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L'homme à femmes

Original title: The Man Who Loved Women
  • 1983
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
L'homme à femmes (1983)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:07
1 Video
40 Photos
ComedyDramaRomance

A womanizing sculptor named David goes to seek help from a psychiatrist, Marianna, to cure him of his obsession with women.A womanizing sculptor named David goes to seek help from a psychiatrist, Marianna, to cure him of his obsession with women.A womanizing sculptor named David goes to seek help from a psychiatrist, Marianna, to cure him of his obsession with women.

  • Director
    • Blake Edwards
  • Writers
    • Blake Edwards
    • Milton Wexler
    • Geoffrey Edwards
  • Stars
    • Burt Reynolds
    • Julie Andrews
    • Kim Basinger
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Blake Edwards
    • Writers
      • Blake Edwards
      • Milton Wexler
      • Geoffrey Edwards
    • Stars
      • Burt Reynolds
      • Julie Andrews
      • Kim Basinger
    • 23User reviews
    • 13Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Man Who Loved Women
    Trailer 2:07
    The Man Who Loved Women

    Photos40

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    Top cast69

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    Burt Reynolds
    Burt Reynolds
    • David
    Julie Andrews
    Julie Andrews
    • Marianna
    Kim Basinger
    Kim Basinger
    • Louise
    Marilu Henner
    Marilu Henner
    • Agnes
    Cynthia Sikes Yorkin
    Cynthia Sikes Yorkin
    • Courtney
    • (as Cynthia Sikes)
    Jennifer Edwards
    Jennifer Edwards
    • Nancy
    Sela Ward
    Sela Ward
    • Janet
    Ellen Bauer
    • Svetlana
    Denise Crosby
    Denise Crosby
    • Enid
    Tracy Vaccaro
    • Legs
    Barry Corbin
    Barry Corbin
    • Roy
    Ben Powers
    Ben Powers
    • Al
    Shelly Manne
    Shelly Manne
    • Jazz Quartet
    Don Menza
    • Jazz Quartet
    Jimmy Rowles
    • Jazz Quartet
    Andrew Simpkins
    • Jazz Quartet
    Jill Carroll
    Jill Carroll
    • Sue
    Herb Tanney
    • Doctor
    • (as Schweitzer Tanney)
    • Director
      • Blake Edwards
    • Writers
      • Blake Edwards
      • Milton Wexler
      • Geoffrey Edwards
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    5.32.7K
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    Featured reviews

    dg-7

    A near miss.

    THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN begins with a sculptor roaming around LA trying to find out what makes women tick. The sculptor is played by Burt Reynolds, one of the biggest movie stars in the world, so I guess the women will pay attention. Actually, the movie begins with his funeral and we see woman after woman in all shapes and sizes, roaming up the cemetery grass to pay tribute to this guy.

    Now any movie with an opening like this had better feature one helluva guy so we immediately cut to the scenes of Burt seducing woman after woman, while providing some tender advice on life to keep them warm when he's gone in the morning. I really liked Burt Reynolds performance in this movie. He shows in this movie that when he wants to he can be a fine actor. We know Burt Reynolds has an amazing screen presence but it's nice to see him in a movie where he doesn't wink at the camera to show us how much fun he's having. His scenes with the feminist shrink(Julie Andrews) are funny as Reynolds exhibits every male symptom in the book. The women are Cynthia Sikes, Marila Henner and Kim Basinger to name a few, and rest assured that they're all(especially Basinger)very beautiful.

    If the movie had stayed true to this idea it might've been special.but it degenerates into a series of three's company set ups and grows tired. After Basinger stirs Reynolds interest they have a romp in her husband's condo. The husband arrives and Reynolds must lurch around. I couldn't count how many scenes there were like that. It's at this point we realize the movie isn't going to be as incisive as it promised. It's silly how Reynolds keeps getting into the same situation with the jealous husband and not very funny either, not even when he say, glues his hands to the steering wheel.

    Another major problem is the chemistry between Reynolds and Andrews. There's no heat between them and I suspect that maybe they didn't get along with each other on the set. This isn't the type of a man she'd go out with, canon of ethics aside. It's awkward at the end when Andrews drops everything to join Reynolds on vacation when we don't even believe he's gotten to first base. I can't quite recommend THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN, it's just not true to itself. The movie introduces us to an interesting man looking to make real discoveries and ends up with a bunch of people who aren't right for each other.

    DG

    STAR STAR (out of four)
    vchimpanzee

    Reynolds, Andrews great, Corbin good

    Has there ever been a film where Julie Andrews didn't do a good job? I thought she was great as David Fowler's analyst--so calm and poised, regardless of how ridiculous Fowler's problems got, or how agitated he became. Burt Reynolds was ... well, Burt Reynolds, but that's enough. Barry Corbin seemed a natural for the role of a Texas oilman/rancher in a cowboy hat. If he wasn't on 'Dallas' (and I don't think he was in the years I watched it), he should have been. I liked Marilu Henner as Agnes but wish we had seen more of her. I didn't recognize Kim Basinger or Sela Ward, but I like them both in most of what I've seen.

