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Infidèlement vôtre

Original title: Unfaithfully Yours
  • 1948
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
6.1K
YOUR RATING
Infidèlement vôtre (1948)
Trailer for this black and white classic
Play trailer2:07
1 Video
26 Photos
Dark ComedyRomantic ComedyScrewball ComedySlapstickComedyMusicRomanceThriller

A man dreams of revenge when he suspects his wife is unfaithful.A man dreams of revenge when he suspects his wife is unfaithful.A man dreams of revenge when he suspects his wife is unfaithful.

  • Director
    • Preston Sturges
  • Writer
    • Preston Sturges
  • Stars
    • Rex Harrison
    • Linda Darnell
    • Rudy Vallee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    6.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Preston Sturges
    • Writer
      • Preston Sturges
    • Stars
      • Rex Harrison
      • Linda Darnell
      • Rudy Vallee
    • 64User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Videos1

    Unfaithfully Yours
    Trailer 2:07
    Unfaithfully Yours

    Photos26

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    Top cast56

    Edit
    Rex Harrison
    Rex Harrison
    • Sir Alfred De Carter
    Linda Darnell
    Linda Darnell
    • Daphne De Carter
    Rudy Vallee
    Rudy Vallee
    • August Henshler
    Barbara Lawrence
    Barbara Lawrence
    • Barbara Henshler
    Kurt Kreuger
    Kurt Kreuger
    • Tony Windborn
    Lionel Stander
    Lionel Stander
    • Hugo Standoff
    Edgar Kennedy
    Edgar Kennedy
    • Detective Sweeney
    Al Bridge
    Al Bridge
    • House Detective
    • (as Alan Bridge)
    Julius Tannen
    Julius Tannen
    • O'Brien
    Torben Meyer
    Torben Meyer
    • Dr. Schultz
    Abdullah Abbas
    • Concert Attendee
    • (uncredited)
    Pati Behrs
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    George Beranger
    George Beranger
    • Maître d'hôtel
    • (uncredited)
    Evelyn Beresford
    Evelyn Beresford
    • Madame Pompadour
    • (uncredited)
    Georgia Caine
    Georgia Caine
    • Dowager in Concert Box
    • (uncredited)
    James Carlisle
    • Concert Attendee
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Carter
    Harry Carter
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Bill Cartledge
    • Page Boy
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Preston Sturges
    • Writer
      • Preston Sturges
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews64

    7.46.1K
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    Featured reviews

    SHAWFAN

    Seems to be under-appreciated by your users

    I was surprised to see only one comment on this film in your files. It's been one of my all-time favorites since I was a youngster about the time it was made. Now that I'm reminded by looking it up here that it was a Preston Sturges film I can see why that's so. His classic comedies were unique. It must be also one of Rex Harrison's greatest films. Being a professional musician myself I can especially appreciate the symphonic ambience in which it takes place. I can also appreciate the possible parody Sturges might have had in mind of the great British conductor of those days, Sir Thomas Beecham. The greatest and most memorable visual effect of the movie (I've certainly remembered it all these years most vividly) happened when the Harrison character has to look up the directions for using the recording machine on which he was going to fake the evidence of his wife's still being alive. Onto the screen flashes the most outrageously complex electrical diagram comprehensible only to a professional electrician. This symbolized the inability of modern man to cope with advanced technology. One of the most hilarious moments in film I've ever seen. More viewers should catch up with this one.
    8blanche-2

    a very funny comedy, helped by a great performance

    Rex Harrison is a temperamental conductor and Linda Darnell his younger, adoring wife in "Unfaithfully Yours," also starring Lionel Stander, Rudy Vallee, and Kurt Krueger. Harrison and his wife are so much in love, it's sickening. But thanks to interference from his brother-in-law (a subdued Rudy Vallee), Harrison begins to believe that while he was out of town, his beautiful wife (Darnell) was consorting with his secretary, Tony, played by blond, handsome Kurt Krueger. As he conducts the orchestra in concert that evening, Harrison imagines several scenarios - one in which he kills his wife and cleverly frames Tony for the murder; one in which he pays her off; and one where he challenges Tony to a game of Russian roulette. Of course, when he actually tries to carry them out, things don't go as he imagined.

