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Corps et âmes

Original title: The Doctor and the Girl
  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
524
YOUR RATING
Glenn Ford, Janet Leigh, Charles Coburn, and Gloria DeHaven in Corps et âmes (1949)
Dr. Michael Corday, a recent graduate of the Harvard Medical School, is the son of Dr. John Corday, an eminent New York City surgeon who has a tendency to continue to direct the lives of his grown children. The daughter, Fabienne, runs away from home and Michael, after first following his father's advice of being callous to the point of cruelty toward patients, changes when he falls in love with a patient, marries her and sets up his practice on the lower East Side in New York. The death of a family member brings most of the family together. A couple of stronger plot incidents than usual for a 1940s film---unwed-pregnancy and botched abortion among them.
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
13 Photos
DramaRomance

Dr. Michael Corday, a recent graduate of the Harvard Medical School, is the son of Dr. John Corday, an eminent New York City surgeon who has a tendency to continue to direct the lives of his... Read allDr. Michael Corday, a recent graduate of the Harvard Medical School, is the son of Dr. John Corday, an eminent New York City surgeon who has a tendency to continue to direct the lives of his grown children. The daughter, Fabienne, runs away from home and Michael, after first foll... Read allDr. Michael Corday, a recent graduate of the Harvard Medical School, is the son of Dr. John Corday, an eminent New York City surgeon who has a tendency to continue to direct the lives of his grown children. The daughter, Fabienne, runs away from home and Michael, after first following his father's advice of being callous to the point of cruelty toward patients, change... Read all

  • Director
    • Curtis Bernhardt
  • Writers
    • Maxence Van der Meersch
    • Theodore Reeves
  • Stars
    • Glenn Ford
    • Charles Coburn
    • Gloria DeHaven
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    524
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Curtis Bernhardt
    • Writers
      • Maxence Van der Meersch
      • Theodore Reeves
    • Stars
      • Glenn Ford
      • Charles Coburn
      • Gloria DeHaven
    • 15User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Official Trailer

    Photos13

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    Top cast65

    Edit
    Glenn Ford
    Glenn Ford
    • Dr. Michael Corday
    Charles Coburn
    Charles Coburn
    • Dr. John Corday
    Gloria DeHaven
    Gloria DeHaven
    • Fabienne
    Janet Leigh
    Janet Leigh
    • Evelyn
    Bruce Bennett
    Bruce Bennett
    • Dr. Alfred Norton
    Warner Anderson
    Warner Anderson
    • Dr. George Esmond
    Basil Ruysdael
    Basil Ruysdael
    • Dr. Francis I. Garard
    Nancy Reagan
    Nancy Reagan
    • Mariette
    • (as Nancy Davis)
    Arthur Franz
    Arthur Franz
    • Dr. Harvey L. Kenmore
    Lisa Golm
    Lisa Golm
    • Hetty
    Joanne De Bergh
    • Child's Mother
    Mimi Aguglia
    Mimi Aguglia
    • Mother of Boy with Diphtheria
    • (uncredited)
    Fernando Alvarado
    • Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Jessie Arnold
    Jessie Arnold
    • Patient
    • (uncredited)
    David Bond
    David Bond
    • Father
    • (uncredited)
    Gail Bonney
    Gail Bonney
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    June Booth
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    Mildred Boyd
    • Sexy Girl
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Curtis Bernhardt
    • Writers
      • Maxence Van der Meersch
      • Theodore Reeves
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.8524
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    Featured reviews

    8GodeonWay

    Curtis Bernhardt's masterful direction makes this a superior movie

    Other reviewers of The Doctor and the Girl have rightfully praised its excellent treatment of a plot-line that at first glance seems familiar, even hackneyed. Of course, the sterling performances of everybody on screen are a huge asset to the picture. But for me, the gold medal has to be given to Curtis Bernhardt's expert handling of Theodore Reeves' adroit screenplay.

    It's a tightly-paced film, with very few exteriors. But Bernhardt's brilliant interiors give superb depth to each scene and each character, from stern Charles Coburn to sylphlike Janet Leigh to earnest Bruce Bennett (in a great supporting role as an unassuming ENT specialist). The director keeps everybody's performance low-key and believable. In her first scenes, sickly Janet Leigh seems to be wearing no makeup at all. And even Charles Coburn isn't allowed to milk his scenes to the limit.

    A master of lighting and camera angles, Bernhardt was one of the numerous excellent filmmakers in exile from Nazi Germany. His filmography is a strong one, studded with many entertaining films of the forties and fifties. Conflict, starring a quintessential Humphrey Bogart, and My Reputation with Barbara Stanwyck at her best, are two goodies that come to mind. And let's not forget Possessed, highlighted by Joan Crawford's hallucinatory performance.

