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IMDbPro

Vertes Demeures

Original title: Green Mansions
  • 1959
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Audrey Hepburn and Anthony Perkins in Vertes Demeures (1959)
A young man in the jungles of Venezuela meets a strange girl of the forest and falls in love with her.
Play trailer2:50
1 Video
78 Photos
Jungle AdventurePeriod DramaQuestSurvivalAdventureDramaRomance

A young man in the jungles of Venezuela meets a strange girl of the forest and falls in love with her.A young man in the jungles of Venezuela meets a strange girl of the forest and falls in love with her.A young man in the jungles of Venezuela meets a strange girl of the forest and falls in love with her.

  • Director
    • Mel Ferrer
  • Writers
    • Dorothy Kingsley
    • William Henry Hudson
  • Stars
    • Audrey Hepburn
    • Anthony Perkins
    • Lee J. Cobb
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mel Ferrer
    • Writers
      • Dorothy Kingsley
      • William Henry Hudson
    • Stars
      • Audrey Hepburn
      • Anthony Perkins
      • Lee J. Cobb
    • 55User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 2:50
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    Photos78

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    Top cast11

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    Audrey Hepburn
    Audrey Hepburn
    • Rima
    Anthony Perkins
    Anthony Perkins
    • Abel
    Lee J. Cobb
    Lee J. Cobb
    • Nuflo
    Sessue Hayakawa
    Sessue Hayakawa
    • Runi
    Henry Silva
    Henry Silva
    • Kua-Ko
    Nehemiah Persoff
    Nehemiah Persoff
    • Don Panta
    Michael Pate
    Michael Pate
    • Priest
    Estelle Hemsley
    Estelle Hemsley
    • Cla-Cla
    Yoneo Iguchi
    • Native Guide
    • (uncredited)
    Bill Saito
    • Native Guide
    • (uncredited)
    Ron Veto
    • Native
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Mel Ferrer
    • Writers
      • Dorothy Kingsley
      • William Henry Hudson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews55

    5.32.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6Cheetah-6

    Dreamlike

    Anthony Perkins does seem a little out of place in this beautifully shot, unique film from 1959. That is, until he makes it to the inner jungle and meets the bird girl Audrey Hepburn. In the romantic scenes with her, the two of them work quite well. The scene where he plays guitar and sings his love song to Rima (Hepburn) and seeing her face as he woos her, is the definite highlight for me. When he's trying to play the tough, strong guy it's a bit laughable. The cinematography is stunning and the Venezuelan jungle comes off as an idyllic fantasy place that's a sensual delight to watch. (The fakiness doesn't distract from the beauty but only helps to give it an otherworldly look. I really don't think it was intended to appear real) Overall this is not a very good film, but there's a romantic, sexual and fantasy appeal to the jungle scenes with Hepburn and Perkins that fuels the imagination for a film that could have been. Watching Hepburn prance around the jungle and glide along tree branches in that lithe way of hers is enough reason to watch this very different and amusing tale from the late 50's.
    5AlsExGal

    Good technical work, mediocre story

    It's easy to see why 1959 critics called it "muddled". The film, which is set in South America's jungles, manages to be an ecological statement (man should take care of his surroundings), a love story, a tale of redemption (in the film's first ten minutes, Abel (Anthony Perkins) sees his father killed and vows vengeance on the killers. Audrey Hepburn as Rima does her utmost in a near impossible part. Lee J. Cobb overacts as Rima's protector.

    MGM spent over one million dollars (a great deal of money in 1959) getting shots of South America to mix in with the main filming done on MGM's back lot. The mixing in of the shots is well done, but it's obvious what was shot at MGM and what were the South American jungle shots. Perkins is the voice of sanity in the film, because whenever the plot threatens to get too wispy, he brings it back down to earth. He has a scene where he serenades Rima with his lovely tenor voice. It was a pity that he was never in a film musical.

    If the film has a message it seems to be that true love never dies.
    TheVid

    Oddball Hollywood reworking of the famous book, redeemable in spite of incredibly bad casting choices.

