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IMDbPro

Promise Her Anything

  • 1966
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
649
YOUR RATING
Warren Beatty and Leslie Caron in Promise Her Anything (1966)
ComedyRomance

A young woman is left with a baby to raise alone. She decides that the baby needs a father figure and decides to marry a psychologist. She hides her son with a neighbor upstairs until she ge... Read allA young woman is left with a baby to raise alone. She decides that the baby needs a father figure and decides to marry a psychologist. She hides her son with a neighbor upstairs until she gets her man.A young woman is left with a baby to raise alone. She decides that the baby needs a father figure and decides to marry a psychologist. She hides her son with a neighbor upstairs until she gets her man.

  • Director
    • Arthur Hiller
  • Writers
    • William Peter Blatty
    • Arne Sultan
    • Marvin Worth
  • Stars
    • Warren Beatty
    • Leslie Caron
    • Robert Cummings
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    649
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Arthur Hiller
    • Writers
      • William Peter Blatty
      • Arne Sultan
      • Marvin Worth
    • Stars
      • Warren Beatty
      • Leslie Caron
      • Robert Cummings
    • 15User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos15

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Warren Beatty
    Warren Beatty
    • Harley Rummel
    Leslie Caron
    Leslie Caron
    • Michele O'Brien
    Robert Cummings
    Robert Cummings
    • Dr. Philip Brock
    • (as Bob Cummings)
    Keenan Wynn
    Keenan Wynn
    • Angelo Carelli
    Hermione Gingold
    Hermione Gingold
    • Mrs. Luce
    Lionel Stander
    Lionel Stander
    • Sam
    Asa Maynor
    Asa Maynor
    • Rusty
    Cathleen Nesbitt
    Cathleen Nesbitt
    • Mrs. Brock
    Michael Bradley
    • John Thomas
    • (as Baby Michael Bradley)
    Warren Mitchell
    Warren Mitchell
    • Frank Focus…
    Sydney Tafler
    Sydney Tafler
    • Panel Participant
    Michael Kane
    Michael Kane
    • Staff Doctor
    Riggs O'Hara
    • Glue Sniffer
    Mavis Villiers
    Mavis Villiers
    • Rusty's Mother
    Margaret Nolan
    Margaret Nolan
    • Mail-Order Film Girl
    Viviane Ventura
    Viviane Ventura
    • Mail-Order Film Girl
    • (as Vivienne Ventura)
    George Moon
    • Neighbour
    Charlotte Holland
    • Neighbour
    • Director
      • Arthur Hiller
    • Writers
      • William Peter Blatty
      • Arne Sultan
      • Marvin Worth
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    5.2649
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    Featured reviews

    5boblipton

    Never Act With Small Children

    This is a prime example of this show biz dictum. Beatty and Caron both act as if they are embarrassed to be in this cheap, poorly written, smutty comedy, and well they should. Apparently they were having an affair at the time and would rather be off alone. So would you if you were in this movie. Give it a miss unless you're a fan.
    2JasparLamarCrabb

    Broken Promises...

    Forget ISHTAR and TOWN AND COUNTRY if you're looking for Warren Beatty's worst film --- PROMISE HER ANYTHING is it. Beatty's an "art film" director saddled with sitting for divorcée Leslie Caron's baby. He's lecherous enough to try and fool her into thinking he's not what he is in hopes of getting her into bed. She has her sights on psychiatrist Bob Cummings. There is very little that's funny despite the presence of comic experts like Cummings, Lionel Stander, and Hermione Gingold. Caron is not bad and she's extremely beautiful, but Beatty is completely at sea and obviously very uncomfortable playing in a farce. For some reason it's set in Greenwich Village but filmed in a studio in England. It looks and feels that way...and that's not a compliment! Promise yourself that you won't bother with this dog. Beatty would have A LOT more luck with comedy ten years later by creating the biting satire SHAMPOO.
    3ArtVandelayImporterExporter

    Promise me a better movie next time

    Kids s2ck. In real life. But especially in movies.

    They are not cute. They're not funny. They are not entertaining. They've obnoxious brats.