    But unlike some other exiled directors - such as Wilder, Lubitsch, Lang and Sirk - Curtis Bernhardt hasn't got any universally acclaimed masterpieces on his résumé, so he is often neglected by movie historians. But he was certainly a talent to reckon with, and any of his pictures deserve a careful look.

    P.S. I totally concur with EliotTempleton's comments about Hollywood having a very long history of movies with medical themes. In fact Theodore Reeves, the main writer for this film, was the author of many medical screenplays dating back to the 1930s.
    6planktonrules

    Not bad...

    Considering that Charles Coburn is a supporting actor in this film, it's not at all surprising that I watched "The Doctor and the Girl", as he's one of my favorite actors from Hollywood's golden age.

    Glenn Ford plays a brilliant young doctor--and the son of a brilliant and well-respected older doctor (Coburn). Ford really looks up to his father and wishes to be just like him--including having a VERY dispassionate outlook towards his patients. At first, those around the doctor at the hospital didn't like him--he was too emotionally disconnected from his patients' pain. But, through the course of the film, he has lots of reason to second-guess this approach....as well as other aspects of this domineering man he'd so long idolized.

    Overall, this is a decent little film. However, to me, the ending seemed pretty weak and difficult to believe. Still, it's a bit better than average and worth your time if you, too, are a Coburn-ite! Glenn Ford--overplayed his 'dispassionate' act
    7bkoganbing

    Medicine And Romance

    In The Doctor And The Girl Harry Cohn decided to sell off half of Glenn Ford's contract to MGM for his services as half of the title of the film. It was the same kind of deal Cohn had with William Holden when he bought half of Holden's contract with Paramount. Now Ford would serve two studios and for loanouts in the future he'd have to have his schedule with both MGM and Columbia clear.

    I hope you all that Ford was the doctor part of the title role. The girl is Janet Leigh, but there are two other prominent female roles and they play Ford's sisters, Gloria DeHaven and future first Lady Nancy Davis. They're all Charles Coburn's children and he's a prominent doctor.

    Who has every expectation of seeing his son follow in his footsteps and he lays down the law to everyone else be they his children or his colleagues. The youngest Gloria DeHaven rebels, but in very unhealthy ways. Nancy has married a doctor herself in the person of Warner Anderson, but Anderson is determined to succeed as a pediatrician on his own thank you very much without Coburn's help.

    But Ford starts off as a chip off the old arrogant block, but after some time working in Bellevue the arrogance flakes off, especially after meeting patient Janet Leigh who is in for some surgery. She's alone in the big city until Ford enters her life.

    And Coburn doesn't consider her a suitable candidate for being a doctor's wife. That and his attitude towards his kids in general sets off the plot events in The Doctor And The Girl. He's a tyrannical old cuss, very typical of some of the parts he's played.

    Though Glenn Ford had been making movies, mostly at Columbia for ten years he was new to the MGM studio. As was Janet Leigh. The film was shot on location in New York City. I recognize the facade of Bellevue Hospital, nothing much has changed their in 60 years. Of course if the camera were turned to the other side of the street on First Avenue, a great deal has changed.

    And as for the disparaging remarks about the working class area of Third Avenue where Janet Leigh lives and to where Ford moves when he marries her, that is some of the most expensive real estate in the world. The cost of their apartment in that same general location would boggle the mind.

    Ford and Leigh were fairly new, but for Nancy Davis this was her second film and first speaking role. It was definitely no acting stretch because in real life she was the daughter of a rich and prominent physician, Dr. Loyal C. Davis of Chicago. I'll bet Dr. Davis was a whole lot like Charles Coburn in manner. He was definitely his daughter's mentor in politics and also a mentor for his son-in-law our 40th President.

    There are two other roles of prominence, Bruce Bennett has a very nice role as Ford's supervisor at Bellevue, he was an army doctor in the second World War and he's a bit put out with Ford's vaunted connections and let's him know it. And Basil Ruysdael is in a part that fits him perfectly the wise old family friend to Coburn and his clan. Ruysdael is also a doctor, a most prominent surgeon.

