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Tendre est la nuit

Original title: Tender Is the Night
  • 1962
  • Approved
  • 2h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
971
YOUR RATING
Tendre est la nuit (1962)
A Psychiatrist and his life with a patient he helped to recover.
Play trailer3:10
1 Video
51 Photos
Drama

A Psychiatrist and his life with a patient he helped to recover.A Psychiatrist and his life with a patient he helped to recover.A Psychiatrist and his life with a patient he helped to recover.

  • Director
    • Henry King
  • Writers
    • Ivan Moffat
    • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Stars
    • Jennifer Jones
    • Jason Robards
    • Joan Fontaine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    971
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henry King
    • Writers
      • Ivan Moffat
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • Stars
      • Jennifer Jones
      • Jason Robards
      • Joan Fontaine
    • 36User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:10
    Official Trailer

    Photos50

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    Top cast69

    Edit
    Jennifer Jones
    Jennifer Jones
    • Nicole Diver
    Jason Robards
    Jason Robards
    • Dr. Richard 'Dick' Diver
    • (as Jason Robards Jr.)
    Joan Fontaine
    Joan Fontaine
    • Baby Warren
    Tom Ewell
    Tom Ewell
    • Abe North
    Cesare Danova
    Cesare Danova
    • Tommy Barban
    Jill St. John
    Jill St. John
    • Rosemary Hoyt
    Paul Lukas
    Paul Lukas
    • Dr. Dohmler - Psychiatrist
    Bea Benaderet
    Bea Benaderet
    • Mrs. McKisco
    Charles Fredericks
    Charles Fredericks
    • Mr. Albert Charles McKisco
    Sanford Meisner
    Sanford Meisner
    • Dr. Franz Gregorovious
    Mac McWhorter
    • Colis Clay
    Albert Carrier
    Albert Carrier
    • Louis
    Richard De Combray
    • Francisco Prado
    Carole Mathews
    Carole Mathews
    • Mrs. Hoyt
    Alan Napier
    Alan Napier
    • Señor Pardo
    Leslie Farrell
    • Topsy Diver
    Michael Crisalli
    • Lanier Diver
    Earl Grant
    • Piano Player
    • Director
      • Henry King
    • Writers
      • Ivan Moffat
      • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews36

    6.0971
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    Featured reviews

    7Boyo-2

    Jones, Robards shine in this Fitzgerald adaptation

    **spoiler alert**

    This movie does not have the greatest reputation in the world. I'd read that Jennifer Jones was too old to play Nicole, that she overacts, that she has no chemistry with Jason Robards, that it was too long, etc.

    Well don't believe it!

    It DID take me several attempts to watch the whole thing, but that nothing to do with the movie, that had to do with something else. When

    I finally saw the whole thing all the way through, I enjoyed it very much and questioned why it does not have more admirers.

    It explores many themes, thoughtfully and without exploitation. Should a doctor romance his patient? When does the patient stop being a patient, exactly, and start being a person?

    Nicole meets Dick in a sanitarium. She's there for a variety of reasons, none of which sister Joan Fontaine really care to discuss. It has something to do with their father. Nicole eventually is released and runs into Dick years later, and they get married. They have a wonderful life and two children but it starts to fall apart. Not because of Nicole's mental state - actually, as it turns out, she becomes the stable one. But a friend of theirs (Tom Ewell, making a fool of himself as a chronic drunk) dies, their daughter almost dies from alcohol poisoning, and Dick is see with an actress (Jill St. John) at a brawl in a café and their picture makes all the front pages.

    Jennifer Jones is prone to be very mannered. In spite of them she's still a favorite, but here she's really very good, she's not too old to play the part, and her chemistry with Robards is believable. Fontaine doesn't do much but enjoy her own wardrobe. As I mentioned, Ewell is a drunk but his death scene (or, rather, the circumstances surrounding it) are the worse thing in the movie. Jill St. John is first seen as a youngster but she matures as the movie progresses..unfortunately, her acting does not improve.

    At over 2 1/2 hours, its an investment, but worth your time. Now I want to watch it again. 8/10.
    5MarieGabrielle

    Something distinctly artificial

    and stilted about this film, and its casting.

    Jason Robards who always delivers, just seems wooden and ineffectual as Dick Diver. Jennifer Jones as the ever desirable, but tragic Nicole Diver, just seems unsympathetic, even strident and cruel.

    The alcohol flows freely and the jet-set lifestyle is invoked by a humorous Tom Ewell, who sings the movies theme song at the beginning of this disjointed movie. (Tom Ewell is forever planted in my memory as Marilyn Monroes bumbling neighbor in "The Seven Year Itch", or as the silly, clichéd father in "State Fair") That being said, it almost seems as if the writers did not know how to treat the subject of psychoanalysis and mental illness. F Scott Fitgerald and his wife endured tragedy, his wife Zelda Sayre Fitgerald was diagnosed with schizophrenia while still in her 20's. She was delusional at times, and probably never walked around at all times looking like a John Robert Powers model,(as Jones does in this movie).

    It was 1962 after all, psychoanalysis was chic and stylish, so this film presents the illness as stylish and merely the effect of being rich and bored on the French Riviera. I wanted to like this film, but it is sorely dated and due for a remake. If nothing else it aptly demonstrates society stigma and misconceptions when portraying mental illness. No wonder there is still so much denial, if this film was considered an acceptable story of a physician and his wife in 1962. Worth seeing as a curiosity. 5/10.
    gregcouture

    Little more than European locations in CinemaScope.

