this uniquely beautiful film.
    7Lejink

    Arise and Shine

    An unusually constructed film which starts off like a screwball comedy albeit to the backdrop of both the recently-ended Spanish Civil War and newly-begun Second World War and finishes up as an interventionist call-to-arms against the global threat of Nazism.

    I think it works, aided naturally by the writing of the justly celebrated screenwriting partnership of Wilder and Brackett, capable direction of Mitchell Leisen and especially the on-screen chemistry of the emerging Ray Milland and the established Claudette Colbert. You can almost picture the censor of the day's pencil hovering over some of the early scenes in the movie as they coyly play cat-and-mouse with one another, in particular one risqué exchange between the two stars with a double bed prominently featured in the background.

    Walter Abel as Colbert's end-of-his-tether editor is rather clichéd but largely speaking, the parts of the lesser characters, such as Milland's two pilot chums and the hotel maid with family caught up in the confusion which add some shade and light to the main characters' motivations are well selected and portrayed.

    I particularly appreciated the topicality of the depiction of very recent real-life events such as the sinking by German submarines of the cruise-liner Athenian taking Milland and Colbert back to the States and the montage of succeeding newspaper headlines documenting the at-the-time seemingly unstoppable march of the German Army.

    Colbert later named this as her favourite of all her movies and I doubt that's just because the film ended up on the right side of history. It manages that tricky balancing act between comedy and drama in a contemporary setting and still finds room for an eloquent wake-up call to the rest of the world at its time of greatest need.
    8perfectpawn

    Claudette Colbert's favorite of her own films

    Claudette Colbert stated that Ernst Lubitsch was "by far" her favorite director, but this film, directed by Mitchell Leisen, she stated to be her favorite movie. Released in 1940, it marked her fourth collaboration with Leisen (he'd co-directed without credit sequences of the 1932 Cecil B. DeMille production "Sign of the Cross," the movie which made Claudette a star), the man who directed her in more films than any other director.

    One can see why Claudette liked this film the best: it gave her a meatier role than the parts she'd played over the preceding several years. Ever since 1934's "It Happened One Night" Claudette had mostly done comedy films. This isn't a complaint – the lady had better comedic timing than just about any other actress in Hollywood. But here in Arise My Love she was able to cover the gamut of her talent, from comedy to drama, something she hadn't gotten to do since the Pre-Code years (check out her 1933 "Torch Singer" for an example). Indeed it's this mixture of genres which seems to offset the critics of today. For Arise My Love answers the unasked question: "What if Casablanca had been done as a screwball comedy?"

    Produced so in-the-moment that the script was rewritten daily to encompass the latest events, Arise My Love was released in 1940 and covers the hectic events of one year, starting in the summer of 1939. Claudette is Gusto Nash, a no-nonsense newspaper reporter who dreams of scoring big headlines. She frees Tom Martin (Ray Milland), a Nazi-hating pilot who's imprisoned on death row in Spain, part of the Liberty battalion of US soldiers who helped that country fight the encroaching Nazis (and lost). The first thirty minutes of this movie are 100% action, with escape via land and air. After this the film moves into screwball territory, with Tom hot for Gusto and Gusto trying to reign in her feelings; she wants to focus on her career. After this we move into drama; together at last, Gusto and Tom are soon separated, Gusto to cover the Nazi menace in various points of Europe, Tom battling the Germans in the Polish air force.

    Everything hangs together despite the mixing of genres. If I had any complaints it would be that the film ends a bit too weakly, Claudette delivering a passionate soliloquy to a silent Milland. Doubtless this gung-ho speech was intended to stir patriotic fervor in the audience of the day, but now, decades after WWII, it seems a bit anticlimactic. Indeed, the opening thirty minutes of the film are more climatic than the ending. But there are a lot of enjoyable moments. Claudette and Milland have good chemistry and both get a chance to display comedic and dramatic skills.

