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Mon homme

Original title: For Love of Ivy
  • 1968
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
937
YOUR RATING
Sidney Poitier in Mon homme (1968)
ComedyDramaRomance

Upon learning their maid will be leaving to earn an education, the son of the family decides to set her up with a man.Upon learning their maid will be leaving to earn an education, the son of the family decides to set her up with a man.Upon learning their maid will be leaving to earn an education, the son of the family decides to set her up with a man.

  • Director
    • Daniel Mann
  • Writers
    • Robert Alan Aurthur
    • Sidney Poitier
  • Stars
    • Sidney Poitier
    • Abbey Lincoln
    • Beau Bridges
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    937
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Daniel Mann
    • Writers
      • Robert Alan Aurthur
      • Sidney Poitier
    • Stars
      • Sidney Poitier
      • Abbey Lincoln
      • Beau Bridges
    • 20User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 1 win & 4 nominations total

    Photos26

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    Top cast45

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    Sidney Poitier
    Sidney Poitier
    • Jack Parks
    Abbey Lincoln
    Abbey Lincoln
    • Ivy Moore
    Beau Bridges
    Beau Bridges
    • Tim Austin
    Nan Martin
    Nan Martin
    • Doris Austin
    Lauri Peters
    Lauri Peters
    • Gena Austin
    Carroll O'Connor
    Carroll O'Connor
    • Frank Austin
    Leon Bibb
    • Billy Talbot
    Hugh Hurd
    Hugh Hurd
    • Jerry
    Lon Satton
    Lon Satton
    • Harry
    Stanley Greene
    • Eddie
    Paul Harris
    Paul Harris
    • Dealer
    Tony Major
    • Dealer
    Clark Morgan
    • Dealer
    Christopher St. John
    Christopher St. John
    • Dealer
    Bob Carey
    • Dealer
    Marlene Clark
    Marlene Clark
    • Radio Phone Girl
    Laura Greene
    • Radio Phone Girl
    Lani Miyazaki
    • Radio Phone Girl
    • Director
      • Daniel Mann
    • Writers
      • Robert Alan Aurthur
      • Sidney Poitier
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews20

    6.2937
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    Featured reviews

    7HotToastyRag

    Cute romantic comedy

    There are lots of reasons to like For Love of Ivy, so if you haven't seen this '60s classic yet, make it this weekend's matinee. You can see a pre-Archie Bunker performance from Carol O'Connor playing the family's patriarch who throws a touch of racism at their black domestic maid. Upon learning she's going to leave their employ, he shrugs to his wife and doesn't see the problem finding a new maid. The matriarch, Nan Martin, is horrified. She looks at Ivy as a member of the family, and even though Ivy wants to get an education and live in her own place, she doesn't want her to leave. It's very much a statement piece, that the white family can't fathom why their black housekeeper feels unsatisfied.

    Abbey Lincoln, who plays Ivy, is just delightful. With a cute, spunky personality and great energy, we easily root for her and hope she finds a happy ending - whatever that means. . . The teenaged children of the family, Beau Bridges and Lauri Peters, come up with a scheme to keep Ivy happy and employed: romance. If she falls in love, she'll be happy and give up her idea of leaving. Beau knows a shady bad boy, Sidney Poitier, and blackmails him into dating Ivy. Which is another great reason to see the film: how often do you see Sidney playing a bad boy?

    Beau Bridges was nominated for a Golden Globe for his sweet performance, and if it seems like he's very comfortable in front of the camera, it's because he was practically a veteran in 1968. Going all the way back to The Red Pony, he did movies and television before this big splash - no wonder he had a great screen presence! Abbey Lincoln was also nominated for a Golden Globe, but for Supporting Actress. Can anyone explain that? The movie is, literally, all about her, and she has the largest part of all the female characters. Why wasn't she nominated for Actress instead?
    7shoolaroon

    Very charming and Sidney is really sexy

    I caught this last night on Turner and while this is a slight little movie, I found it quite charming, mainly in the developing relationship between the smooth, elegant, slightly dangerous Poitier and the sweet and yet sassy Ms. Lincoln. They're a good match together, and I love the very romantic seduction scene with that great Quincy Jones music playing in the background. From what I've seen of Sidney Poitier he usually plays a somewhat angry young man who's fighting the system in some way. Well, here he just gets to play a smooth hustler, and man is he sexy!!! Wish he'd made more light romantic films like this.

    As for the rest of the cast - well, the plot serves them poorly. The white family come across as well meaning stooges, and the hippie look is really dated on Beau Bridges. But it's kind of the equivalent of one of those Rock Hudson/Doris Day movies with a bit more of an edge and a little bit of a conscience. Well worth watching when it comes around again.
    7moonspinner55

    Plush romantic whimsy with lots of personality...

