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Les tiens, les miens, le nôtre

Original title: Yours, Mine and Ours
  • 1968
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Les tiens, les miens, le nôtre (1968)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:39
1 Video
99+ Photos
ComedyFamily

A widower with ten children falls for a widow with eight, and they must decide about forming a huge, unconventional family.A widower with ten children falls for a widow with eight, and they must decide about forming a huge, unconventional family.A widower with ten children falls for a widow with eight, and they must decide about forming a huge, unconventional family.

  • Director
    • Melville Shavelson
  • Writers
    • Melville Shavelson
    • Mort Lachman
    • Madelyn Davis
  • Stars
    • Lucille Ball
    • Henry Fonda
    • Van Johnson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Melville Shavelson
    • Writers
      • Melville Shavelson
      • Mort Lachman
      • Madelyn Davis
    • Stars
      • Lucille Ball
      • Henry Fonda
      • Van Johnson
    • 88User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Yours, Mine and Ours
    Trailer 3:39
    Yours, Mine and Ours

    Photos108

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    Top cast62

    Edit
    Lucille Ball
    Lucille Ball
    • Helen North Beardsley
    Henry Fonda
    Henry Fonda
    • Frank Beardsley
    Van Johnson
    Van Johnson
    • Darrell Harrison
    Louise Troy
    Louise Troy
    • Madeleine Love
    Sidney Miller
    Sidney Miller
    • Dr. Ashford
    Tom Bosley
    Tom Bosley
    • Family Doctor
    Nancy Howard
    • Nancy Beardsley
    Walter Brooke
    Walter Brooke
    • Howard Beardsley
    Tim Matheson
    Tim Matheson
    • Mike Beardsley
    • (as Tim Matthieson)
    Gil Rogers
    • Rusty Beardsley
    Nancy Roth
    • Rosemary Beardsley
    Gary Goetzman
    Gary Goetzman
    • Greg Beardsley
    Morgan Brittany
    Morgan Brittany
    • Louise Beardsley
    • (as Suzanne Cupito)
    Holly O'Brien
    • Susan Beardsley
    Michele Tobin
    • Veronica Beardsley
    Maralee Foster
    • Mary Beardsley
    Tracy Nelson
    Tracy Nelson
    • Germaine Beardsley
    Stephanie Oliver
    • Joan Beardsley
    • Director
      • Melville Shavelson
    • Writers
      • Melville Shavelson
      • Mort Lachman
      • Madelyn Davis
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews88

    7.110.5K
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    Featured reviews

    jimu63

    They don't make 'em like this no more...

    If I were asked what my favorite film of all time was, I would probably say either "The Last Picture Show" or "Ordinary People," two films that I feel are legitimate masterpieces. But if I were asked what my favorite film of all time REALLY was, I'd have to say "Yours, Mine and Ours," which was one of the first movies my parents ever took me to (along with a re-release of "Swiss Family Robinson" and Steve McQueen's "Bullitt") as a five-year-old. I've loved it my entire life, and I have to admit my affection for it hasn't dimmed with age. Although I realize it's not one of the great masterpieces of all time, and I would never rate it as high as say, "Show" or "People" or "Casablanca" or "Schindler's List" for that matter, I still love this film all the same.

    I must admit that I am also a lifelong fan of "I Love Lucy," so the fact that "Yours, Mine and Ours" stars Lucille Ball certainly has something to do with my fondness for this film. And growing up in the '70's when co-star Henry Fonda was relegated to cameo roles in awful films like "The Swarm" and "Rollercoaster," if it hadn't have been for his charismatic and likeable performance here, I would never have known he was the great actor that he was. Add the pleasure of Lucille's longtime friend Van Johnson in the prime supporting role of Darryl, Fonda's best friend, and an extremely young Tim Matheson as Fonda's oldest son, and you have the foundation of an excellent cast in a lovely romantic comedy about the ultimate blended family (think "The Brady Bunch" with brains, and much, much larger to boot).

    Very loosely based on a true story, Ball is Helen North, a recent widow with eight unruly children who moves to San Francisco for a fresh start. While working at the infirmary at an (unnamed) Naval base, she meets Naval Officer Frank Beardsley (Fonda, of course), who is a recent widower himself (with 10 children !) and has brought one of his daughters (Suzanne Cupito, aka '70's starlet Morgan Brittany) in for treatment. Helen and Frank are immediately smitten with each other and go out on a date, but immediately break it off when they realize how many children their combined family would contain. Darryl realizes that eighteen children aside, these two were made for each other and proceeds to plot to get them together. They do eventually marry and this sets up many amusing scenes of this huge family trying to blend in together.

