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IMDbPro

Jeu, set et match

Original title: Hard, Fast and Beautiful!
  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
738
YOUR RATING
Robert Clarke, Sally Forrest, Claire Trevor, and Carleton G. Young in Jeu, set et match (1951)
DramaRomanceSport

Tennis prodigy Florence Farley is torn between romance and her mother's ambitions.Tennis prodigy Florence Farley is torn between romance and her mother's ambitions.Tennis prodigy Florence Farley is torn between romance and her mother's ambitions.

  • Director
    • Ida Lupino
  • Writers
    • Martha Wilkerson
    • John R. Tunis
  • Stars
    • Claire Trevor
    • Sally Forrest
    • Carleton G. Young
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    738
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ida Lupino
    • Writers
      • Martha Wilkerson
      • John R. Tunis
    • Stars
      • Claire Trevor
      • Sally Forrest
      • Carleton G. Young
    • 22User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast41

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    Claire Trevor
    Claire Trevor
    • Millie Farley
    Sally Forrest
    Sally Forrest
    • Florence Farley
    Carleton G. Young
    Carleton G. Young
    • Fletcher Locke
    Robert Clarke
    Robert Clarke
    • Gordon McKay
    Kenneth Patterson
    • Will Farley
    Marcella Cisney
    • Miss Martin
    Joseph Kearns
    Joseph Kearns
    • J.R. Carpenter
    William Hudson
    William Hudson
    • Interne
    George Fisher
    • George Fisher - Announcer
    Arthur Little Jr.
    • Arthur Litte Jr. - Commentator at Forest Hills
    Bert Whitley
    • Young official
    Edwin Reimers
    • Announcer
    Don Kent
    • Umpire
    William Irving
    • Umpire
    Barbara Brier
    • Girl
    Marilyn Mercer
    • Girl
    Bob Alden
    • Photographer
    • (uncredited)
    Herman Belmonte
    • Match Spectator
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ida Lupino
    • Writers
      • Martha Wilkerson
      • John R. Tunis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.3738
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    Featured reviews

    dougdoepke

    A Low-Key Highpoint

    Another of Ida Lupino's low-budget, guerilla entries she hoped would find an intimate place between the twin behemoths of 1950's TV and big screen Technicolor. Too bad her effort largely failed. The odds, I suppose, were just too great. Nonetheless, her productions typically tackled difficult subjects otherwise avoided by the behemoths, e.g. rape in The Outrage (1950) and bigamy in The Bigamist (1953). Unfortunately, this obscure entry, dealing with the perils of success, doesn't rise to the level of the other two, but does have its notable moments.

    To me, those moments come with the effect that Florence's (Forrest) tennis star success has on her middle-class family, which to that point, seems fairly happy. However, with the success, Mom (Trevor) exults, because now she has a chance to escape a dull suburban existence and indulge her secret desire to social climb among the rich and famous. Meanwhile, daughter Florence starts out as a sweet, unassuming girl, but eventually has her head turned by the new world of big time tennis. These are interesting, but fairly routine developments.

    Instead, the really compelling few moments come from Dad and the effect of his daughter's success on him. Now Kenneth Patterson is a name I don't recognize. But here he delivers a really affecting performance as a man who sees his family slipping slowly away from their conventional lives leaving him in an uncertain limbo. Worse, he sees his very manhood undermined by slick promoter Locke (Young) who politely but insistently takes over the lives of his wife and daughter. Catch those few close-ups of Dad trying quietly to comprehend while his home slips away beneath him. Whatever pain he's feeling on the inside, manfully, he won't let it show on the outside. These are minor masterpieces of the collaborative art of camera, script, and performance. The poignancy is made all the more intense by Patterson's refusal to go over the top, and Lupino's awareness that this should be the movie's low-key highpoint.