    It wasn't a great film, but a good one. It was funny enough of the time, though it could be depressing.
    4utgard14

    Elegy of a hard-on

    Seriocomic portrait of a middle-aged teenager. In the 1960s and 1970s, there were a slate of films about sensitive men who "loved" women. Sad attempts by so-called enlightened men to justify how their raging libidos were not at odds with them being feminists. They weren't womanizers, you see. They just loved women so much they couldn't stop at one. The Reese's peanut butter cups approach to adult relationships. Gene Siskel used to really love these types of films. It did not shock me to learn he gave this film three out of four stars.

    This is a remake of a 70s film I haven't seen. It already feels like a relic by 1983. Blake Edwards, a director I've never been particularly enamored of outside of Breakfast at Tiffany's, can't seem to decide if we are to take this dreck seriously or not. The film introduces us to our horndog hero, played by Burt Reynolds who at this time was desperate to get away from success and achieve that which all box office stars seek eventually - "to be taken seriously as an AK-TOR!" What follows is an eyerollathon of good looking adults flirting with the finesse of children. There's sex, even some brief nudity from Marilu Henner, but the movie is never sexy. Nor is it fun. It certainly never approaches anything resembling funny. It's a slow, dry exercise in trying to provide sophistication and depth to Andy Hardy. Still, this is Burt before his mid-80s accident that he never fully recovered from. Whatever charms the movie has comes entirely from him.
    6TheFearmakers

    Burt and Blake

    There are two movies reported to have been what Burt Reynolds decided to star in instead of co-starring in TERMS OF ENDEARMENT for the role famously taken by Jack Nicholson... and along with being box office bombs, they embodied each sub-genre that rode Burt through six-years as box office king...

    The second is the action-comedy STROKER ACE directed by collaborator/stuntman muse Hal Needham; and the first by a director Burt's said to have liked the best, Blake Edwards, in the romantic-comedy THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN...

    Which is a far better vehicle for Reynolds, herein playing it safely and naturally as a doomed sculptor who, as we begin, has a myriad of women attending his funeral that, narrated by sophisticated shrink and ultimate love-interest (and the director's wife) Julie Andrews, keeps the viewer guessing on how he'll eventually buy the farm...

    As that too is ultimately humorous while MAN rolls around dryly and coolly... without any big laughs... in that slow-burn fashion of Blake's game-changing 10: both depicting a wealthy mid-life-crisis-struck artist with everything who still complains about having too much... of everything...

    But it's the WOMEN who are the most intriguing... not only to gander at but to anticipate... ranging from extremely sexual married-Texan Kim Basinger, lovely-legged Marilu Henner, down-home Cynthia Sikes, 11th hour groupie Sela Ward while the cutest is the most subtle in Edwards' daughter Jennifer as a hooker turned secretary...

    Overall making this Americanized 1970's-French-remake seem from that very decade of good-old-fashion jazz-soaked womanizing through dry self deprecation that surely suits Burt -- despite being on cruise control throughout.
    7ijonesiii

    Burt and Blake Score in a Watchable Comedy...

    In the style of STARTING OVER, Burt took on another romantic lead in 1983's THE MAN WHO LOVED WOMEN, which starred Reynolds as a confirmed bachelor whose obsession with the opposite sex has driven him into therapy with a female shrink of course (Julie Andrews in a low-key performance). Though not as good as his performance in STARTING OVER, Reynolds does exude a great deal of charm in this film and get solid support from Andrews, Marilu Henner, and in an early and very amusing role, Kim Basinger as the undersexed trophy wife of a wealthy Texan (Barry Corbin)who likes her sex with an element of danger. This comedy that was co-written by Blake Edwards and his own psychiatrist is worth a look.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This movie, a remake, was released six years after François Truffaut's source French movie L'homme qui aimait les femmes (1977).
    • Goofs
      When Julie Andrews unwraps the book on the plane, the front cover is visible before she flips it over to face her, but then when it is shown from her point of view, it looks completely different.
    • Quotes

      Agnes Chapman: You're a fast worker. I better leave before one of us gets pregnant.

      David Fowler: I'm not that fast.

    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: D.C. Cab/Two of a Kind/The Man Who Loved Women/The Keep (1983)
    • Soundtracks
      Little Boys (theme song)
      Music by Henry Mancini

      Lyrics by Alan Bergman & Marilyn Bergman

      [Played over the closing credits]

      Performed by Helen Reddy

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    FAQ18

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • July 11, 1984 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Sony Pictures Entertainment
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • The Man Who Loved Women
    • Filming locations
      • Houston, Texas, USA(Texas scenes.)
    • Production companies
      • Delphi Films
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $12,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $10,964,740
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,347,032
      • Dec 18, 1983
    • Gross worldwide
      • $10,964,740
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 50m(110 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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