    Colorful locales, kitschy production design and a nice stroke of sado-masochism go a long way in making this obscure gem a guilty pleasure of jungle-lust adventure. Mel Ferrer directs the story like a comics classic, with his then-wife Audrey Hepburn playing a jungle girl with her usual Givenchy class, and Tony Perkins as a young Indiana-Jones type. Hokey and utterly inappropriate, but still enjoyably offbeat, especially when Perkins croons a love song. The other cast members fare much better: with Lee J. Cobb overacting perfectly as Audrey's old man; Sessue Hayakawa, laconic and petulant as the Indian chief; and Henry Silva, all wide-eyed enthusiasm as the warrior relishing his tortuous ritual of courage. Old-style Hollywood, matinee magic in CinemaScope, with the added wonder of Stereophonic sound.
    5EUyeshima

    Hepburn in an Odd Though Watchable Curio as a Jungle Girl

    This must surely be the strangest movie that Audrey Hepburn made, though it's not without its virtues. Directed by her-then husband, actor Mel Ferrer, the 1959 movie is a fanciful adventure story where Hepburn plays Rima, a nymph-like "bird girl" living in the remotest part of the Venezuelan jungle. She is being hunted by the local Indian tribesmen for being an evil spirit, but she is protected first by her grandfather Nuflo and then by Abel, a young political refugee whom she rescues after he is bitten by a deadly coral snake. The slowly-paced story initially focuses on Abel's hazardous journey into the jungle with Joseph Ruttenberg's cinematography nicely capturing the authentic Amazon locations.

    Rima shows up as a shadowy figure about a half-hour into the film and doesn't speak until about ten minutes later. Leave it to Hepburn to exhibit any sort of conviction in such an impossible role. Looking ethereal if a little too styled and coiffed (even without Givenchy) and sounding entirely too Euro-cosmopolitan, she still exudes Rima's innocence while discovering the darker secrets of her past. The rest of the cast is not as lucky. Anthony Perkins, a year away from "Psycho", is irritatingly unctuous as Abel when he is not simply confounded by his heroic role. His low point has to be the ridiculous scene when he sings a love song to Rima as he strums his guitar. And where exactly did the guitar come from? Familiar character actors show up in the oddest roles. Lee J. Cobb, heavily made up as a cross between Uncle Jesse Duke and Santa Claus, turns in yet another ham-fisted performance as Nuflo, and Henry Silva is cast as another exotic as the ultimately nefarious tribal leader. Nehemiah Persoff has a small bit at the beginning as a greedy trader, while Sessue Hayakawa, of all people, has a mostly silent role as the tribal leader. Adding to the artifice is the obvious use of soundstages and matte shots to replicate the jungle, and the ending is pure Hollywood sappiness. This is a curio for Hepburn fans.
    jann-6

    Appealing romance, at least

    After reading reviews of this film I expected it to be pretty bad. I wanted to see it anyway because I love Audrey Hepburn, and I always have an interest in seeing Anthony Perkins films since I loved him in Psycho (though I must admit I still haven't seen him do anything as well as he did Norman Bates.) So I put the tape in the VCR and expected something visually stimulating, but with a dull story. What I got was something visually stimulating, and a story interesting enough to keep me entertained. The scenery is gorgeous (though I agree with a previous comment that some of it looks fake), and Hepburn and Perkins are equally attractive. The music is heady and romantic (Tony Perkins sings - and he does this well!) A few scenes of primitive tribal rituals are the only inelegant parts of the film. I do think that Audrey Hepburn was miscast as "the bird girl"; she seems a bit too sophisticated for this type of role (and dare I say just a wee bit too old - she was about 30 at the time, playing a character constantly referred to as "that child.") But it doesn't matter. She was a great actress so she did this role well. Anthony Perkins did well at least in the more romantic scenes. The chemistry between them worked for me. The whole movie worked for me, at least on a hedonistic level. Green Mansions isn't a "great movie", but it's an enjoyable one.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      One of the first films (if not the first) to be shot using Panavision's Auto Panatar lenses that eliminated what was called "anamorphic mumps" in the wide-screen CinemaScope process where in close-ups an actor's face would widen horizontally. This innovation won Panavision its first Academy Award. Each lens cost $11,000 ($94,000 in 2017).
    • Goofs
      South American Indians having driven Rima up a tall tree set it on fire and flames are seen in the tree tops but only the tree and brush at its base burns, not the rest of the forest.
    • Quotes

      Abel: [sings to Rima] They say that love is a fragile thing, a linnet's wing / a magic ring made of gold / They say that love is a bird in flight, a gleam of light / a star too bright to behold / Tell me, tell me, tell me, o child of the moon / Is it as they say? Must love slip away too soon? / Tell me, Rima, where are the meadows of June? / Speaking with her eyes, softly she replies: / I know a place where green mansions are, as near or far / As any star up above / And in this land of eternal spring, where hummingbirds can learn to sing / Green grow the mansions of love.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Forecast (1945)
    • Soundtracks
      Song of Green Mansions
      Music by Bronislau Kaper

      Lyrics by Paul Francis Webster

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 27, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La flor que no murió
    • Filming locations
      • Kaieteur Falls, Guyana(Background for opening credits)
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $3,288,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 44 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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