    This is a hilarious movie, with Harrison absolutely magnificent - and I might add, totally unlikable. One wonders if Darnell will stay with him once the bloom is off the rose. Lanky and sure of himself, though not particularly handsome, Harrison has a certain magnetism, not to mention a snappy way with a line. "Will I see you tonight at the concert?" Vallee asks him. "Yes!" Harrison yells. "I'm generally there on the nights when I conduct!" His last scene alone in the apartment is a scream, mainly because Harrison doesn't go for laughs but takes the whole thing very seriously and in character. Darnell is beautiful and appropriately cloying. Edgar Kennedy, as a classical music loving detective, has a wonderful scene with Harrison.

    I haven't seen the remake, but I noticed its voting average is lower than the original's. I can imagine Dudley Moore being quite funny, but this role, with its arch egotism, was tailor-made for Harrison.
    8SimonJack

    Hilarious romp with Harrison

    Rex Harrison comedy in films was mostly of the tongue and mind. He is known in most of his comedic roles for the witty quips, humorous repartee and funny dialog. While there's a smattering of that here, "Unfaithfully Yours" is mostly a departure from the normal Harrison persona. Here he is very funny for his antics and the fumbling, bumbling and pratfalls. He reminds one instantly of the Three Stooges and the Marx Brothers.

    Is this a dark comedy, as some think? Is it about the complications of operating modern gadgets? Is it a classical musical in some sense? No, I don't think it's any of these. It's just a straightforward comedy about the foibles and problems that marital jealousy and distrust can cause. And it takes serious pokes at such jealousy in the fantasies that Harrison has after he becomes suspicious of his wife.

    That his Sir Alfred De Carter might have dark daydreams about revenge or murder is offset quickly by the humorous situations that follow. And, what person hasn't at one time or another in life fantasized about getting even with someone, even by bumping them off? But only to laugh about such thoughts later? (There may be such a near perfect person or two, but even the best of my acquaintances have had such temptations in their lives.)

    A scene with complicating instructions for operating a home recorder seems just a counterpoint to Carter's fantasy about how easy and simple it would be to carry out such a dream. And, the classical music - well that is just the venue in which all of this can develop, because the thought of bumping off his wife was just as horrible to Carter as classical music seemed to Preston Sturges in real life.

    How do we know that? Because his wife, Sandy, tells us in an interview with the later DVD release of the movie. She says that Sturges "hated" classical music. He couldn't stand it. She said that they went to a concert one time in which he sat through the entire two-hour program. He railed against it afterwards, and Sandy said it led to his idea for this film. He would use the classical Mozart motif as a torturous undertone for the torturous fantasies brought on by jealousy. Only the humorous foibles would return Carter, the film and the viewers to normal for a spell.

    So, classical music lovers, don't take it personally, but the classical music overtone for this film was not intended as a kudos to the genre. Rather, it served as a vehicle for the clever Sturges to concoct and carry out a fanciful revenge and knocking off of his wife. It's in the several different ways and times that he tries and fails that make this movie such a very good comedy. The ending says it all.

    Personally, I enjoy classical as well as most forms of music. And I thought it served the purpose Sturges intended for this film and story quite well. All of the cast are very good, but this is a Harrison vehicle all the way.
    6sol-

    Othello as a comedy

    As he conducts a symphony in a crowded concert hall, an esteemed musician imagines different ways to deal with his wife's reported infidelity in this Preston Sturges comedy. Rex Harrison is perfectly posh, snobby and indignant in the lead role, though his character is more than a little hard to relate to as he simply assumes that his wife has been unfaithful based on hearsay without ever confronting her and without any real evidence. In this regard, the film plays out a lot like 'Othello', though with a pronounced black comedy streak as some of Harrison's imagined solutions to the issue are really rather grisly. In arguable bad taste or not, 'Unfaithfully Yours' is laugh-out-loud funny at its best with the zaniest moments coming from Harrison later trying to act on his imagined scenarios, only to find himself foiled by unreliable technology and other things that get in the way. The film is incredibly slow to build up though, with over 45 minutes elapsing before Harrison starts to concoct revenge scenarios. While this build-up does allow us to get under his skin a bit better, it also makes him seem all the more foolish for not doing anything more to confirm the suspected infidelity. A rather nice touch of the movie is how his anger gives him the fuel to conduct more brilliantly than ever, but this is not a first rate Sturges comedy, even if it certainly never once bores.
    8lasttimeisaw

    it is Sturges' trademark witticism and sleight-of-hand that marks this oldie a treasure to be appreciated by posterity