    This movie is no more entertaining than going over to your friends' house on a Saturday evening and having them trot out their stupid brats to sing a song, play the piano, or mimic something they saw in a cartoon movie.

    I was embarassed for Warren Beatty having to do physical shtick. And to a certain extent Bob Cummings, being a 50-something pretending to be young enough to still be a bachelor living at home with his super-annuated rich mom.

    I enjoyed looking at Leslie Caron, as any healthy man would.

    But this movie is terrible. No wonder it only pops up once ever 10 years on TCM.
    3moonspinner55

    "In America, sex never changes--in Denmark, it changes!"

    Exceedingly thin comedy from screenwriter William Peter Blatty (paying his bills) about a cheesecake filmmaker in Greenwich Village under duress from his mail-order distributor to spice up the action. Meanwhile, he's got a new neighbor, a young French widow with a rambunctious son...and a shapely behind! Tepid picture from talents seen to better advantage elsewhere. Warren Beatty looks flustered and performs listlessly, while Leslie Caron is all spunky externals and no depth. The entire plot is laid out for us in the first 15 minutes, while Beatty's competition in the love department is none other than sexless Robert Cummings, he of the mannequin's grin. You know you're in for it when the opening montage consists of a toddler wreaking 'comic' chaos in a jewelry store, playing peek-a-boo for the camera while reacting to animated credits hovering about his head. *1/2 from ****
    6oceanchick

    Mid-60s Miracle

    Hollywood was stumbling through of one of its worst times in film history: lush budget financial disasters drained studios dry, the end of the studio era left few to no actors or directors on contract, studios were selling land and movie props to stay alive, floundering studios were bought out, budgets for films were practically zilch, films were produced overseas to cut costs, influx of foreign films imported to the US compared to lack of exported films was debilitating, and birth of the made for television movies sets the stage for this mid-60's Hiller miracle, Promise Her Anything.

    Having seen several of Arthur Hiller's films that I've enjoyed, most notably The Out-of-Towners and The Americanization of Emily, I was eager to see Promise Her Anything because of its rarity. I was pleasantly surprised. Is Promise Her Anything a side-splitting flawless comedy worthy of Oscar nods? No. Is it a unique piece of comic cinema making the most out of what little it had? Yes.

    Promise Her Anything is unique because of the wide variety of subject matter presented to the audience in a single film, touching on anti-social anarchist topics like beatniks and independent mail-order "hoochie coochie" films, but it doesn't stop there. The movie tackles topics such as divorce, open sex, sex outside of marriage, a female's desire for sex, deception in relationships and goes into even more serious topics touching on single mothers, fatherless children, validity of child psychology, and exploitation of children. It addresses all these topics yet somehow manages to be cohesive and entertaining enough to watch through to the end. That credit goes directly to director Arthur Hiller.

    Never a Beatty fan, Beatty's work is either good or bad but in Promise Her Anything, he shows he has the ability for comedy, screwball comedy, slapstick comedy all the while commanding a sincerity that makes his actions believable. I compare Beatty's performance as Harley Rummell to Cary Grant's as Mortimer Brewster in Arsenic and Old Lace. Both films have a similar physical comedy style and situational content, but Beatty shows the same desperation to cover up the truth with balance, not exaggerating his performance as much as Grant. In a role which could have easily been taken over the top, Beatty keeps grounded and with Hiller's direction gives a performance that, for the role, is spot on. His repeated encounter with the sofa as well as numerous times hiding his equipment and actors somehow doesn't get old, and I found myself surprised at that. Beatty's charisma shows through every time, with a different feeling of frustration, desperation, or excitation that lends itself to making the scene feel fresh.

    Leslie Caron made her natural vulnerability and determination shine equally in Promise Her Anything. Caron's role as Michelle O'Brien, a beautiful sexy single mother who captures the loins of every man that sees her, is the impetus for much of the insanity that ensues in the film and she carries that with grace and passion. Her determination to do what is right all the while going about it in a way that is wrong juxtaposes itself but she breathes the breath of life into that dichotomy. In a role that doesn't take advantage of her talents as a dancer or singer to entrance the viewer, Caron must make it through on acting ability, and with Hiller's direction, she does. Caron's real life gives her much to draw upon, grounding the part of Michelle and making her motives unquestionable while adding gentle nuanced truth to her performance.

