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Ils étaient tous mes fils

Original title: All My Sons
  • 1948
  • Approved
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Burt Lancaster, Edward G. Robinson, and Louisa Horton in Ils étaient tous mes fils (1948)
During WW2, industrialist Joe Keller commits a crime and frames his business partner Herbert Deever but years later his sin comes back to haunt him when Joe's son plans to marry Deever's daughter.
Play trailer2:27
1 Video
25 Photos
Film NoirDrama

During WW2, industrialist Joe Keller commits a crime and frames his business partner Herbert Deever but years later his sin comes back to haunt him when Joe's son plans to marry Deever's dau... Read allDuring WW2, industrialist Joe Keller commits a crime and frames his business partner Herbert Deever but years later his sin comes back to haunt him when Joe's son plans to marry Deever's daughter.During WW2, industrialist Joe Keller commits a crime and frames his business partner Herbert Deever but years later his sin comes back to haunt him when Joe's son plans to marry Deever's daughter.

  • Director
    • Irving Reis
  • Writers
    • Arthur Miller
    • Chester Erskine
  • Stars
    • Edward G. Robinson
    • Burt Lancaster
    • Mady Christians
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Irving Reis
    • Writers
      • Arthur Miller
      • Chester Erskine
    • Stars
      • Edward G. Robinson
      • Burt Lancaster
      • Mady Christians
    • 47User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:27
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    Photos25

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    Top cast34

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    Edward G. Robinson
    Edward G. Robinson
    • Joe Keller
    Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster
    • Chris Keller
    Mady Christians
    Mady Christians
    • Kate Keller
    Louisa Horton
    Louisa Horton
    • Ann Deever
    Howard Duff
    Howard Duff
    • George Deever
    Frank Conroy
    Frank Conroy
    • Herbert Deever
    Lloyd Gough
    Lloyd Gough
    • Jim Bayliss
    Arlene Francis
    Arlene Francis
    • Sue Bayliss
    Harry Morgan
    Harry Morgan
    • Frank Lubey
    • (as Henry Morgan)
    Elisabeth Fraser
    Elisabeth Fraser
    • Lydia Lubey
    Margaret Bert
    • Townswoman
    • (uncredited)
    Walter Bonn
    • Jorgenson
    • (uncredited)
    Helen Brown
    • Mrs. Hamilton
    • (uncredited)
    Pat Flaherty
    Pat Flaherty
    • Bartender
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Gargan
    • Workman
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Harvey
    Harry Harvey
    • Judge
    • (uncredited)
    Jerry Hausner
    Jerry Hausner
    • Halliday
    • (uncredited)
    Herbert Heywood
    • McGraw
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Irving Reis
    • Writers
      • Arthur Miller
      • Chester Erskine
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    7.32.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Doylenf

    Edward G. Robinson in another powerhouse performance...

    ALL MY SONS may have been slightly diluted for the screen as compared to the stage play which implicated corruption and wartime profiteering on a higher level than just one or two business men, but it's still powerful stuff and extremely well directed by Irving Reis. Individual scenes have a strength that is impressive, largely due to the excellent central performances of BURT LANCASTER, EDWARD G. ROBINSON and MADY CHRISTIANS. Robinson, in particular, makes the most of a meaty role that has him cocky and confident one moment, then bruised and bitter the next as his past crimes catch up with him--and his conscience.

    Seems that during WWII, he and his partner (FRANK CONROY) were pressured to finish making cylinder parts for airplanes on the government's tight schedule and knowingly sent defective parts which caused the death of twenty-one pilots when their planes went down. Robinson has been hiding the truth from himself and his neighbors ever since, concerned only with making a decent living for himself and his family in suburban America.

    Conflicts arise when others around him begin to question his role in the crime that sent his partner to jail. The son of the jailed partner, played in rather stiff fashion by HOWARD DUFF, is unforgiving when he realizes Robinson shared the guilt with his father and yet let his father take the blame for the incident. Lancaster, too, and his girlfriend (LOUISA HORTON) who happens to be Duff's sister, also bring the conflicts into the open when they start asking for answers and probing for the truth. Horton is rather colorless in what is meant to be a sympathetic role and spent her remaining years in TV roles.