    The Doctor And The Girl is a good addition to the roll of medical dramas. It's not all that different from what folks would be seeing soon on the small screen with Medic, Dr. Kildare, and Ben Casey. And remember this is MGM the people who did produce the Dr. Kildare series for the big screen.
    8EliotTempleton

    In answer to SimonJack's review on 6-3-2013

    I just wanted to say that the above reviewer is a bit misinformed regarding the history of films about physicians, particularly in the '30s. There was no shortage of movies with doctors as the central character in the early sound era, and some of them are "Men in White," "Internes Can't Take Money," "The Citadel," "Strange Interlude," "Symphony of Six Million," "Arrowsmith," "Yellow Jack," "Doctor X" "The Story of Louis Pasteur," just to name a few off the top of my head, without doing any research. Paramount's "Internes Can't Take Money," starring Barbara Stanwyck and Joel McCrea, was the first movie to feature the character of Dr. James Kildare, created by author Max Brand. I'm sure that the studio's executives rued the fact that they didn't have the foresight to feature the sympathetic young doctor in a series, which is what M-G-M did, starring Lew Ayres as the compassionate and crusading Dr. Jimmy Kildare. That series, by the way, started in the '30s with "Young Dr. Kildare" in 1938, followed by "Calling Dr. Kildare" and "The Secret of Dr. Kildare" in 1939. So, you see, there were quite a few doctors gracing movie screens throughout the 1930s.
    8HotToastyRag

    Excellent story and characters

    Hollywood loves making medical dramas, but not all of them become classics through the decades. The Doctor and the Girl is an excellent movie, but I'm willing to bet most people have never heard of it. Glenn Ford and Janet Leigh play the titular characters, and Charles Coburn has a pivotal role as Glenn's father. He's a doctor, too, and he expects Glenn to take over his lucrative practice in a very wealthy neighborhood where there's usually nothing more serious than housewives' nerves. Glenn, however, wants to help the impoverished and seriously sick. They argue constantly about the direction his life will take, and it's very well written because you can see both sides.

    You won't find any blood and guts in this movie, like modern medical television shows. But you will find three-dimensional characters who are conflicted when they make life-altering decisions. A father wants what's best for his son, financially and romantically. A young man wants to believe he's making a difference. If you like this drama, try Not As a Stranger or The Young Doctors for equally obscure but powerful stories.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This was Glenn Ford's first movie for MGM.
    • Goofs
      When Michael is in the outpatient clinic, the chest x-ray on the view-box by his desk is reversed.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Michael Corday: [after waking his superior in the middle of the night] Look, I know you don't like me. I don't blame you. But I had to talk to somebody, that's why I came here...

      Dr. Alfred Norton: ...sit down. What's wrong?

      Dr. Michael Corday: Thanks.

      Dr. Alfred Norton: [seeing the grim look on Corday's face, and trying to break the tension] What, did you kill somebody?

      Dr. Michael Corday: [laughs nervously] No.

      Dr. Alfred Norton: That's alright. I've heard about the girl. What's the trouble?

      Dr. Michael Corday: My father.

      Dr. Alfred Norton: Oh, I see.

      Dr. Michael Corday: You see, if I get involved with her, I'm on my own. If I toe the line, I can have the residency at Chelsea. It's... well, you know what that means.

      Dr. Alfred Norton: Yeah. I'd like to help you out... but nobody can make that decision - you have to make it for yourself.

      Dr. Michael Corday: [Dejectedly, as he gets up to leave] You're right, I shouldn't have come here. I'm sorry. I'll just...

      Dr. Alfred Norton: [takes out a bottle of whiskey] . Sit down, sit down. I'm awake now. Let's have a drink together.

      Dr. Michael Corday: [smiles gently] Okay.

      Dr. Alfred Norton: You know, somehow you don't seem to qualify as a distress case. A ballplayer who's lost an arm, or a painter who goes blind. Let me tell you how I feel about it. Men like your father are tops. We had them in China. But the war kind of jumbles up things. You see a chest specialist doing eye surgery in an emergency station. An endocrine man, handling an amputation. That's when I discovered something. That whether you're doing a decompression on a man's head, or removing a splinter from his finger, you're part of the greatest fraternity in the world. There's nothing like it. Why, I'd be happy in your father's shoes, or as... as a country doctor. Just as long as I was on the team.

      Dr. Michael Corday: [after staring into his drink, he looks up] That's what I wanted to hear. Something like that.

      Dr. Alfred Norton: Now, don't get oversold. You see, what's right for me may be wrong for you. Ask yourself honestly, what it is that you want. And what you're willing to pay for it.

      Dr. Michael Corday: [smiles as he get he gets up to leave] Thanks.

      Dr. Alfred Norton: [smiles] You know, every day I convert doctors to the practice of medicine.

    • Connections
      References Meurtre à crédit (1945)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 29, 1949 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Doctor and the Girl
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,055,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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