IMDb > Bringing Up Baby (1938) > foire aux questions
Bringing Up Baby
Liens rapides
Top liens
trailers and videosinterprètes et équipe techniqueanecdotesSites officielsphrases célèbres
Vue d'ensemble
infos principalesinfos complètesinterprètes et équipe techniquesociétés de productiontv schedule
Récompenses et critiques
avis des utilisateurscritiques externescritiques des forumsawardsnotes des utilisateursparents guidedans la lignéeForum
Synopsis et citations
résumésynopsismots-clésrésumé du Amazon.comphrases célèbres
Curiosités
anecdotesbêtisierinfos B.O.F.clins d'œil dans génériqueinfos sur d'autres versionsliens avec d'autres œuvresfoire aux questions
Autres infos
en ventebox office/businessdates de sortielieux de tournagecaractéristiques techniquesinfos laserdiscinfos DVDbibliographieA la Une
Matériel publicitaire
accroches trailers and videos affiches Gallerie de photo
Liens externes
horaires dans les sallesSites officielsdiversphotossound clipsvideo clips
The content of this page was created directly by users and has not been screened or verified by IMDb staff.
Visit our FAQ Help to learn more

FAQ Sommaire


A Note Regarding Spoilers

The following FAQ entries may contain spoilers. Only the biggest ones (if any) will be covered with spoiler tags. Spoiler tags have been used sparingly in order to make the page more readable.

Is this movie based on a book?

Bringing up Baby is based on a short story by the same name, written by Hagar Wilde [1905-1971] and published in a 1937 issue of Collier's Weekly magazine. Wilde, with the aid of screenwriter Dudley Nichols, adapted the story for the movie.

What is the baby's name?

"Baby" is the name of a tame leopard sent to Susan Vance (Katharine Hepburn) by her brother in Brazil. In the original short story, Baby was a panther (leopards are not native to South America).

It's an old joke meaning that one leg is shorter (or longer) than the other. Susan uses it when she loses one of her heels and is bobbing around...up and down...as would anyone trying to walk while wearing a heel on one foot and no shoe on the other.

How does the movie end?

After Susan breaks out of jail to find Baby, Alexander Peabody (George Irving) shows up to identify Aunt Elizabeth (May Robson). Satisfied that Elizabeth is who she says she is, Constable Slocum (Walter Catlett) releases her, David (Cary Grant), Major Applegate (Charles Ruggles), and the gardener (Barry Fitzgerald). Just as everyone is about to leave the station, the two men from the circus show up to report their missing leopard. As the circus men are trying to explain how the wild leopard escaped, Baby and George come waltzing through the door. Everyone panics when they see Baby, until David pets it and the man from the circus realizes that it's not their leopard. Meanwhile, Susan has roped the wild leopard and is attempting to pull it into the police station. Realizing that Susan is dragging in the wild leopard, everyone again panics and runs pell-mell into the jail cells to hide. David manages to corner the wild leopard in one of cells, locks the door, and promptly faints.

Later, back at the museum, Alice (Virginia Walker) breaks off her engagement to David now that she's seen his "true colors". Alice leaves, and Susan walks in, bearing the "intercostal clavicle" and the million dollars from Aunt Elizabeth. David quickly climbs to the top of the scaffolding that surrounds his precious brontosaurus skeleton and tells Susan to place the bone on a table and go away. Undaunted, Susan climbs up after David until she's at the top of the ladder. David pleads with her to get down off the ladder but admits that he's never had so much as when he was with her. As they confess their love for each other, the ladder begins to sway. In order to keep from falling to the floor, Susan grabs onto the brontosaurus. The brontosaurus begins to break apart, so David pulls Susan onto the scaffolding with him. In the final scene, the brontosaurus bones fall to the floor, leaving Susan and David atop the scaffolding, in each others' arms.

Viewers who have seen and liked Bringing Up Baby have recommended What's Up, Doc? (1972), a madcap comedy in which mistaken luggage, a jewel theft, and government spies provide an adventure for two researchers competing for a musicology grant.

Dernière mise a jour de la page faite par bj_kuehl, le 4 months ago
Top Contributeurs: bj_kuehl

r73731

Rapporter un problème

Liens liés

Plot summary Anecdotes Guillemet
Goofs Soundtrack listing Versions alternatives
Connections entre films Commentaires de l'utilisateur Principaux Détails