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All This, and Heaven Too (1940) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

Note des utilisateurs:
7.7/10   1,313 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 1% in popularity this week. See rank & trends on IMDbPro.
Réalisateur:
Anatole Litvak
Writers:
Rachel Field (novel)
Casey Robinson (screenplay)
Contact:
View company contact information for All This, and Heaven Too on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
13 juillet 1940 (USA) suite
Genre:
Drame | Romance suite
Awards:
Nominated for 3 Oscars. suite
Avis des utilisateurs:
The Murder that Helped Topple a Monarchy suite

Ensemble

  (Cast overview, first billed only)

Bette Davis ... Henriette Deluzy-Desportes

Charles Boyer ... Duc de Praslin
Jeffrey Lynn ... Henry Martyn Field
Barbara O'Neil ... Duchesse de Praslin
Virginia Weidler ... Louise
Helen Westley ... Madame LeMaire
Walter Hampden ... Pasquier
Henry Daniell ... Broussais
Harry Davenport ... Pierre
George Coulouris ... Charpentier
Montagu Love ... Marechal Sebastiani
Janet Beecher ... Miss Haines
June Lockhart ... Isabelle
Ann E. Todd ... Berthe (as Ann Todd)
Richard Nichols ... Reynald
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Additional Details

Autre(s) titre(s):
L'étrangère (Belgium: French title) (France) [fr]
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Durée:
141 min
Pays:
USA
Couleur:
Noir et Blanc
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 suite
Son:
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Classification:
Australia:PG | Finland:K-16 | Sweden:15 | USA:Approved (PCA #6089)

Curiosités

Anecdotes:
Charles Boyer plays this role in which he commits suicide. In real life he did the same by taking barbiturates 2 days after his beloved wife, the actress Pat Paterson, died of cancer. Boyer died in Arizona on Aug. 26, 1978; she died Aug 24th of the same year. suite
Guillemet:
Duc de Praslin: May I have Pierre come for your luggage?
Duchesse de Praslin: Theo, last night I poured my heart out to you in a letter. I crept to your doorway which I am foridden to enter and stooped in humility and pushed it under the seal!
Duc de Praslin: I received it, Frances.
Duchesse de Praslin: But look! You didn't even open it! Oh Theo, do you suppose this empty pretense is what I hoped for?Lastnight I begged for you to come to me! I hoped we might start this journey today united as we once were! Theo, Theo! Have you completely forgotten the life we once shared together?
[...]
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Movie Connections:
Referenced in Desperation (2006) (TV) suite
Soundtrack:
The War of the Roses suite

foire aux questions

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25 out of 29 people found the following comment useful:-
The Murder that Helped Topple a Monarchy, 8 April 2004
Author: theowinthrop de United States

This excellent period drama is based on a popular novel of 1939 by Rachel Field. It told a version of the story of the murder, in Paris in 1847, of Fanny Sebastiani Choiseul-Praslin, Duchesse and wife of Theobald, Duc de Choiseul-Praslin. Fanny was the daughter of Marachal Horace Sebastiani, one of the leading political and social figures in the July Monarchy or Orleans Monarchy of France, under King Louis Phillippe (1830 - 1848). This was a middle-class supported monarchy, and was far more liberal than it's predecessor monarchy under King Louis's cousins the Bourbons. But by 1847 it had grown corrupt, and it was suffering a series a serious scandals. The murder of Duchesse Fanny by her husband was the last real blow. Supposedly the marriage had collapsed due to the growing relationship between Theobald and the children's governess, Mlle. Helene Deluzy-Desportes. The actual relationship between the governess and the Duc remains questioned, although most believe she was his lover. Rachel Field, a descendant of Fanny and her later husband, Rev. Martyn Field, presented the governess as the victim of circumstances (working in a household that was falling apart). Finally, whatever the cause, Theobald beat Fanny to death, and tried to make it look like a burglar did it. Instead the Surete was not fooled, and Theobald was arrested. But while under arrest he took poison, and he died denying his guilt and denying the involvement of the governess. Fanny came to America, where she taught school and married into the Field family (her brother-in-law Cyrus was a financier who laid the Atlantic Cable, and her brother-in-law Stephen was an Associate Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court). As for the French, they blamed the government for allowing the Duc to escape justice, and within a year the July Monarchy was overthrown. Marachel Sebastiani (Montague Love in the film) died prematurely in 1851 - the last victim of the crime.

The film, except for the pro-Deluzy-Desportes slant, is excellent with a fine, restrained performance by Davis, an intense one by Boyer (who finally explodes in one scene where he shows his thorough hatred for his wife), and a marvelous performance by Barbara O'Neill as Fanny. I would thoroughly recommend this one for movie fans - a fine example of the best of Warner's historical films.

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only 6 stars marfrie56
what was wrong with her grandpa ashkanpashakola
Question regarding evidence in the case rahul_capri
The painting of Henriette BillLloydSampsonRichards
No kiss... mustang_steph
One of my favorite movies! HoferPM-1
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