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Le ciel de lit

Original title: The Four Poster
  • 1952
  • Approved
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
255
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
    255
    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

    6.4255
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    Featured reviews

    10sylhp65

    Movies can affect your life!

    This movie has been impossible to find and I would so much like to see it again. It left an indelible impression about marriage and love. And it took some time to realize that this movie after all is a Movie! Now I would like to view it as an adult. One can be influenced by this media if experienced at the right time of life.
    9twocents

    Borderline fantasy, bittersweet study of different phases of a married couples life.

    Where is this movie today? I have not seen it offered in almost 20 years. All I have is a memory of a marvelous study of a married couples life, all revolving around a four poster bed. This film is a bittersweet fantasy with an ending that would satisfy most closet romanticists. Please, bring this movie back. If anyone knows where to find this movie please let me know. .
    9francisclough

    A glamorous acting duo find their forte in stage-to-screen tour de force

    The Four Poster(1952)is a warm,witty,and wise play chronicling a marriage, from "I do" to "til death do us part", from the candlelit late-Victorian years through the late nineteen-thirties. The Stanley Kramer-produced movie version of the Jan de Hartog stage success utilizes the gifted, Academy-award winning cinematographer Hal Mohr (A Midsummer Night's Dream, WarnerBros. 1935) to create a frequently non-static fluidity to the mies-en-scene (the overall "look") of the necessarily stage-bound piece (the closeups are luminous). The scintillating score by the virtuoso Dimitri Tiomkin perfectly captures the changes of the characters' moods and attitudes as each of them grow and evolve - both as individuals and as a couple - through each succeeding decade of their life together. The music also helps work against staginess, literally sweeping up and propelling forward the film's pace, briskly and jubilantly. In fact, Tiomkin's screen credit "Music Composed and Directed by Dimitri Tiomkin" is entirely appropriate, for he is as much to be credited with producing a movie that moves as are producer Kramer and director Irving Reis (best-remembered film The Bachelor and the Bobby Soxer starring Cary Grant). An additional innovation was the use of the famed U.P.A. cartoon studio's (Gerald McBoing-Boing their signature character) animation sequences between acts to delineate the couple's lives outside the confines of their bedroom as time moves on. The results are delightful and often poignant. Lastly, and best of all, are the shining brilliance of the performances of (at the time) real-life married couple Rex Harrison and Lilli Palmer. They had been brought to Hollywood together after their British film success The Rake's Progress (U.S.A. title The Notorious Gentleman), with Mr. Harrison signed by Twentieth Century-Fox and Miss Palmer by Warner Bros. After each had enjoyed a rising success at their respective studios - Harrison especially in movies such as Anna and the King of Siam and The Ghost and Mrs. Muir - everything came to a screeching halt in 1948 after the suicide note written by actress Carole Landis implicating Harrison in an affair. Miss Palmer's decision to stand by her husband had them both deemed persona non grata and returned to England for work in the theatre and one oddly-autobiographical movie about marital infidelity, The Long Dark Hall in 1951. Stanley Kramer's desire to cast them in The Four Poster brought them back to Hollywood the following year, at last for a vehicle tailor-made and perfectly suited to each actor's respective gifts. Harrison is at his peak here: dashing and debonair, temperamental, sometimes foolish and childish, others compassionate and knowing. Palmer had never before and would never again be given a role in a Hollywood film that so completely utilized her versatility and enormous strengths. As the wife she is girlish and sophisticated, vibrant and ebullient, supportive yet never docile, fiery and earthy and warm and ever-hopeful for life's blessings. Miss Palmer's radiant beauty is seen to best advantage here in a performance that is quite simply sublime, and for which she was awarded the Best Actress prize at the Venice Film Festival for the year 1953 (Academy Award consideration should also have been hers but shamefully was not). One can sense in these two superb performances a lot of catharsis: the trials of their exile and the tensions of their personal relationship being diverted and channeled into those of their characters' situations. The Four Poster was acclaimed critically but sadly was a box-office failure, perhaps its sophisticated, innovative presentation a little ahead of its time. Yet happily for viewers today the movie is at the very least a filmed record of two glowing performances by two great stars, whose middling success overall as an acting couple would be eclipsed by later individual stage and screen successes. And this film can be seen as a reminder of what dynamic star charisma and sheer acting presence used to be.
    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.
    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

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    • 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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