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poster of A Farewell to Arms
Rating: 5.698/10 by 48 users

A Farewell to Arms (1957)

An English nurse and an American soldier on the Italian front during World War I fall in love, but the horrors surrounding them test their romance to the limit.

Directing:
  • Charles Vidor
Writing:
  • Ben Hecht
  • Ernest Hemingway
  • Laurence Stallings
Stars:
Release Date: Sat, Dec 14, 1957

Rating: 5.698/10 by 48 users

Alternative Title:

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Deutsch
Runtime: 02 hour 32 minutes
Budget: $4,100,000
Revenue: $20,000,000

Plot Keyword: epic, based on novel or book, nurse, ambulance, world war i, italy, switzerland, pregnancy, mountain, love, priest, hospital, soldier, explosion, physician, swiss alps, red cross, court martial, 1910s
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Rock Hudson
Lt. Frederick Henry
Jennifer Jones
Catherine Barkley
Vittorio De Sica
Major Rinaldi
Luigi Barzini
Court Martial Colonel
Georges Brehat
Captain Bassi
Oskar Homolka
Dr. Emerich
Elaine Stritch
Helen Ferguson
Victor Francen
Colonel Valentini
Alberto Sordi
Père Galli
Bud Spencer
Carabinieri
Eduard Linkers
Lieutenant Zimmermann
Johanna Hofer
Mrs. Zimmermann

CinemaSerf

It was always going to be hard enough to adapt this novel for the screen, and given Gary Cooper did an OK job with it in 1932, I am not quite sure why David O. Selznick concluded that is might be a ripe vehicle for Rock Hudson to reprise. He is the American "Lt. Henry" serving in Italy during the Great War when he meets British nurse "Catherine" (Jennifer Jones). They take an immediate shine to each other but needless to say the War has no time to stop and indulge their affection and the film follows the ups and downs as they try to stay alive and, ultimately, make it to safety with their as yet unborn child. The thing with Hemingway stories, I found, is that they rarely work on a big screen. They are detailed, descriptive and requiring of the reader to use their imagination to create the scenario that's all too easily replaced by the visuals here. That also requires the actors to deliver strong and intricate characterisations that deal with their own issues, sure, but with the issues of loyalty, of professionalism and of tough choices made amidst the atrocities of conflict. Neither of these two here have the gravitas to do those complexities justice and that frequently turns this gripping wartime romance into a not so gripping romance set amidst a war. There is quite an engaging effort from Vittorio De Rica as the inspirational surgeon "Rinaldi" and Elaine Stritch is also to be seen here before she became a lady who lunched. The film looks good, the wartime imagery potent and at times we get a little indication of the true horrors of this war, and of the strains it put on people both in and out of the military, but there's no getting away from the weak and rather insipid casting. Pity!


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