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Le ciel de lit

Original title: The Four Poster
  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
256
YOUR RATING
Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer in Le ciel de lit (1952)
ComedyDramaRomanceWar

Adapted from the prize-winning Broadway play that featured two people and a four-poster bed, in which the couple enacts their marriage, from 1897, until he dies some time after she has died ... Read allAdapted from the prize-winning Broadway play that featured two people and a four-poster bed, in which the couple enacts their marriage, from 1897, until he dies some time after she has died from cancer. It is a love that endured wars, another woman and the death of their favorite... Read allAdapted from the prize-winning Broadway play that featured two people and a four-poster bed, in which the couple enacts their marriage, from 1897, until he dies some time after she has died from cancer. It is a love that endured wars, another woman and the death of their favorite son.

  • Directors
    • Irving Reis
    • John Hubley
  • Writers
    • Jan de Hartog
    • Allan Scott
  • Stars
    • Rex Harrison
    • Lilli Palmer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    256
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Irving Reis
      • John Hubley
    • Writers
      • Jan de Hartog
      • Allan Scott
    • Stars
      • Rex Harrison
      • Lilli Palmer
    • 15User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 3 nominations total

    Photos3

    View Poster
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    Top cast2

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    Rex Harrison
    Rex Harrison
    • John Edwards
    Lilli Palmer
    Lilli Palmer
    • Abby Edwards
    • Directors
      • Irving Reis
      • John Hubley
    • Writers
      • Jan de Hartog
      • Allan Scott
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.4256
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    Featured reviews

    10wrouzer

    Poignant, Moving, So very human

    I saw this movie as a very young man. I saw it only once. And I've never forgotten it. It represents, to me, a template of life that speaks of all the joy and all the sorrow of life and of all the reasons that it is worth living.

    If this movie were to be made available, it is one that I would gladly add to my private library and feel priviledged to be able to share it again.
    7marcslope

    The writing

    Who was Jan de Hartog? Whoever he was, he wrote a splendid, perceptive, entertaining play, "The Four Poster," which was a Broadway hit with Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy (how I'd have loved to have seen them in it), and, during that run from 1951 to 1953, was filmed and released by Stanley Kramer. Two-character plays were rare then, and two-character movies rarer still, but this one survives quite beautifully, preserving de Hartog's clear-eyed, comprehensive views on marriage, ego, womanhood, and creativity. The husband, played a bit stiffly to my eye by Rex Harrison, is a self-centered writer who nonetheless shows great sensitivity to his wife when it's required, and the wife, played beautifully by Lilli Palmer, is a searching individual whose identity is tied up almost exclusively in her marriage. The real-life marriage of this couple was, as other posters have noted, fraught, and the tension plays well into their characterizations. It's cleverly augmented by John Hubley's animated transitional sequences, which are rather brilliantly scored by Dmitri Tiomkin. Musical theater fans will know that the piece was successfully turned into "I Do! I Do!", and they'll be intrigued by the changes librettist Tom Jones made (the characters' names, the somewhat happier ending). I'd tried to track this one down for years and am glad to have finally seen it. It's unique. And it works.
    8boblipton

    I Do, I Do

    In this filmed version of Jan De Hartog's play, Rex Harrison and wife Lilli Palmer go through life in half a dozen scenes in their bed room. It starts with them newly married, and goes through their hardships, from inveigling a virgin bride into consummation, through death.

    Harrison and Miss Palmer were husband and wife when they made this, and it neatly compresses the joy and heartache that a couple goes through. It was later the basis of the Broadway show, I DO, I DO, and Miss Palmer is radiant... and producer Stanley Kramer was taking an awful risk, since Harrison had left Hollywood in disgrace a few years earlier. Always-ambitious director Irving Reis pulls fine performances from his to performers, while the play is opened up by careful camera movement by DP Hal Mohr, and UPA cartoons about the world surrounding the two acting as scene changes. For some reason, they look like they were based on Ronald Searle's cartoons.
    10ttor

    My presence shocked my parents' friends because I was only 11.

    The year was 1952. My parents had a date with another couple to see The Four Poster. I don't remember why they decided to take me. When the other couple got into my parents' car they were shocked to see me there. This movie contains adult dialogue - it is no movie for an 11 year old, they complained. My mother's response impressed me: "Either my daughter will understand or she won't. Either way is fine." The result, of course, was that I strained to listen to every word that was uttered by either Rex Harrison or Lilli Palmer, hoping against hope to hear the naughty implications. But darn it, it all sounded innocent to me. Whatever it was that the other couple thought I shouldn't hear, I hadn't!! But despite my youth, I found the movie interesting and well-acted and have never forgotten the images of Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer discussing their marriage while standing next to their four poster bed.
    msa-3

    The animation makes it brilliant.

    This filmed version of the theatrical, 2-person play was brought to life by the animation. The stunt behind the play was that a married couple entered a bedroom with a four poster bed. Through a number of scenes, they live out their entire married life. The film cleverly used animation by John Hubley to open up the play and go out into the world. The animation was profound and moving (perhaps even more so than the live action), its design was new and brilliant, and its execution was superior to almost anything on the animation circuit at the time. (So superior was it, that some animators in Zagreb, Yugoslavia confiscated a print circulating there and studied it for weeks, running the animation sequences over and over. The end result was the creation of the Zagreb animation studio.) The film is out of circulation. You can't get it on video and you don't see it in retrospective screenings. Perhaps someone will get a print on the market. If they do, animation lovers should see it for historical context. They should also see it to learn what animators did with animation 50 years ago and are not doing now.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sir Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer were husband and wife in real-life.
    • Quotes

      John Edwards: I think I have a fever. Feel my pulse.

    • Crazy credits
      The movie ends with 'The Beginning' instead of the usual 'The End'.
    • Connections
      Version of Himmelsengen (1955)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 2, 1953 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Four Poster
    • Production company
      • Stanley Kramer Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 43m(103 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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