NOTE IMDb
7,1/10
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MA NOTE
Un bon père de famille se retrouve célibataire pour un été quand une blonde ingénue très craquante vient occuper l'appartement voisin. Pêchera ti ou pêchera ti pas ? En sortant du cinéma, un... Tout lireUn bon père de famille se retrouve célibataire pour un été quand une blonde ingénue très craquante vient occuper l'appartement voisin. Pêchera ti ou pêchera ti pas ? En sortant du cinéma, une bouche de métro souffle un vent coquin sous la jupe de Marilyn [255]Un bon père de famille se retrouve célibataire pour un été quand une blonde ingénue très craquante vient occuper l'appartement voisin. Pêchera ti ou pêchera ti pas ? En sortant du cinéma, une bouche de métro souffle un vent coquin sous la jupe de Marilyn [255]
- Nomination aux 1 BAFTA Award
- 2 victoires et 3 nominations au total
Tom Ewell
- Richard Sherman
- (as Tommy Ewell)
Dolores Rosedale
- Elaine
- (as Roxanne)
Brandon Beach
- Commuter at Station
- (non crédité)
Steven Benson
- Kid at Train Station
- (non crédité)
George Bruggeman
- Commuter at Station
- (non crédité)
George Chester
- Porter
- (non crédité)
Noble 'Kid' Chissell
- Train Station Gateman
- (non crédité)
Richard Elmore
- Commuter at Station
- (non crédité)
Duke Fishman
- Commuter at Station
- (non crédité)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesBilly Wilder preferred shooting in black and white, but Marilyn Monroe's contract with Fox called for all of her movies to be shot in color. Monroe always thought that she looked far more attractive and glamorous in color than in black and white.
- GaffesBoth Richard and his boss, who are in the book publishing industry, refer to "The Portrait of Dorian Gray". The actual title of the Oscar Wilde novel is "The Picture of Dorian Gray".
- Crédits fousWhen the title appears, one arm of the T in ITCH reaches down and scratches the stem of the letter.
- Versions alternativesVersion released in then West Germany contains some profanity.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Marilyn (1963)
- Bandes originalesPiano Concerto #2
Composed by Sergei Rachmaninoff (as S. Rachmaninoff)
Played on a record and often in the score
Commentaire à la une
Even after sixty years, THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH retains its freshness and bounce - a delightful testament both to the script (by Billy Wilder and playwright George Axelrod) and the quality of the performances.
The story is a simple one: left on his own during a hot New York summer, Richard Sherman (Tom Ewell) tries his best to avoid the temptations of drink, tobacco and an extra-marital affair. However his best intentions are frustrated by the presence of The Girl (Marilyn Monroe), who has moved into the apartment above him. Nothing actually happens, but the promise persists ...
Ewell gives a stellar performance, the best in his forty-five year acting career. In his rumpled gray suit, with tie askew, he embarks on a series of monologues where his better nature competes with his carnal desires. Most of them are shot in single takes in the Shermans' apartment: Ewell's India-rubber face changes rapidly as he debates the morality of inviting The Girl down for a drink. He walks from side to side of the frame, his shoulders hunched, almost as if he is bearing the cares of the world on his back.
The fantasy-sequences are extremely funny, with Ewell imagining himself as the protagonist in a comic reworking of FROM HERE TO ETERNITY, rolling about on the beach with a woman not his wife. Later on he casts himself as a Noel Coward-like figure speaking in a cod-British accent, as he plays Rachmaninov on the piano while trying to seduce The Girl (a reference to BRIEF ENCOUNTER).
When the latter scene is re-enacted for real, The Girl is completely uninterested in Rachmaninov. Sherman tries to embrace her, and the two of them end up falling off the piano bench in an ungainly heap. Although Sherman imagines himself as the Great Lover, he will never be able to fulfill his role.
Monroe is equally memorable in her role as the not-so-dumb blonde from Denver. It's clear she is attracted to Sherman - not because of his physical attributes, but because at heart he is an extremely sweet man. On the other hand she respects his love for his wife Helen (Evelyn Keyes), and thus refrains from making a pass at him. THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH contains the memorable sequence where she stands over a grille and lets the wind from a subway train beneath blow up her white dress. Wilder shoots this sequence very discreetly, leaving everything to the viewer's imagination. Monroe is far more seductive in an interior sequence, where she hides behind a chair and stretches out one leg, and then another. The janitor Mr. Kruhulik (Robert Strauss) witnesses what happens, and promises to leave Sherman alone.
Wilder's and Axelrod's script fairly crackles with one-liners, as well as a series of in-jokes referring to Charles Lederer (Wilder's fellow-scriptwriter), as well as a reference to Monroe herself.
THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH is one of those comedies that never loses its sparkle, even after repeated viewings.
The story is a simple one: left on his own during a hot New York summer, Richard Sherman (Tom Ewell) tries his best to avoid the temptations of drink, tobacco and an extra-marital affair. However his best intentions are frustrated by the presence of The Girl (Marilyn Monroe), who has moved into the apartment above him. Nothing actually happens, but the promise persists ...
Ewell gives a stellar performance, the best in his forty-five year acting career. In his rumpled gray suit, with tie askew, he embarks on a series of monologues where his better nature competes with his carnal desires. Most of them are shot in single takes in the Shermans' apartment: Ewell's India-rubber face changes rapidly as he debates the morality of inviting The Girl down for a drink. He walks from side to side of the frame, his shoulders hunched, almost as if he is bearing the cares of the world on his back.
The fantasy-sequences are extremely funny, with Ewell imagining himself as the protagonist in a comic reworking of FROM HERE TO ETERNITY, rolling about on the beach with a woman not his wife. Later on he casts himself as a Noel Coward-like figure speaking in a cod-British accent, as he plays Rachmaninov on the piano while trying to seduce The Girl (a reference to BRIEF ENCOUNTER).
When the latter scene is re-enacted for real, The Girl is completely uninterested in Rachmaninov. Sherman tries to embrace her, and the two of them end up falling off the piano bench in an ungainly heap. Although Sherman imagines himself as the Great Lover, he will never be able to fulfill his role.
Monroe is equally memorable in her role as the not-so-dumb blonde from Denver. It's clear she is attracted to Sherman - not because of his physical attributes, but because at heart he is an extremely sweet man. On the other hand she respects his love for his wife Helen (Evelyn Keyes), and thus refrains from making a pass at him. THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH contains the memorable sequence where she stands over a grille and lets the wind from a subway train beneath blow up her white dress. Wilder shoots this sequence very discreetly, leaving everything to the viewer's imagination. Monroe is far more seductive in an interior sequence, where she hides behind a chair and stretches out one leg, and then another. The janitor Mr. Kruhulik (Robert Strauss) witnesses what happens, and promises to leave Sherman alone.
Wilder's and Axelrod's script fairly crackles with one-liners, as well as a series of in-jokes referring to Charles Lederer (Wilder's fellow-scriptwriter), as well as a reference to Monroe herself.
THE SEVEN YEAR ITCH is one of those comedies that never loses its sparkle, even after repeated viewings.
- l_rawjalaurence
- 2 juil. 2016
- Permalien
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- The Seven Year Itch
- Lieux de tournage
- 164 East 61st Street, Manhattan, Ville de New York, New York, États-Unis(exterior of Richard's apartment)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 1 800 000 $US (estimé)
- Montant brut mondial
- 20 487 $US
- Durée1 heure 45 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.55 : 1
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