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IMDbPro

L'auberge du sixième bonheur

Original title: The Inn of the Sixth Happiness
  • 1958
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
5.7K
YOUR RATING
Ingrid Bergman, Robert Donat, and Curd Jürgens in L'auberge du sixième bonheur (1958)
Trailer for this wartime drama set in China
Play trailer3:08
1 Video
13 Photos
BiographyDramaWar

A tenacious British woman becomes a missionary and runs an inn for travelling merchants in China during the Japanese invasion and the tumultuous years leading up to the Second World War.A tenacious British woman becomes a missionary and runs an inn for travelling merchants in China during the Japanese invasion and the tumultuous years leading up to the Second World War.A tenacious British woman becomes a missionary and runs an inn for travelling merchants in China during the Japanese invasion and the tumultuous years leading up to the Second World War.

  • Director
    • Mark Robson
  • Writers
    • Isobel Lennart
    • Alan Burgess
  • Stars
    • Ingrid Bergman
    • Robert Donat
    • Curd Jürgens
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    5.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mark Robson
    • Writers
      • Isobel Lennart
      • Alan Burgess
    • Stars
      • Ingrid Bergman
      • Robert Donat
      • Curd Jürgens
    • 72User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Inn of the Sixth Happiness
    Trailer 3:08
    The Inn of the Sixth Happiness

    Photos13

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    Top cast47

    Edit
    Ingrid Bergman
    Ingrid Bergman
    • Gladys Aylward
    Robert Donat
    Robert Donat
    • The Mandarin of Yang Cheng
    Curd Jürgens
    Curd Jürgens
    • Capt. Lin Nan
    • (as Curt Jurgens)
    Michael David
    • Hok-A
    Athene Seyler
    Athene Seyler
    • Jeannie Lawson
    Ronald Squire
    Ronald Squire
    • Sir Francis Jamison
    Moultrie Kelsall
    Moultrie Kelsall
    • Dr. Robinson
    Richard Wattis
    Richard Wattis
    • Mr. Murfin
    Peter Chong
    • Yang
    Tsai Chin
    Tsai Chin
    • Sui-Lan
    Edith Sharpe
    • Secretary at China Inland Mission
    Joan Young
    • Sir Francis' Cook
    Lian-Shin Yang
    • Woman with Baby
    Noel Hood
    • Miss Thompson
    • (as Noël Hood)
    Burt Kwouk
    Burt Kwouk
    • Li
    Chris Adcock
    • Russian Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Blaine
    • Madman
    • (uncredited)
    Alexis Bobrinskoy
    • Russian Fireman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mark Robson
    • Writers
      • Isobel Lennart
      • Alan Burgess
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews72

    7.25.6K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    10Flaming_star_69

    A Perfect Actress!

    Once more, in this film as she had in her earlier films, Ingrid Bergman proves she was "A PERFECT ACTRESS!" In this film, "Inn of the Sixth Happiness," she plays Englishwoman Gladys Aylward who knew that China was the place where she belonged. Not qualified to be sent there as a missionary she worked and saved her money until she had enough to go on her own. Once there, she meets up with people who manage to help her through her first days. Then, she is nearly all alone and must make it or leave China. She stays. Eventually, just as WW2 is breaking out, she rescues over 100 children and takes them to freedom.

    Again, I repeat, it clearly shows Ingrid Bergman as a perfect actress. She shows her talent and charm all through this film and it is one everyone in the family can watch and appreciate. I highly recommend it.
    10overseer-3

    Not too many movies like this one around

    The Inn Of Sixth Happiness is a film about faith, but more importantly about faith AND works. What is the point of simply saying "I am a Christian", if you just sit in a comfortable house on a well kept street, and read your Bible once a month, and go to church for an hour each Sunday, but never care enough about other people to be ready to sacrifice your life for them to hear the gospel? Gladys was a young woman who felt led by God to go to one of the poorest, uncivilized areas of the world, to preach the story of Jesus, brave a treacherous trip across many lands, learn a strange new language, face the hostility of a people with a different religious background, etc. Comparitively few professing modern Christians would ever put themselves in the line of fire as Gladys did. Ingrid Bergman does a beautiful job playing the role. It was obvious she researched the woman quite deeply and cared about her part. Apparently after the film was made she tried to visit Gladys, but arrived several days too late: Gladys had died. In her modest home Ingrid saw a book with press clippings about the film that Gladys had put together. She had heard second hand that Gladys hadn't been too thrilled with the film; however the "fan book" seemed to declare that bit of gossip a fallacy.

    Robert Donat does a wonderful job of acting as the leading official of the town. It doesn't matter that he was not an Asian actor, he makes it quite believable. Kudos to him. Curt Jurgen is masterful and manly as the soldier Gladys grows to love. I like the way the two of them slowly mellow towards each other during the progression of their relationship; it is one of the chief delights of the film.

    I highly recommend this film to people of faith and to people without faith in God. With so few major motion pictures ever made about people who desire to preach the Christian gospel, it is a nice change to view this classic movie and be inspired.
    janetm-4

    Great old classic based on a true story

    Inn of the Sixth Happiness is a great epic. The story is surprisingly a true one - Gladys Aylward was a British servant who believed her calling was to preach in China.

    Inn of the Sixth Happiness was done in the old Hollywood style with a bit of romance built in, but that seems to be the only way they deviated from the real story.

    Ingrid Bergman does a wonderful job of recreating Gladys and the movie cinematography really captures the old China I knew.

