AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,7/10
794
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWorld War I brings tribulations to an American woman married to a German.World War I brings tribulations to an American woman married to a German.World War I brings tribulations to an American woman married to a German.
Ronnie Cosby
- Teddy 'Sonny' Wilbrandt
- (as Ronnie Crosby)
Elizabeth Patterson
- Clara Tuttle--Canteen Worker
- (apenas creditado)
Ethel Wales
- Miss Honeywell--Canteen Worker
- (apenas creditado)
Donald Meek
- Storekeeper
- (cenas deletadas)
Wallis Clark
- Enoch Sewell
- (não creditado)
George Cooper
- Lefty--Soldier
- (não creditado)
Claire Du Brey
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
Enredo
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAn early example in a long line of films where the character played by Ralph Bellamy is the second romantic lead and loses or doesn't get the girl.
- Trilhas sonorasDu, Du Liegst Mir im Herzen
(uncredited)
Traditional German folksong
Played during the opening credits and often as background music
Played on piano and sung by Otto Kruger
Words reprised often
Avaliação em destaque
The First World War saw the debut not only of new military technology, but also new weapons of psychological warfare. It was the first war fought with means of mass persuasion as well as mass production. To get the American public in the proper fighting spirit for their inevitable entry into the war, the authorities deliberately and uncritically passed along British propaganda which wildly exaggerated or just plain fabricated German atrocities. (Sadly for all concerned, real German acts of brutality, especially in the conquered Low Countries, gave this propaganda an air of plausibility.)
It's unfortunate that, given its time and circumstances, this movie can only hint at the pervasive ugliness of these manufactured images of the gleefully nun-raping, baby-bayoneting "Bestial Hun", and the vicious persecution it inspired against German immigrants.
Though the glimpses it does show are often harrowing, as the story tracks the collapse of the blissful marriage between a professor (Otto Kruger) from Germany who teaches at a small college, and his American wife (Barbara Stanwyck), under the pressure of the growing hatred and intolerance they face from almost everyone around them. Even if the plot's predictable and the final twist is pretty contrived, and with few exceptions the acting and direction are about what you'd expect from a time when talking pictures were only four years old, I still have to give Warner Brothers some credit simply for having made a film -- even a low-budget "weeper" like this -- showing at least in some small way how war can corrode our humanity on the home front, too.
The other major thing this picture has going for it from my point of view is, of course, Barbara Stanwyck: In the moments when she subtly transcends what could otherwise have been just another mawkish, pedestrian melodrama, you can clearly see a great actress who's just beginning to hit her stride. She even manages to make the somewhat over-the-top final moments watchable, if not quite believable.
It's unfortunate that, given its time and circumstances, this movie can only hint at the pervasive ugliness of these manufactured images of the gleefully nun-raping, baby-bayoneting "Bestial Hun", and the vicious persecution it inspired against German immigrants.
Though the glimpses it does show are often harrowing, as the story tracks the collapse of the blissful marriage between a professor (Otto Kruger) from Germany who teaches at a small college, and his American wife (Barbara Stanwyck), under the pressure of the growing hatred and intolerance they face from almost everyone around them. Even if the plot's predictable and the final twist is pretty contrived, and with few exceptions the acting and direction are about what you'd expect from a time when talking pictures were only four years old, I still have to give Warner Brothers some credit simply for having made a film -- even a low-budget "weeper" like this -- showing at least in some small way how war can corrode our humanity on the home front, too.
The other major thing this picture has going for it from my point of view is, of course, Barbara Stanwyck: In the moments when she subtly transcends what could otherwise have been just another mawkish, pedestrian melodrama, you can clearly see a great actress who's just beginning to hit her stride. She even manages to make the somewhat over-the-top final moments watchable, if not quite believable.
- henri sauvage
- 16 de abr. de 2011
- Link permanente
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Ever in My Heart
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 243.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração1 hora 8 minutos
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Sempre no Meu Coração (1933) officially released in Canada in English?
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