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Les Ambitieux

Original title: The Carpetbaggers
  • 1964
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
George Peppard and Carroll Baker in Les Ambitieux (1964)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer3:03
1 Video
99+ Photos
DramaRomance

Jonas Cord is a disagreeable young tycoon who's building planes, directing films, and catting around on the corporate make in 1930s Hollywood.Jonas Cord is a disagreeable young tycoon who's building planes, directing films, and catting around on the corporate make in 1930s Hollywood.Jonas Cord is a disagreeable young tycoon who's building planes, directing films, and catting around on the corporate make in 1930s Hollywood.

  • Director
    • Edward Dmytryk
  • Writers
    • Harold Robbins
    • John Michael Hayes
  • Stars
    • George Peppard
    • Alan Ladd
    • Robert Cummings
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edward Dmytryk
    • Writers
      • Harold Robbins
      • John Michael Hayes
    • Stars
      • George Peppard
      • Alan Ladd
      • Robert Cummings
    • 52User reviews
    • 36Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:03
    Official Trailer

    Photos134

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    Top cast68

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    George Peppard
    George Peppard
    • Jonas Cord
    Alan Ladd
    Alan Ladd
    • Nevada Smith
    Robert Cummings
    Robert Cummings
    • Dan Pierce
    • (as Bob Cummings)
    Martha Hyer
    Martha Hyer
    • Jennie Denton
    Elizabeth Ashley
    Elizabeth Ashley
    • Monica Winthrop
    Lew Ayres
    Lew Ayres
    • 'Mac' McAllister
    Martin Balsam
    Martin Balsam
    • Bernard B. Norman
    Ralph Taeger
    Ralph Taeger
    • Buzz Dalton
    Archie Moore
    Archie Moore
    • Jedediah
    Leif Erickson
    Leif Erickson
    • Jonas Cord Sr.
    Carroll Baker
    Carroll Baker
    • Rina Marlowe
    Arthur Franz
    Arthur Franz
    • Morrissey
    Tom Tully
    Tom Tully
    • Amos Winthrop
    Audrey Totter
    Audrey Totter
    • Prostitute
    Anthony Warde
    Anthony Warde
    • Moroni
    Charles Lane
    Charles Lane
    • Denby
    Tom Lowell
    Tom Lowell
    • David Woolf
    John Conte
    • Ed Ellis
    • Director
      • Edward Dmytryk
    • Writers
      • Harold Robbins
      • John Michael Hayes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews52

    6.52.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7Kelt Smith

    A TYCOON'S LIFE IN EPIC PROPORTIONS

    Based on the best seller by Harold Robbins, this tale of ruthless tycoon Jonas Cord Jr. is no doubt the apparent life story of Howard Hughes. Though the raunchy sexual escapades in the novel have been all but dropped, this was considered very adult and daring at the time of its initial release in 1964. George Peppard plays Jonas Cord Jr. In the first opening scenes, we're treated to a young carefree Jonas with little on his mind except sex and thrills. This soon changes when his father dies of a sudden heart attack and leaves Jr. his vast holdings. Jonas takes dad's ample assets and sets his sights on multiplying everything in as quickly and as calculatingly a manner as possible. He also thinks nothing of toying with his late father's sexy young widow, Rina played by Carroll Baker. He buys her out and sends her packing. Alan Ladd is longtime mentor & friend Nevada who watches these shenanigans from the sidelines and cleans up the mess. Elizabeth Ashley is wonderful as Monica, whom Jonas marries, only to neglect when he tires of her desire to become a mother. Robert Cummings is very effective as a slimy agent, and the always outstanding Martin Balsam is equally as good as a Harry Cohn like studio head. Martha Hyer, who usually plays cool well bred blondes, is surprisingly convincing as call girl Jennie Denton. Small parts are very well played by Leif Erickson, Audrey Totter, and Lew Ayres. Great musical score by Elmer Bernstein, and terrific photography by Joseph MacDonald. This movie is like having a television mini series rolled into a 2& half hour movie.
    Poseidon-3

    Leaves one (carpet)begging for more.

    When a film is based on a Harold Robbin's novel, it's pretty clear that the story isn't going to be about Amish furniture building or love among the hollyhocks. His brand of fiction is usually racy, tawdry and more than a little tasteless, yet readers lap it up, page after page, book after book and moviegoers have lapped at several films based on his work. Unfortunately, since it was 1964, not all the dirt hits the screen this time around. Peppard is the ne'er do well son of a chemical company president who, when his father drops dead in mid tongue-lashing, proceeds to boss everyone around and acquire, acquire, acquire! He doesn't just accumulate businesses and wealth, he also likes to collect women, starting with his own step-mother (Baker) a girl he dated prior to her defection to his father. He marries a sassy young flapper (Ashley), but soon enough is neglecting her, turning her into a clinging nag. He becomes involved in the aeronautics industry and the movie business as well, all the time burning out the men and women around him who do most of the dirty work. Eventually, it takes a wake up call or two to make him see what he's become, but it may be too late for him to change. Peppard gives a very one-note performance. He is great at the forceful, demanding and cold-hearted aspects of the character, but offers no warmth or buried kindness that can allow the audience to care what happens to him. (As the film progresses, he is outfitted with ridiculously made up eyebrows that give him an extra-fiendish look!) Ashley is extremely attractive in a variety of Edith Head concoctions and is the epitome of patience as she lives through Peppard's humiliations. Baker also looks smashing in a wide array of Head's silk robes and slinky evening dresses. Both women have incredibly distinct voices and deliver quite a few amusing and/or suggestive lines of dialogue in their own special way. Several solid and professional actors give decent portrayals as well. Erickson is appropriately tough and overbearing as Peppard's father, Ayres is low-key, but effective, as Peppard's put-upon attorney and Cummings is deliciously slick and sneaky as an opportunistic talent agent. Other good work comes from Ladd as a friendly father figure with a past, Balsam as a cocky studio head, Hyer as a hooker-turned-movie star and Totter as a kindly prostitute. The whole film is lavishly appointed, beautifully scored and full of eye-popping sets, costumes, cars and furnishings. What's ostensibly bad about the film (the tacky storyline, the tart, suggestive dialogue, the unbelievability of the situations) now makes it that much better for an audience that delights in flashy, showy Hollywood cheese. If it had been made only a couple of years later, it could have really been a whopping piece of sexploitation. As it stands, it's more of a tease than anything, but it holds definite rewards for those in the mood. Ladd (who clearly shows the ravages of drink and drugs in this film) would be dead of an overdose within a year. Ashley (who later married Peppard in real life) soon gave up her promising start for about 5 years and never really regained her momentum entirely.
    6bkoganbing