    I would highly recommend this to anyone who wants to be entertained, and to anyone with a sense of adventure.
    9claudio_carvalho

    The One Who Loves People

    In the 30's, the working-class Englishwoman Gladys Aylward (Ingrid Bergman) leaves Liverpool and arrives in London, trying to join the China Missionary Society expecting to be sent to China. However, having only ordinary schooling, her request is turned down due to her lack of qualification to the position. Gladys works hard as a maid and uses all her savings and salaries to buy a train ticket to Tientsin. Then she travels by mule to the remote province of Wangcheng, where she works with the Englishwoman Jeannie Lawson (Athene Seyler) and the Chinese cook Yang (Peter Chong) in the Inn of the Sixth Happiness. When Ms. Lawson has an accident and dies, Gladys has no money to run the establishment and accepts the position of "foot inspector" offered by the Mandarin Hsien Chang (Robert Donat). She is assigned to visit the countryside to promote and enforce the government's law against foot binding Chinese girls. She is successful, changes her nationality to Chinese and her name to Jen-ai (meaning "the one who loves people"), surprising the skeptical bi-racial Captain Lin Nan (Curt Jurgens). When Wangcheng is invaded by the Japanese, Jen-ai travels through the mountains with one hundred children to save them from death.

    "The Inn of the Sixth Happiness" is a wonderful and engaging epic based on the true story of the enlightened Gladys Aylward. Her biography romanticized by Hollywood is awesome, and the movie is fantastic. Ingrid Bergman is stunning in the role of a servant in a period of class struggle in London determined to go to China where she believes she belongs and has a mission from God to be accomplished. The colors and the landscapes are impressive, but the cast of Ingrid Bergman as a woman not gorgeous; Curt Jurgens as a Chinese-Caucasian; and Robert Donat as a Chinese is weird, but they have perfect performances and I believe that is what matters in a film. My vote is nine.

    Title (Brazil): "A Morada da Sexta Felicidade" ("The Inn of the Sixth Happiness")
    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    A movie of heart...

    In spite of the rejection of her application for missionary work because of her lack of formal education, Gladys Aylward—a strong London domestic in the service of a retired explorer—decides to join an English missionary who has set up a hostelry in the mountains of North China... Here, Sara Lanson (Athene Seyler) takes in muleteers, provides them with food and lodging, and tries by ingenious means to convert them to Christianity...

    Gladys saves enough money to travel to China via the Trans-Siberian Railway... Eventually she reaches the inn and Miss Lanson, and becomes her aide...

    Gradually, Gladys wins over the people of the area, with her good works and humble, friendly approach... Soon she is known as "Jan-Ai" (The One Who Loves People).

    After Miss Lanson's death, Gladys goes to work as a foot inspector (to enforce a government edict against binding of females' foot) at the request of a tired and cynical mandarin (Robert Donat), who is irritated by her meddling and sends her on foot-inspection trips to get rid of her... But upon her return from an arduous journey, he finds himself respectful of her dedication and courage and becomes her friend...

    Captain Lin Nan (Curt Jurgens), a Chinese Army officer, comes into the district to enforce discipline in the face of the Japanese 1931 invasion... Gladys meanwhile has succeeded in restoring order in a prison uprising with her healing presence, and when Lin Nan finds it necessary to warn the people of the countryside against the Japanese, Gladys, through bandits she has befriended and are now devoted to her, manages to aid him in his efforts...

    Lin and Gladys gradually fall in love, and before he leaves to rejoin the Chinese forces, he gives her a jade ring as a token of his feeling, and promises that they will someday be permanently together...

    The Japanese attack, and it becomes necessary to march 100 motherless children to a mission safe in the interior... Before Gladys volunteers for, and leaves on, the mission with the children, the Mandarin offers her a parting gift: his conversion to Christianity.

    There is no doubt about the splendor of Ingrid Bergman dramatizing Gladys Aylward, the "woman who wasn't qualified to come to China." With a luminous smile, she fills the screen with radiance, bringing missionary work purity of spirit, challenge, simplicity, frankness, honesty, energy, force and love...

    The film, based on the novel "The Small Woman" by Alan Burgess, is a fine adventure story with love, war, religion, comedy, music, and spectacle...

    Hollywood took some liberties in romancing the character with a Chinese officer—which was not true—Gladys Aylward (1904-70) was a great 'little woman' who lived a virtuous life full of quality, respect and admiration... She faced the impossible with hope, seeing the world through God's telescope...

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This is the final film of Robert Donat, who died during its making. In the scene in which he is saying goodbye to Gladys as the elders prepare to take their leave of the city, he says, as though he was prophesying his death, "I fear we shall never see each other again."
    • Goofs
      The captain is talking with Gladys and says that someone will listen to anything for an extra bowl of rice. The story takes place in northern China and rice is only eaten in southern China. Noodles made from wheat was the mainstay of the Chinese diet in the north. Later in the film it appears Gladys takes a serving of rice from a large pot, and lastly on the journey with the children they come across some uncooked rice which Gladys picks it up.
    • Quotes

      [Robert Donat's final line in his final film]

      The Mandarin: We shall not see each other again, I think. Farewell, Jen-Ai.

    • Crazy credits
      The opening title card reads: "This story is based upon the life of Gladys Aylward, a woman of our time, who was, and is dedicated to the simple, joyful and rare belief that we are all responsible for each other."
    • Connections
      Featured in Ingrid (1984)
    • Soundtracks
      THE CHILDREN'S MARCHING SONG (THIS OLD MAN)
      Traditional (Arranged by Malcolm Arnold)

      Sung by Ingrid Bergman and a children's chorus

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 27, 1959 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • Japanese
      • Mandarin
      • Russian
      • Cantonese
    • Also known as
      • The Inn of the Sixth Happiness
    • Filming locations
      • Penrhyndeudraeth, Gwynedd, Wales, UK
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 38m(158 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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