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Le monde de Suzie Wong

Original title: The World of Suzie Wong
  • 1960
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
William Holden and Nancy Kwan in Le monde de Suzie Wong (1960)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:07
1 Video
58 Photos
DramaRomance

A businessman moves to Hong Kong to pursue a career as an artist and falls in love with a prostitute he hires as a model.A businessman moves to Hong Kong to pursue a career as an artist and falls in love with a prostitute he hires as a model.A businessman moves to Hong Kong to pursue a career as an artist and falls in love with a prostitute he hires as a model.

  • Director
    • Richard Quine
  • Writers
    • Paul Osborn
    • Richard Mason
    • John Patrick
  • Stars
    • William Holden
    • Nancy Kwan
    • Sylvia Syms
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Quine
    • Writers
      • Paul Osborn
      • Richard Mason
      • John Patrick
    • Stars
      • William Holden
      • Nancy Kwan
      • Sylvia Syms
    • 49User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    The World of Suzie Wong
    Trailer 3:07
    The World of Suzie Wong

    Photos58

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    Top cast29

    Edit
    William Holden
    William Holden
    • Robert Lomax
    Nancy Kwan
    Nancy Kwan
    • Suzie Wong
    Sylvia Syms
    Sylvia Syms
    • Kay O'Neill
    Michael Wilding
    Michael Wilding
    • Ben Marlowe
    Jacqueline Chan
    Jacqueline Chan
    • Gwennie Lee
    • (as Jacqui Chan)
    Laurence Naismith
    Laurence Naismith
    • O'Neill
    Yvonne Shima
    • Minnie Ho
    Andy Ho
    • Ah Tong
    Lier Hwang
    • Wednesday Lu
    Bernard Cribbins
    Bernard Cribbins
    • Otis
    Edwina Carroll
    Edwina Carroll
    • Mrs. Marlowe
    Dervis Ward
    • British Sailor
    Marian Spencer
    • Dinner Guest
    Lionel Blair
    Lionel Blair
    • Dancing Sailor
    David Cargill
    David Cargill
    • Dancing Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    Anthony Chinn
    Anthony Chinn
    • Police Officer on Ferry
    • (uncredited)
    Michael Collins
    • Dinner Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Rodney Dines
    • American Sailor
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Richard Quine
    • Writers
      • Paul Osborn
      • Richard Mason
      • John Patrick
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews49

    6.92.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8inkblot11

    My sisters and I loved this film when we were teens, even if we really didn't understand the plot implications, for it is a lovely romance

    Robert (William Holden) was a success in the business world but found it unfulfilling. Thus, he made what could be called a major life change! Moving to Hong Kong so he can devote himself to his real goal, making it as an oil painter, he can only afford to rent digs in a cheap hotel. All too soon he discovers that the native call girls of the city meet their American or European beaux in the same place! One absolutely lovely gal is Suzie Wong (Nancy Kwan) who catches Robert's eye and visa versa. But, since Robert is comparatively poor at the moment and Suzie must make ends meet for herself and her family, the situation becomes rather sticky. A romance between the two is out, so a friendship develops. However, the more time they spend with one another, the more their hearts become entwined. Soon, Robert doesn't want Suzie to see any other men but him yet, if she doesn't, she will fall on hard times. Even then, when Robert does take Suzie out to a restaurant, the native wait staff and other "high society" Caucasians make fun of the two together, for they know what her profession is. Will love still triumph? The powers that be in sixties television must have gotten this film cheaply, for it was on quite a bit of the time. As such, my sisters and I really adored the movie, having seen Kwan in Flower Drum Song and admiring her beauty. Because the call girl angle is truly subtle, it took awhile for us to really understand the big picture. We saw it more as a romance between two people from different worlds, which it also is. As the two principals, Holden and Kwan make for a great couple while the scenery, costumes, and photography from Hong Kong are also a treat. Meanwhile, the script displays a touching tale of socially forbidden love while the direction sensitively deals with a rather difficult subject. Therefore, if you see the late, late show is featuring this flick, don't miss out. Even 50 years later, it is still a romantic and entertaining view.
    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    "I Can't pay you much, but I'd like you to pose for me."

    The setting is Hong Kong in the late fifties…

    The film tells the story of a bittersweet love affair between an American architect who has decided to try painting and a wonderful Asian girl who uses with vigor and diligence her essentially dirty trade in a turmoil of mischievous fantasy…

    Suzie Wong (Nancy Kwan), attracted to Robert Lomax (Holden), offers to be his "steady girlfriend," but a world-weary Lomax informs her that he has had enough of love and wants only to paint…

    Paint he does, and the irresistible hooker, appointed as a model, appears in his work in a variety of poses… A compassionate Lomax suddenly realizes he loves her and takes her as his mistress…

    There are comic moments in Richard Quine's movie concerning the lies Suzie relates to win the respect of her prostitute friends and her drunken admirer, Ben (Michael Wilding).