    Robert Cummings reprises his role, so to speak, as a bumbling psychologist who has far more problems than his patients, as in What a Way to Go, in which he worked with Beatty's sister, Shirley MacClaine. Cummings plays this type of role well and is capable of deadpan comedy without effort. His interactions with Cathleen Nesbitt who plays his mother in the film are memorable because the dialog is wonderful, though the acting and chemistry between them seems unnatural. The rest of the cast was believable considering they were actors playing actors in no budget "misdemeanor" mail order films.

    Though the film looks like it was shot without a budget on super-16, it works. It looks rough and spontaneous which gives gritty texture to the film, offering the viewer an additional subtle layer of believability. The horrible over-extended rear-screen projection sequence could have been edited down, but otherwise, editing was quite tight, shot selection was good; use of fast motion was minimal and appropriate and not used as a comedic "fast-motion-is-funny" Munsters crutch.

    The dialog was true to life, intelligent and clever. Every line is pertinent and on the mark. Michelle, thick with a french accent and European ideals, may have a humorous flubbed word or lost in translation moment but it is not over-used. Not only was the script fitting to the characters, the situation and the mood of the film, but it allowed the viewer to recognize the depths of the characters without much effort. For example: I caught myself trying to name the movie or novel that Harley would use lines from in everyday conversation. A man so immersed in the classics that he contextually and naturally speaks lines from the greats gives more subtext for Beatty and raised my respect for Harley the character. It made his ambition to become a real film maker "real". He wasn't an uneducated dolt happy with the work he was doing; Harley was educated and had aspirations of making great films. It takes a great script to convey so much with so little dialog in such a short amount of time.

    Considering everything, I believe that Promise Her Anything is a good 60's era comedy that far outshines several others with bigger names and budgets, such as Cactus Flower and Dear Brigitte, though it still falls a little short to it's older sibling, What a Way to Go.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      By the time this movie premiered Leslie Caron's husband had divorced her, as she had been in a long term affair with Warren Beatty. Because Beatty had been determined the reason for the divorce, the British court ordered him to pay for all of the court costs.
    • Goofs
      In the 'building-block bridge' demonstration for John Thomas, Harley places a red block on top which becomes blue in the subsequent wider shot.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Philip Brock: But you don't understand, he is a very exceptional child.

      Harley Rummel: Of course, he's an exceptional child - he's mine.

      Dr. Philip Brock: No. Absolutely not. You have signed a release.

      Harley Rummel: I want my baby. I can't live without him!

      Dr. Philip Brock: Mr. Rummel, don't you want your baby cured?

      Harley Rummel: I want him home.

      Dr. Philip Brock: But you must leave him here - in the interests of science.

      Harley Rummel: Science! Science! what does science know of a father's love? Can it mend a broken heart?

      Dr. Philip Brock: Now you listen to me. Now this child remains here tonight. We've got to photograph him before...

      Harley Rummel: Photograph him! Don't you dare turn a camera on that child. Do you hear? Who gave you the right, who gave you the permission to exploit my son?

      Dr. Philip Brock: No one is exploiting your son. Cinematography is an invaluable tool of medical research.

      Harley Rummel: It's a tool of the devil!

      Dr. Philip Brock: Oh, it's nothing of the sort. It's almost on a par with x-ray when it comes to scientific...

      Harley Rummel: Don't tell me what movies are good for him. Just give me the kid!

      Dr. Philip Brock: No! Absolutely not. You signed a release. The child remains here. You can have him back tomorrow.

      Harley Rummel: Doctor, I will pray on bended-knees for socialized medicine!

      [exits]

      Harley Rummel: .

    • Connections
      Featured in Leslie Caron, Française à Hollywood, Américaine à Paris (2016)
    • Soundtracks
      Promise Her Anything
      Lyrics by Hal David

      Music by Burt Bacharach

      Sung by Tom Jones

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 22, 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Versprich ihr alles
    • Filming locations
      • Radio City Music Hall - 1260 6th Avenue, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(2nd unit of yellow bucket truck passes in Manhattan)
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Rastar Pictures
      • Seven Arts Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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