    When this was released I managed to see most films first-run, except the ones clearly aimed at my age group. (Such a snob, n'est-ce pas?!?) So, being a fan of both Jennifer and Joan, I went to a Los Angeles-area theater with top-notch projection and sound. Back then Twentieth-Century Fox rarely stinted on sending companies to the actual locales of the stories being filmed, so this one has plenty of its share of gorgeous shots set in Switzerland and elsewhere on the Continent, as I recall.

    But, as other comments herein attest, the rest is somewhat of a disappointment. Henry King, the director, seemed to encourage Jennifer Jones in some of her less-attractive mannerisms which somehow were not so apt as a rendition of her character's mental distress. Jason Robards, Jr. was never much of a success as a romantic lead, in my opinion. And Joan Fontaine was assigned the rather thankless role of a rich "bitch." All in all it's a prime example of how the studio "system" was growing out of touch with an ever-younger movie audience. Nevertheless for those of us who have always appreciated luxurious eye candy, it was a fairly tasty treat.
    6blanche-2

    I guess everyone enjoyed this film more than I did

    Well, c'est la vie.

    A wonderful cast and beautiful scenery are the highlights of "Tender is the Night," a 1962 film starring Jason Robards, Jennifer Jones, Tom Ewell, Joan Fonaine, Jill St. John, and Paul Lukas. The film is based on a book by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

    Fitzgerald wrote beautiful prose, but much of his work has been difficult to adapt to the screen. He himself worked as a writer in Hollywood but wound up uncredited on most of the scripts and told someone that he did recognize one of his lines in a film that evidently had not been cut from a script.

    In this film, Robards plays Dick Driver, a psychiatrist who falls for one of his patients, Nicole (Jones). Nicole is being treated for mental instability, the result of incest (though this is only hinted at). When Dick realizes his feelings, and hers, he quickly distances himself, but she runs into him after she leaves the sanitarium and the two wind up getting married.

    Nicole is filthy rich, and the money is controlled by her sister (Joan Fontaine). Dick gets lulled into the good life, the parties, the travel, the luxury, and while he intends to return to his work at the sanitarium and finish a book, he doesn't go. This is mainly because the insecure and sometimes paranoid Nicole is resistant. When he finally returns to the sanitarium, his mentor (Lukas) is dying and the sanitarium has been taken over by a colleague, who only wants Driver's investment. Driver refuses, since he would have to get the money from Nicole, but she insists. But for Driver, it feels like it's all too late.

    The acting is superb and Jones, one of my favorites, looks gorgeous throughout. She is somewhat nervous and mannered as Nicole, but that's the character, and she captures her. Robards is strong, emotional, and excellent as the deeply convicted Driver. And how wonderful to see Paul Lukas. I actually recognized his voice and then looked at his face -- I'm so used to seeing him in movies made 20 years earlier that I didn't recognize him at first.

    The problem with the film for me is that so much that goes on is beneath the surface -- this can be a fascinating feature, but it is directed at too leisurely a pace by Henry King. The St. John character is never really fleshed out, she darts in and out of the picture; ditto the drunken composer played by Tom Ewell. We just don't know enough about him to care. Joan Fontaine wears some great clothes and acts well, and we do get to know her somewhat.

    The other problem is the time in which it is set, which seems a bit generic. It's supposed to be the '20s - I can tell by the music - but not by anything else. The ambiance is '60s.

    Nevertheless, Tender is the Night was an ambitious project that probably could have used some judicious editing, but if you're a Jones fan you won't want to miss it.
    8Anakim7

    Good love story

    Other comments cover every aspect except: The semi-autobiographical nature of Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald's novel, "Tender Is The Night". It is the story of his love for Zelda Sayre. Putting himself in the role of a psychiatrist who makes the fatal mistake of falling in love with a patient. F. Scott Fitzgerald from Minneapolis, MN, transforms his real life experiences into fiction beautifully in the Fitzgeraldian style. Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald spent time at Shepard-Pratt Hospital and at Eudowood Sanitarium. Fitzgerald and Zelda became hypnotized by the lifestyle provided by the money from Scott's work. When the money ran out he went back to work until his luck ran out. I enjoyed seeing "Tender Is The Night" several times and would enjoying seeing this film again.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The Divers are based on real-life couple Gerald and Sara Murphy, friends and patrons of the famous, including the author of this story, F. Scott Fitzgerald. Poet Archibald Macleish once said of the Murphys that "there was a shine to life wherever they were".
    • Goofs
      The American flag adorning the child's sand castle has its stars arranged in the staggered rows of 5 and 6 stars as in the current 50 stars arrangement. An American flag of the 1920's would have had its stars in the 6 rows of 8 arrangement.
    • Quotes

      Mr. Albert Charles McKisco: What's your place in the economy of life, Barban?

      Tommy Barban: I shoot

      Mr. Albert Charles McKisco: Just any old thing, huh?

      Tommy Barban: Well, er... buffalo in Africa, tigers in India, Bolsheviks in Europe...

      Mr. Albert Charles McKisco: Don't you ever get the urge to do anything?

      Tommy Barban: Yes. I would like to restore the Holy Roman Empire.

    • Connections
      Featured in 20th Century-Fox: The First 50 Years (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Tender Is the Night
      Music by Sammy Fain

      Lyrics by Paul Francis Webster

      Sung by an off-screen vocal group during the opening credits

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 23, 1962 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Tierna es la noche
    • Filming locations
      • Italy
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $3,900,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 22m(142 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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