    The nice thing about this film is that for once Lucille Ball is allowed to play a character completely different from Lucy Ricardo or Lucy Carmichael (from "The Lucy Show"). She is intelligent, touching, funny and very, very human here. In only one scene does she do any kind of "Lucy" shtick, and that is during a wonderfully played drunk scene. Even then she doesn't resemble her daffy TV persona as much as, well a woman who's had too much to drink. And the chemistry between Ball and Fonda is so believable, as a child I found it hard to believe they were not really married in real life! Honest! Johnson gives wonderful support and Tom Bosley has a few amusing scenes as the family's exasperated doctor. I also loved the character of Madeline Love, who Darryl sets Frank up with on a disastrous date that ends with her riding home between Frank and Helen (who's been dumped by her Darryl-arranged date). Their discussion of their respective families ends with the hilarious exchange: Frank: "I'm glad I have ten children!" Helen: "I'm glad I have my eight!" Madeline: "And I'm glad I'm careful!"

    All in all, this is an extremely enjoyable romantic comedy that grandkids can watch with their grandparents where everyone will be entertained and nobody will be embarassed. An added treat: laughing at the '60's styles and hairdoes, which look worse and worse with each passing decade. They just don't make them like this anymore. ***1/2 (out of *****)
    9suessis

    Best Family Movie of the 60's

    I have to admit that I had trouble with Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball in the leads largely because they both were really too old to play their respective characters (Ball was about 57 at the time and Fonda about 63). In the end the film is so well done that I forgot about that. Aside from the film "Please Don't Eat the Daisies", this is probably the best family movie of the 60's. The best thing about the film is the realistic way in which the family blends together. The usual problems are all there and the way in which Fonda and Ball deal with it is about what one would expect, a certain amount of good intentions, a bit of mistake making, sacrifice, and providing a good deal of love and support. The writing may not be politically correct in this day and age (the scene where Fonda's kids get Ball drunk, Ball spanks one of the boys, and there is also a certain amount of gender stereotyping), but it is this that gives the film its appeal and relatability. As Leonard Maltin points out, look for a some well known faces in the supporting cast. Tom Bosley as the doctor, Tim Matheson as Mike, a four or five year old Tracey Nelson, Morgan Brittany of Dallas fame, 70's TV staple Ben Murphy as the oldest daughter's boyfriend, and well known child actor Eric Shea who gives an endearing performance as young Philip, the kid that seems the most lost in the big family. All in all Dad Fonda sums the whole thing up when he describes for the oldest daughter (who's being pressured by the boyfriend to have sex) what love is really about and how this family is staying together, "It isn't going to bed with a man that proves that you love him it's getting up in the morning and facing the drab, miserable, wonderful everyday world that counts. I suppose having 19 kids is carrying it a bit too far, but if we had it to do all over again who would we skip, you?" And that is exactly what Helen and Frank are doing together, and the kids admire and respect them all the more for it.
    bowen-2

    Helen Beardsley

    I worked with Helen Beardsley at a hospital in Fresno, CA in the early 80's. She was a nice woman with a take-charge attitude. (I think you have to have one when you are the mother of 19 children.) She used to live in an ocean-view house in the Carmel area, but then sold it to move to Fresno. We always kidded her about doing that; she said the weather was better inland. I think that she was proud of her book and movie. She sold the rights to her movie early on, before it achieved sort of cult-favorite status. She told me that she regretted doing that. I did not know that she died until I read it on this comment page. I was sorry to read that; she wasn't that old and she was a strong woman.
    9AndersonWhitbeck

    Great Lucy!

    Lucille Ball reined above Hollywood as Queen of Comedy and also the CEO of Desilu with not one but three studio lots in Hollywood,Desilu Gower, Desilu Cahuenga and DesiluCulver ( The old Selznick Studio where Gone With The Wind was filmed). Taking chances was Lucy's forte: starring in a TV show "I Love Lucy" and insisting on the casting of her husband Desi Arnaz and her also equally famous decisions authorize the productions of "Star Trek" and "Mission Impossible" against the recommendations of the Desilu Board of Directors. Ball's last great accomplishment as a CEO was the insistence of filming "Yours Mine and Ours" as a theatrical movie hoping to make Desilu a force in film production as well. Make no doubt about it if one re reads the story that Rex Reed wrote in the New York Times on Lucy while she was filming this movie, Ms. Ball ran the show and event titled his great article on Lucy " I Run My Studio Like I Run My Home".