    Nancy Kwan in her film's debut displays a large range of feelings, alternating hardness, affection, and affinity
    6woolrich2-1

    Dated, but, Basically, a Bicultural Love Story Told with Feeling

    American William Holden, as former architect turned struggling artist, Robert Lomax, a cynic who's "pushing forty," arrives in 1960 Hong Kong to make a valiant effort for his art. He's never been there and has no idea what to expect. On the ferry boat to Kowloon, he has a sort of altercation with the very young & attractive Nancy Kwan, who claims to be named "Mei Li," a very proper young lady about to enter into an arranged marriage set up by her wealthy father. Shortly before reluctantly introducing herself, she also almost manages to have Robert arrested by claiming he's a purse snatcher, which, judging from her mirthful expression, she does for the sheer entertainment value of the situation.

    Robert, completely lost and not particularly wealthy, soon makes his way to the Wan Chai district, and, in his naivete as American abroad, fails to realize he's entered the main prostitution district in the city. His journey to the seedy hotel where he sets up shop as artist would be one of the highlights of the film: Robert's amazement and confusion at the bustling, vibrant city that has become his new home come across nicely. In many ways, the brilliant cinematography and camera work turn the city of Hong Kong itself into the unacknowledged third star of the film. However, it's a very different Hong Kong than now: very much a British colonial post, and, in segments of the neighborhoods, almost a Third World city.

    Unfortunately, once Robert reaches the hotel, the movie loses much realism, and we've plainly entered a 1950's Hollywood set version of Hong Kong, complete with cartoonish prostitutes and Brit sailors on leave. It turns out that prim-and-proper Mei Li's none other than "very popular" Wan Chai "girl" Suzie Wong. There are some very dated scenes that follow, although actress Jacqui Chan's charming in an off kilter way as bar girl Gwennie Lee. Nancy Kwan vamps and spouts much pidgin English and says "for goodness' sake" about 500 times in a row. Fortunately, Robert, Suzie, and the camera eventually hit the streets of actual Hong Kong again.

    Then, something odd happens with this film, bit by bit. The movie focuses more and more on Robert and Suzie as a couple, and, bit by bit, Suzie becomes less of a stereotypical bar girl and more and more of a human being who behaves unexpectedly. It turns out that she has developed a persona for herself, a very manipulative, successful one, that's given her an edge in a very harsh city for abandoned young women. She has an active fantasy life, that's enabled her to separate herself psychologically from the more sordid aspects of what she's done in order to survive. Robert too, becomes less and less Joe Gillis, Jr. (for those of you who've seen Holden in SUNSET BLVD. from a decade earlier), a one-note, crabby cynic with a paternalistic attitude towards Suzie, and more and more a human being who's in love. He shows this most plainly when he finds out that Suzie has an infant son, and Robert accepts little Winston affectionately as his own. In a complex way, Suzie, and also little Winston, act as muses for Robert, and his own art becomes more inspired and interesting because of them. Suzie also benefits from her love for Robert and shows some real emotion for him rather than her usual play acting.

    This is where I find the movie interesting, as it depicts, much more realistically than one might expect in 1960, the dimensions of a biracial, bicultural couple's life together. Although Robert has made contact with the British elite in the city and needs them for patronage for his art, he's never really comfortable with them or their patronizing, mildly racist way of observing the Chinese. Kay O'Neill (actress Sylvia Syms), the daughter of a well-placed British banker, falls for Robert, but he doesn't really feel any emotion for her as he does for Suzie. Of course, she can't believe Robert would really prefer Suzie to her. When he announces he's thinking of marrying Suzie, Kay's father says that, of course, he could never hire someone in those circumstances. The rest of the Brits more talk around Suzie than to her whenever she's present. Likewise, most of the Chinese, while polite with Robert, don't know quite what to make of him, either, and he seems to do better either with Suzie as intermediary or because her friends help him along. It's obvious too that sometimes cultural miscues cause Suzie and Robert to misunderstand one another. This leads to the beginning of the climax of the film, which is somewhat tragic.