    The Sturges/Brackett script is up to the level of their previous Claudette productions ("Bluebeard's Eighth Wife" and "Midnight"), though, again, they don't get as much chance here to unleash their trademark comedy. Leisen's direction is good, too, as is the cinematography and production values. Claudette and Milland traipse about Europe in a variety of locales, from Paris to countryside inns deep in France; all of it done on a set, all of it featuring that Classic Film glamor.

    Released well after the enforcement of the puritanical Code, Arise My Love still gets in a few surprises – first, there's a delightful scene where Gusto comes up to Tom's room to snap his photo for her article. Tom however thinks she's coming up for sex. This develops into a scene filled with hilarious misunderstanding, with Gusto arranging the setup and Tom becoming increasingly bewildered: "So where shall we do it? How about the chair?" "What?" "Right – too conventional." All of it like "Three's Company," but still very funny. Also, shortly after this scene Gusto and Tom talk in a restaurant; Tom's pretending he's waiting for a (nonexistent) Swedish girl, but really he just wants to be with Gusto (who thinks she's just getting material for her article). There's a moment where Tom asks Gusto to pick out some flowers – flowers he pretends to be buying for the Swedish girl but are really for her. As Tom purchases the flowers she picked out, Gusto looks at him with a dawning understanding that turns into a look of longing – and then, very abruptly, she puts her pen in her mouth. Dr. Freud calling!

    Despite Claudette's preference for this film, it's never been officially released – not even on VHS. You'll need to scour the sordid world of online DVDR trading/sales to find yourself a copy, one which most likely will have been sourced from a cable TV broadcast.
    8allans-7

    Then contemporary, now historic war romantic drama

    This is a good movie, full of snappy lines, very capable acting and interesting scenes. Mitchell Leisen has an above average script to work with, and when this happens you can be assured of a very watchable movie. Well worth a DVD release (can you hear me Universal!), but this inexplicably has never even made it on to VHS.

    It features a strong capable woman (a trademark Leisen feature), but her male counterpart is no weakling is either, Ray Milland matches Claudette Colbert all of the way, helping create dramatic interest. The last section of the movie after the sinking of the Athenia is a bit underwritten and slightly unconvincing, but this is only a minor quibble.

    Very well worth watching.
    9dexter-10

    And spite the envious moon!

    In the final analysis, a film is about cinematography. From the very beginning at the Spanish prison, extraordinary cinematography is used to an exceptional degree, and it continues through the film. There are minor exceptions, as with the file film of airplanes flying. More importantly, the film claims the obvious: The Spanish government in 1939 had more than casual leanings toward Berlin. The bombing of Guernica by the Nazi air force is testimony, here reinforced. Tom Martin (Ray Millard) says he had a pet rat in his jail cell named "Adolph." Spain's neutrality during World War Two is in question with Paramount Pictures, as it was in diplomatic circles. Of course, a 1940 movie about event of 1939 has the advantage of historical retrospect, yet the public actions of the Spanish government stand. Claudette Colbert as Agusta Nash is the career woman whose career comes before love, who puts her career before all. Her assignment as Special Berlin Correspondent is to tell of Hitler and his gang. A series of unpredictable events leads her to redefine her sense of patriotism. There are, in effect, many loves which must arise and spite the envious moon. Cinematography, historical theme, and some darn good acting all unite for an effective historical perspective on life at the beginnings of World War Two.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Claudette Colbert once said that this was the favorite of all of her films.
    • Goofs
      When Walter Abel tells Claudette Colbert that she has got a new assignment in Berlin and she is told she is going in 3 days time on Saturday, she receives a cable dated September 1st, 1939, from Ray Milland. September 1st, 1939, was a Friday.
    • Quotes

      Mr. Phillips: Gusto Nash, you're fired, as of immediately!

      Augusta Nash: Oh, it's not true!

      Mr. Phillips: I know it's not true. I just wanted to taste the words. Sheer rapture!

    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood contra Franco (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Dream Lover
      (1929) (uncredited)

      Written by Victor Schertzinger

      Lyrics by Clifford Grey

      Sung and hummed by Claudette Colbert

      Introduced in Parade d'amour (1929)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 12, 1989 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Vår flygande reporter
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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