    More generally, Forrest delivers a sprightly performance as an ace tennis player, even if she's not very good at being bitchy. On the other hand, Trevor knows exactly how to convey the self-indulgent behavior of an unfeeling woman, while Clarke has the thankless role of the patient boyfriend. Too bad, Lupino didn't try to buck the banality of the conventional romance, which mars the otherwise rather tough-minded 80-minutes. All in all, it's a well done little film from one of Hollywood's gutsiest figures, and is still worth catching up with.
    8cabotcove

    Starts well, then loses steam

    The acting and the viewpoint had me riveted in my seat in the first half of this little potboiler, before it turns turgid and never recovers. The tennis scenes are well done. This is one of those movies that seems headed for greatness, but in the end disappoints the viewer.
    9jayraskin1

    Flashes of Genius

    In 1951, there were probably 400 movies released in the United States. This one is the only one that was directed by a woman.

    Ida Lupino made seven low budget "B" films between 1949 and 1953. Despite working under terrible conditions, each one is fascinating and shows great directorial skill and creativity.

    Notice how she actually makes the tennis sequences interesting. Notice how the characters often go beyond the plot and seem to be real people struggling with the world around them. Notice how there are good guys and bad guys, but all the characters have dignity and ultimately redeeming qualities.

    Like Orson Welles, Ida Lupino was a directorial genius. Unfortunately, unlike Welles, she never got a chance to make her "Citizen Kane" All we are left with are seven small gems and the deliciously cute "The Trouble with Angels" that she did in the 1960's. She did direct some 60 television shows in the 1950's and 1960's, including 9 terrific episodes of Boris Karloff's "Thriller" television series.

    As other people have noted, this is a good, but not great movie, with an outstanding performance by Claire Trevor as the mother. If Hollywood had not been completely sexist in the 1950's and if Ida Lupino had been given a budget 1/10th that hundreds of inferior male directors got, it could have been a great film. The fact that she was able to complete it and make it come out as well as it does is a testament to her genius.
    9aromatic-2

    Lupino's perspective is fascinating

    This movie turns its characters' souls inside-out, but never deviates from its pacing or its sports theme. Interesting performances punctuate an early 50's version of a woman trying to find her own way by eschew popular convention. The studio ending forced upon Lupino blunts some of the intended effect.
    7secondtake

    There are thin parts, and flat characters, but Trevor is amazing

    Hard, Fast and Beautiful (1951)

    You might not think a tennis movie--that is, a movie about a young girl making her way up the tennis ladder to the championships--would go very far. And this is the main focus for the first half of it. But in the background some relationships are developing, and here is the real meat of this B-movie, with its slightly suggestive title.

    At the core is a fairly new kind of stereotypical family, the kind broadened in 1950s television from the Donna Reed Show to My Three Sons to the Brady Bunch--a suburban utopia. Husband and wife in this case are politely happy, and the wife, played brilliantly by Claire Trevor, in particular is secretly frustrated. When her daughter begins her rise in the tennis world, and falls in love with the local pretty boy (a nice guy, too), she starts to be jealous, or at least to see what she's been missing in her own life. And then the power man comes along, a mover and shaker in the tennis world who see the daughter's talent and also the mother's hunger and charm.

    It can only get interesting from there, and it does.

    The tennis scenes are not terrible, but there are too many of them, I think, and we don't totally care who wins the matches. But again, this is backdrop, and as the ball is hit hard and fast, we see the subplots brood and get interesting, within the limits of the code still holding sway for another decade.

    This is an Ida Lupino movie. You might not think it matters that a woman directed a fairly formula kind of film, but there are slight tilts to the attitudes that seem only possible by having a woman (and a woman like Lupino) in charge. And the characters who really rise to the most complexity are women, the daughter to some extent limited by her role as a young and naive whiz, but the mother, for sure. Between Trevor and Lupino we have an interaction that comes alive on screen.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      At the 34-minute mark, Florence is playing a match in Seabright, New Jersey. In the crowd, Robert Ryan and director Ida Lupino (both uncredited) are shown applauding her.
    • Goofs
      Florence looks at her new necklace in the mirror while she is wearing it. The words I LOVE YOU CHAMP are seen in the mirror. They ought to have been backwards.
    • Connections
      Featured in Howard Hughes: His Women and His Movies (2000)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 7, 1952 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Hard, Fast and Beautiful!
    • Filming locations
      • West Side Tennis Club - 1 Tennis Place, Forest Hills, Queens, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production company
      • The Filmakers
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 18 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Robert Clarke, Sally Forrest, Claire Trevor, and Carleton G. Young in Jeu, set et match (1951)
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