    But it's EDWARD G. ROBINSON who makes the biggest impression as the father, proud of his achievements and obviously in denial until his son, Lancaster, makes him realize why his other son never returned from the war--which leads to a tragic ending.

    Summing up: Somber drama never quite overcomes its stage origins but it's still powerful stuff.

    Trivia note: The only implausible factor in the casting--the physical impossibility of BURT LANCASTER as Robinson's son, when he bears no physical resemblance whatsoever to Eddie--nor Mady Christians for that matter!
    8diana-2

    who was really to blame?

    I saw this movie today for the umpteenth time and it finally occurred to me... Weren't both men to blame? Wasn't Herbert Deever really just as guilty as Joe Keller? No matter who "says" they are responsible, anyone involved in knowingly shipping faulty parts that could kill people is responsible. Deever shouldn't have sent them out, no matter what he was told. Isn't that what all those Nazis claimed when asked how they could commit so many atrocities? "I was just taking orders." That doesn't wash with me or with most people. We all have a responsibility to follow our own consciences with regard to right and wrong.

    They were both guilty....

    It's a wonderful story and very well performed and written, but that fact remains to be discussed.
    telegonus

    Of Suburbs, Studios, and Arthur Miller

    The movie version of Arthur Miller's All My Sons is yet another excellent example of how a fairly dreadful play can make a watchable, even beautiful film. In its day quite relevant, the play now reeks of the stuffily leftish Old Testament pieties of the Group Theatre of the thirties, and in style, if not content, anticipates the think-piece, more mainstream television dramas of the fifties. The plot is worth going into only briefly, and concerns a morally corrupt though not innately bad manufacturer of aircraft parts whose cost-cutting was responsible for the crashing of several planes during the then recent Second World War. Set in what appears to be either a New York suburb or a leafy section of one of the city's outer boroughs, the films is beautifully photographed and designed. It isn't quite realistic, as it is obviously a studio product, but it is far less artificial-looking than most movies of the period, and is singularly evocative in every detail of a way of middle class life, leisurely and informal, egalitarian and yet conscious of social distinctions, that has long passed into history. Beautifully rendered also is the large, very comfortable house in and around which much of the film takes place. Not quite a mansion, it is nevertheless roomy and in its way elegant, of Victorian vintage or nearly so. We get to see so much of it. The dining room, with its fluffy, lacey things all about; the heavy soup bowls and plates decorated with vines and flowers; and in its somwhat retro feeling it appears, like the family itself, both vaguely European and wholesomely American. Everything in the house seems heavy and solid, nailed down, as it were, as if this way of life was going to go on forever. The scenes in the backyard show the lazy, hazy summer afternoons of lemonade and hammocks, before the arrival of television, interstate highways, and shopping malls. Overall the picture is so brilliantly and minutely detailed, whether the set is a restaurant or a factory, that it is astonishing that it didn't win the Academy Award for set design. The action, consisting mostly of people either arguing with one another, lying, or expressing strong emotions, like love and hate, is very well presented and framed within the various settings. None of the actors in the film, including a young Burt Lancaster, is at his absolute best, though Edward G. Robinson, as the paterfamilas, in snugly in his element here, and quite credible, if not moving. There's a cockiness to Robinson which, though quite charming in certain roles, works against pathos or sympathy of any kind. Thus, in the end, the film is strangely fails to tug at the heartstrings, so to speak; it worked better in the earlier scenes, before the story built a head of steam. A few behind the scenes things are worth mentioning, not the least of which director Irving Reis, whose orchestration of this and several other films of the period showed great potential. Like Robert Wise, Mark Robson, John Sturges, Edward Dmytryk and Jules Dassin, Reis was a strong up-and-comer in the Hollywood pecking order of directors of the time, and was, sadly, to die just a few years later. Mady Christians, who plays Robinson's foreign-born wife, was blacklisted shortly after the film came about. All My Sons was one of the films that was presumably going to launch its studio, the newly reorganized Universal-International, into the big leagues. It didn't, but that's another story.
    8rcshepherd