    Lucille Ball-looking youthful and beautiful- is superb in the title role of Helen Beardsley and her nuanced performance should have garnered Lucille Ball a long sought after Oscar nomination. Ms. Ball is at times both funny and in a departure from her TV "Lucy" quite soft and underplays many scenes. Henry Fonda is a perfect "Mr. Beardsley". Van Johnson a pal from Lucy's old MGM days is cast and gets a nice role supporting both Stars.

    Many were surprised by the success of this film. I have no idea why. It is a fine and lasting comedy classic directed by the sure hand of the fine Melville Shavelson.
    8Little-Mikey

    Another reason to say "I Love Lucy"!

    OK, the movie is really quite dated. Perhaps this is why the movie sells for less than $9.99 on DVD. But in spite of its being dated, the movie is still very funny. Maybe it's funny because it is outdated. The movie was made a long, long time ago, in a day when "comedy" took priority over "politically correct". With Madelyn Davis and Bob Carroll, Jr writing the script, it couldn't be anything but a sure fire winner. The two also provided their talents on I LOVE LUCY. (Madelyn Davis was known as Madelyn PUGH during the I LOVE LUCY era).

    Lucille Ball, in this movie, has really taken a big risk in stepping out of her domain where she truly reigned as the queen of comedy. Her brilliance as a comedian has always been in her ability to act like the perfect scatterbrain, driving a totally frustrated straight man well past his breaking point with her totally insane schemes. On TV, this straight man was played by Desi Arnaz and later, by Gale Gordon.

    In this movie, Lucille Ball shone brighter than ever, showing an ability to go from "scatterbrain" to "serious to the point of tears" and back, so effortlessly. And there was no "straight man" to bounce her brand of comedy off of.

    Tom Bosely was hilarious as the family doctor, with his deadpan approach. Seeing him later as Howard Cunningham in HAPPY DAYS, I wonder if he was really acting or was he simply being himself? He certainly has that dry wit down to an art.

    Oh, and then, there is that issue of age. Lucille Ball was 57 and Henry Fonda was around 61 when the movie was made. This issue is obviously irrelevant. The movie was a hit when it was released in 1968. And it obviously beats that remake in 2005, hands down, in spite of the age of leading roles in the remake.

    Lucille Ball and Henry Fonda rule!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      After purchasing the rights to the book the film was based on, Lucille Ball became very close to the Beardsleys and even treated the whole family to a vacation at Disneyland.
    • Goofs
      During their first date in a club, Frank is wearing his hat during the entire sequence. Wearing your cover (hat) indoors is a breach of military etiquette and a real Naval officer would know this.
    • Quotes

      Colleen North: [as Helen is leaving for the hospital to have the baby] I know this is a terrible time to talk about it, but Larry says...

      Frank Beardsley: I've got a message for Larry! You tell him *this* is what it's all about. This is the real happening. If you want to know what love really is, take a look around you.

      Helen North: What are you two talking about?

      Frank Beardsley: Take a good look at your mother.

      Helen North: Not now!

      Frank Beardsley: Yes, now.

      Frank Beardsley: [to Colleen] It's giving life that counts. Until you're ready for it, all the rest is just a big fraud. All the crazy haircuts in the world won't keep it turning. Life isn't a love-in--it's the dishes, and the orthodontist, and the shoe repairman, and... ground round instead of roast beef. And I'll tell you something else: It isn't going to a bed with a man that proves you're in love with him; it's getting up in the morning and facing the drab, miserable, wonderful everyday world with him that counts!

      [leaving the house, they say good-bye to the little kids]

      Frank Beardsley: I suppose having 19 kids is carrying it a bit too far--but if we had it to do over, who would we skip? You?

      Helen North: [getting into the car] Thank you, Frank. I never quite knew how to explain it to her.

      Frank Beardsley: If we don't get you to the hospital fast, the rest of it's gonna be explained right here!

    • Connections
      Featured in AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Henry Fonda (1978)
    • Soundtracks
      Yours, Mine and Ours
      (uncredited)

      Music by Fred Karlin

      Lyrics by Ernie Sheldon

      [sung by chorus over main titles]

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 24, 1972 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Cantonese
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Los tuyos, los míos y los nuestros
    • Filming locations
      • Alameda, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Desilu Productions
      • Walden Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,500,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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