    Sidney Poitier developed the original story for this fantasy-romance between a black maid working for a neurotic, rich white family out on Long Island and a handsome, confirmed bachelor--a partner in a trucking firm which deals (rather craftily) in illegal gambling on the side. In the most prominent role, Abbey Lincoln (real-life jazz vocalist who resembles a young Dionne Warwick) has a firm jaw and a shyly self-conscious manner, but she grows on you--and in her lighter moments displays a tentative yet winning smile and personality. After a static, stilted beginning, the movie picks up some steam and quickly overcomes its contrived set-up, and Poitier is full of jubilant charisma. Nice end-credits theme song, written by Quincy Jones and performed by Shirley Horn, received an Oscar nomination. Good fun! *** from ****
    7whpratt1

    Great Sidney Poitier Story

    This is a great film starring Sidney Poiter as Jack Parks, who runs a gambling racket in a large van which is always on the move and he is beloved by all kinds of females who find him very attractive and sexy. It just so happens that a White family has a female Black female servant named Ivy Moore, (Abbey Lincoln) who is very attractive and has been with the family for over nine years of service. Ivey decides she wants to leave their employ and the family becomes very upset and Mr. Frank Austin, (Carroll O'Connor) decides something has to be done to keep Ivy from leaving. The family arranges for Ivy to meet Jack Parks who is a friend of the family and desires to become a match making family to get these two people together in order to keep their family maid still in the family service. There is plenty of comedy and funny situations which makes this a great story created by Sidney Poitier and he gives an outstanding performance along with a great supporting actress, Abbey Lincoln. Enjoy.
    5Lejink

    Placebo Ivy

    Apparently based on an original idea by Poitier himself, you have to wonder if he couldn't have come up with something a bit more challenging and true-to-life, especially in this of all years. Instead, we get this strangely balanced and oddly bland romantic comedy. Maybe I'm being harsh on him, but coming off three hit films in a row, this seems like a somewhat safe and almost cosy regression in a film which you could almost imagine condensed into a Dick Van Dyke TV show episode of the time.

    Poitier, plus an entourage of drivers, croupiers and skimpily-clad cocktail waitresses, runs a permanently floating crap game for predominantly white high-rollers, wives included, from the back of a huge haulage truck, which acts as cover from the law. I'm guessing high-stakes gambling venues were thin on the ground in upstate New York at the time. One of his clients is wealthy businessman Carroll O'Connor and his nuclear family of ditzy wife, flighty daughter and stoner son, who it seems can't do anything at home for themselves, relying on their black maid Ivy to basically organise their lives for them. When Ivy unexpectedly hands in her notice, declaring her intention to leave the household, get an education and no doubt find her true self in the process, the family cracks up and cook up a hair-brained plan to marry her off to some rich, handsome black dude who no doubt will allow her to continue her life of servitude to them within an otherwise blissful married life.

    It's all very slight and undemanding, requiring little effort from Poitier who basically just continues to portray the urbane educated persona he'd adopted in "To Sir With Love" and "Guess Who's Coming To Dinner". Abbey Lincoln makes a good impression as the wilful title character, but like everyone else in the film, her character is very thinly sketched.

    The humour, mildly taking in tropes like the generation gap and interracial relations, manages to be both forced and lacklustre and the ending is exactly what you could have guessed from ninety minutes out. There's a bizarre scene near the end when Beau Bridges, as the hippie son, puts in his tuppenceworth to resolve the situation which only serves to further demean Ivy's already lowly status even as you appreciate that this time Carroll O'Connor isn't going to pull off a Spencer Tracy and rescue the film at the finish.

    On the plus side, there's a pleasing, sultry jazz soundtrack by Quincy Jones, Poitier and Lincoln make for a handsome couple and the look of the film is polished and slick for sure, but really this is one Ivy pretty much out of its league in a film which hasn't aged well and which I know won't stay long in my memory,

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the film Sidney Poitier's character says that he is 36 while Poitier was actually 41 at the time of the movie. Abbey Lincoln's character says she is 27, although she was actually 38 at the time of the movie.
    • Quotes

      Jack Parks: Looks like you've got a pretty good setup here.

      Ivy Moore: Too good. I don't want to die here.

      Jack Parks: You've got to die somewhere.

      Ivy Moore: Well, isn't it better not to go ignorant and alone?

    • Connections
      Featured in Abbey Lincoln: You Gotta Pay the Band (1993)
    • Soundtracks
      For Love of Ivy
      Vocal by Shirley Horn

      Lyrics by Bob Russell

      Music by Quincy Jones

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    FAQ17

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 15, 1969 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • For Love of Ivy
    • Filming locations
      • Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • ABC Pictures International
      • Cinerama Productions Corp.
      • Palomar Pictures (I)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,590,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 41 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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