    This Screen Adaptation Is True to Arthur Miller

    A standard 1940s group of ensemble players, coupled with the strength of an Arthur Miller project. All cast principles and minor players were at the top of their forms when they stood before the cameras. None were noted as powerful stage actors in their own right. Yet when they appeared in this film, they succeeded in doing what I think a significant stage work should do. Carry the viewer into the stage (not film) theater, and give them the unique experience of a Broadway or Off-Broadway theater seat.

    The production style and direction (for reasons of cost and utility) let the words of Miller's play take center stage. In beautiful black-and-white, the Art and Set direction are spare, firm, and commanding. They command our attention. Miller is big on attention to the issues his characters are grappling with and their impact on the significant issues of our (and all) time.

    As Miller repeats in Death of a Salesman, there are layers of meaning and understanding between his characters and the issues they confront internally and externally. The two business partners have had a long, intimate family relationship (like Cain and Able). So close a connection that his son could have married his partner's daughter. And she, of course, is the only one who has always known (from that son) the truth about the son's death. And the fact (s) about the father.

    Miller shows us that the father's Horatio Alger lies are at the foundation of who we are individually and collectively as Americans; the lies can almost thoroughly wash out what individuals and a community should think about its leading citizens. It is an interesting plot twist that, as Miller's script points out, the low-class birth and poverty of the father embed him into the fabric of the community.

    That the film faithfully carried Miller's message of contempt and loathing not only for the worship of that false god(capitalism) but also for the whole Horatio Alger hero myth (that both American liberals and conservatives embrace) is quite daring. Even for a film world that had not yet descended into the long night of the "Black List."
    9edwagreen

    All My Sons- For Social Justice and Humanity ***1/2

    Excellent film dealing with Arthur Miller's story of a man who sold defective plane parts to the military during World War 11 resulting in the death of many pilots.

    Edward G. Robinson gave us an outstanding performance as the conflicted individual, who did this for his own selfish-interests only to escape prosecution but to see his partner jailed.

    This is a story of intense inter-family conflicts. The partner's daughter was to be married to Joe's (Robinson's) son Larry in the film. The picture begins with the fact that Larry is missing in action. Ann, played by Louisa Horton, is now becoming engaged to Joe's other son, Chris, played with marvelous insight by a young Burt Lancaster.

    Mady Christians is also a standout as Joe's devoted wife, who herself is in denial that Larry is probably dead and knowing full well what her husband did was wrong.

    This is a terrific film dealing with moral conflict and the ultimate tragic resolution to it.

    You have to wonder what Edward G. Robinson had to do to be nominated for an academy award.

    This is Arthur Miller at his best writing. A truly American classic.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The original Broadway production of "All My Sons" opened at the Coronet Theater in New York on January 29, 1947. It ran for 328 performances, and won the 1947 Best Play Tony Award for author Arthur Miller. His original script was used as the basis for this movie's screenplay.
    • Goofs
      When Joe comes out of the house upon Annie's arrival, he comes down the front steps and walks into the yard with his arms raised. In the next instant, he's back at the steps and his arms are down.
    • Quotes

      Jim Bayliss: Put her to bed, Joe. Both of you go to bed. Staying up won't help; sleep will. Sleep's a wonderful thing, the best thing about living.

    • Connections
      Featured in Film Preview: Episode #1.1 (1966)
    • Soundtracks
      You'll Never Know
      (1943) (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Warren

      Played on piano by Louisa Horton

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • November 17, 1948 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "Christ T" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "DDF: Cinema Archive" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • All My Sons
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Rosa, California, USA(the Grace home on McDonald Avenue)
    • Production company
      • Universal International Pictures (UI)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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