    No doubt, this has been a controversial film. In the past, many Asian-American studies professors seemed to grow livid at the mention of it. This was supposed to be the ne plus ultra (or maybe the nadir, instead) for stereotypical portrayals of all Asian women as submissive little China doll characters or bar girls. There is some of that there (although much less than in most other 1950's-early 1960's American films), but, as I'd noted, the interesting thing's how the stereotype turns out to be a fake, something created for the advantage (if that's the word) of the heroine for relating to foreigners. It's also interesting how the genuine romance, one based on a sort of mutual respect between Robert and Suzie, becomes more important. Most interesting of all's the portrayal (that mostly rings true) of a biracial, bicultural romance between two human beings. As someone involved in such a relationship for many years, I found myself giving the film an extra star for this "rightness" alone.

    Plus, if nothing else, this movie's a terrific time capsule/travelogue of Hong Kong, as it was never so brilliantly captured elsewhere on screen in that era.
    7iadoredave

    Lives up to the hype!

    AT LONG LAST I saw The World of Suzie Wong at my school library today. You just have to see it to believe it. It is a shame that it takes an outsider (Hollywood) to capture the exotic beauty of the old-time Hong Kong. (With Love Is a Many-splendored Thing as the forerunner) I have never seen Hong Kong photographed in a flattering yet realistic light. Nancy Kwan ignites the screen with such charm and grace which Asian actresses seriously lack today. All through the film I smile whenever I see her. I love her chemistry with William Holden..yet another favorite of mine...Hong Kong is blessed to be immortalized by this exquisite romance.
    nicholas.rhodes

    The Original "Pretty Woman"

    Long before "Pretty Woman", "Maid in Manhattan" and "In the Mood For Love" were dreamed up, we have this beautiful film from the fifties which is the meatiest of them all.

    True the film is a bit long, but this does not detract from the general impression it gives to the spectator.

    The dialogues are sublime, the technicolor is wonderful and both protagonists are very beaufiful actors. I saw this on TV and would dearly love to have it on DVD ( chance would be a fine thing !!! ) to have a better sound quality for the dialogues.

    For pure unadulterated romance and passion, this film is hard to beat. One gets the impression that it was rather ahead of its time when it came out.

    Lastly, those frightening landslide sequences close to the end are really impressive, and the "baby's funeral" also leaves a bitter taste in the mouth.

    A truly magnificent film, seemingly little known today, and which would gain from being made better known to the general public .......

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Referring to France Nuyen's firing from the film version of "The World of Suzie Wong," the famed show biz columnist Louella Parsons wrote the following in the daily newspaper, the Chicago American, on Tuesday, February 27, 1962 (page eight) when Nuyen was cast opposite Charlton Heston in Le seigneur d'Hawaï (1962) in '62": "As for little Miss Nuyen, things have been going much better for her recently since her bad start when she was taken out of 'The World of Suzie Wong' when she put on too much poundage worrying over M. Brando." And in its review of the film, the TV Guide site also references the firing: "Nuyen was distressed at reports from California that her lover, Marlon Brando, was carrying on with another woman, and drowning her sorrows in food. The actress gained so much weight that she was fired from the part."
    • Goofs
      Robert Lomax's hotel suite (Borehamwood studio) faces the building across the street, but when he walks a few steps up to the outside patio (Hong Kong location) - he is thirty feet above it.
    • Quotes

      Gwennie Lee: Suzie, what happen? Dear, you have accident? You fall down?

      Suzie Wong: [she had bitten her own lip, to make it bloody.] Robert, he beat me up.

      Wednesday Lu: Oh, you steal something from him?

      Suzie Wong: No, he jealous. He crazy in love with me. I tell him I have tea in his room with my girlfriends. He not believe me. He think I have tea with sailor.

      Minnie Ho: Oh, we'll tell him the truth, Suzie.

      Suzie Wong: He not believe you, Minnie Ho. Poor Robert, he can't help how he feels. Besides, he only hit me 8 to 10 times.

      Gwennie Lee: That prove Robert very in love with you.

      Wednesday Lu: Oh, you very lucky, Suzie.

      Suzie Wong: I know. Tomorrow he'll be sorry. Bye, I go home now.

      Suzie Wong: [to Gwennie] So sorry you not have nice man to beat you up.

    • Connections
      Featured in Slaying the Dragon (1988)
    • Soundtracks
      The World of Suzie Wong
      Lyrics by Sammy Cahn

      Music by Jimmy Van Heusen

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    • FRANCE NUYEN----WAS SHE SUPPOSE TO PLAY "SUZIE WONG"?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 15, 1961 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Cantonese
    • Also known as
      • El mundo de Suzie Wong
    • Filming locations
      • Hong Kong, China(Exterior)
    • Production company
      • World Enterprises
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $7,300,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 6m(126 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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