    Golden-Age Hollywood screwball fabricator Preston Sturges' last feature film worthy of his caliber, UNFAITHFULLY YOURS stars Rex Harrison as a renowned conductor Sir Alfred de Carter, on the eve of his concert, he is deviled by the paranoia that his much younger wife Daphne (Darnell) might have an extramarital affair with his personal secretary Anthony Windborn (Kreuger) thanks to his philistine brother-in-law August Henshler (Vallée)'s presumptuous misconstruction.

    The apprehension and exasperation of being cuckolded hangs like a rock over Alfred's mind and Sturges only knows all too well, that for a man of Alfred's Brobdingnagian ego, the last thing to do is to lay bare his suspicion point blank in front of Daphne, from blunt rebuke to mounting curiosity, until firmly convinced by the circumstantial evidence, it all comes down to an increasingly fractious Alfred envisages three possible outcomes when wielding his baton in front of a full symphony orchestra and a full-house audience.

    Every scenario is pertinently induced by a different classical piece from romantic-era he conducts and introduced by a cracking zooming-in shot right into Alfred's eyeball, the overture of Rossini's baroque SEMIRAMIDE triggers a murderous plan A which a framed Anthony to take the rap, yet what Wagner's operatic TANNHÄUSER suggests is a plan B with lenience and munificence, whereas plan C of a Russian roulette derring-do is influenced by Tchaikovsky's symphonic poem FRANCESCA DA RIMINI, a special treat for musos and cinephiles alike.

    Sardonically, reality is, more often than not, not exactly what we have imagined, so during his execution of one of the plans after the concert (interestingly, the choice of the plan betrays Sturges' arch amalgamation of comedy and morbidness), a knockabout transpires in a slightly labored fashion which plays up to Alfred's clumsiness, and he is merely stuck in the preparatory step with the "so-simple-it-operates-itself" home recording unit when Daphne returns, thus an air-clearing finale is all we need to put everything back to the status quo.

    A motormouthed Rex Harrison simulates a great impression as a conductor and relishes Sturges' long-winded screenplay which jollily throws barbs to the folly of machismo, meanwhile, Linda Darnell is hobbled as a virtuous beauty with a little more to act (albeit it is all in one's figment), yet, quintessentially it is Sturges' trademark witticism and sleight-of-hand that marks this oldie a treasure to be appreciated by posterity and here is the takeaway quip to round off my review - "If there is one reassuring thing about airplane, they always come down."

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The camera zooms to a big close-up of Sir Rex Harrison's left eye just before fading to each of Alfred De Carter's infidelity fantasies. Harrison happened to be blind in that eye, the result of childhood measles.
    • Goofs
      The "recording machine" Rex Harrison was trying to use in his fantasy was not a recording machine at all but a Garrard RC-100 flip-over 1938 record changer.
    • Quotes

      Alfred: Have you ever heard of Russian Roulette?

      Daphne De Carter: Why, certainly. I used to play it all the time with my father.

      Alfred: I doubt that you played Russian Roulette all the time with your father!

      Daphne De Carter: Oh, I most certainly did. You play it with two decks of cards, and...

      Alfred: That's Russian Bank. Russian Roulette's a very different amusement which I can only wish your father had played continuously before he had you!

    • Connections
      Edited into Myra Breckinridge (1970)
    • Soundtracks
      Francesca da Rimini, Opus 32
      (1876) (uncredited)

      Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (as Peter Ilystch Tchaikowski)

      Played during the opening credits, at the concert and often in the score

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Unfaithfully Yours?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 31, 1949 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "DK Classics III" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Silver Screen Remaster" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Unfaithfully Yours
    • Filming locations
      • Stage 3, 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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