    "You've Become Your Father."

    On one of the Star Trek feature films Spock refers to Jacqueline Susann and Harold Robbins from his vantage point in the future as the 'old masters' of 20th century earth literature. Is that a frightening prospect or what?

    One of the earliest of master Robbins works to get to the silver screen was The Carpetbaggers. It's a novel about a young industrialist whose like a tornado in his business and personal life, destroying everything in the path of Jonas Cord, Jr.

    George Peppard is the younger Cord, based on Howard Hughes as you will know within the first 15 minutes of the film. Peppard is singlemindedly determined to outdo his father, Leif Erickson in every way conceivable. Erickson dies at the beginning of the film leaving an industrial empire to Peppard who rules it 24/7.

    There's also a young wife Erickson left, Rina Marlowe played by Carroll Baker. Think of Baby Doll grown up a bit and you have Carroll as Rina.

    The novel was an immense bestseller in its day and had a pre-existing audience so there was no way it was going to flop commercially. Knowing that is what attracted a very good cast of players to support Peppard and Baker who give some really good performances. My favorite is Robert Cummings as the sly actor's agent who doublebangs Peppard in a business deal and then attempts some blackmail. He is truly a slimeball.

    Of course you can't talk about The Carpetbaggers without talking about Alan Ladd. He plays Peppard's friend and confidante Nevada Smith, a cowboy who Erickson takes on to mentor young Peppard. And he does very well in the part.

    Alan Ladd's wife Sue Carol was his agent and managed his career. Or mismanaged it in one sense. She never let him gracefully transition into good character parts like Nevada Smith as so many of his contemporaries did. She insisted that he had to be the leading man as he was in his big box office days at Paramount. It's too bad Ladd didn't live to see the good reviews he got even from critics who trashed The Carpetbaggers.

    How good was it? Well if it was bad, I doubt a Nevada Smith movie would have ever been made.

    Ironically Ladd was also in a cast with Robert Cummings and Lew Ayres both of whom transitioned into character roles and got work the rest of their lives.

    The Carpetbaggers is trashy, no doubt about it. But it gets a good production from a good cast, a mixture of old and new Hollywood of the period.
    dbdumonteil

    A pattern for JR and co.

    The wealthy family saga has always been an audience's favorite:think "giant" (1956) or "written on the wind"(same year) or "home from the hill"(1960,which featured George Peppard too).The genre became essentially a TV show afterwards,the likes of "Dallas" and "Dynasty".Today,it has almost died down.

    "The carpetbaggers" is very unlikely story of a tycoon who pushes the others out of his way and whose heart of stone nobody can break.Add the de rigueur childhood trauma -which,as anyone past infancy should know,explains everything!Around him , a bevy of beautiful women :Caroll Baker,as his attractive mother-in-law(!)Martha Hyer as a would be actress,and Elizabeth Ashley as his deceived wife .Alan Ladd plays a movie star down on his luck ,because of the coming of the talkies.It's his swansong and his last scene with Peppard is impressive.So impressive we could do without the implausible mushy epilogue which follows.

    George Peppard is extremely good and it's his performance that saves the movie from tediousness.As for Edward Dmytryk,his best works("the Caine mutiny" "the young lions") were behind him and what came next would be disastrous(notably the western "Shalako" with Brigitte Bardot and Sean Connery)
    7richardchatten

    Fictional and Fabulous

    Like Charles Foster Kane, Jonas Cord is far more dashing and virile than the fellow this film carefully avoids claiming he was actually based on.

    Harold Robbins' trashy 1961 bestseller cashing in on the late fifties fascination with the Roaring Twenties erupted into this Technicolor nonsense with a once in a lifetime cast (it was the debut of Elizabeth Ashley and the posthumous swansong of Alan Ladd). George Peppard is a much more rugged adventurer than the man it's not based on (who's actual story just continued to get weirder and weirder for another ten years after this version abruptly ends).

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Carroll Baker, who played George Peppard's stepmother, played his mother two years earlier in La Conquête de l'Ouest (1962). Peppard is almost three years older than Baker.
    • Goofs
      The story takes place in the 1920s and 1930s, but Carroll Baker, Martha Hyer and Elizabeth Ashley's hairstyles are from the 1963 time period in which the film was shot.
    • Quotes

      Jonas Cord: [referring to a porn film] As for this, I've seen it. Twice. You had good lighting and a bad director.

    • Connections
      Featured in Sex, Censorship and the Silver Screen: Look Ma, No Clothes (1996)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 27, 1965 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Les Ambitieux ou la Légende de Jonas Cord
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Embassy Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 30 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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