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A Foreign Affair

A Foreign Affair is a 1948 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Billy Wilder and starring Jean Arthur, Marlene Dietrich, and John Lund. The screenplay by Charles Brackett, Wilder, and Richard L. Breen is based on a story by David Shaw adapted by Robert Harari.

A Foreign Affair
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBilly Wilder
Screenplay by
Story byDavid Shaw
Produced byCharles Brackett
Starring
CinematographyCharles B. Lang Jr.
Edited byDoane Harrison
Music byFrederick Hollander
Production
company
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • June 30, 1948 (1948-06-30) (United States)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryUnited States
Languages
  • English
  • German
Box office$2.5 million (US rentals)[1]

The film is about a United States Army captain in post-World War II Berlin, occupied by the Allies during the early days of the Cold War, who is torn between an ex-Nazi cafe singer and the United States congresswoman investigating her. Though a comedy, the film has a serious and cynical political tone, attesting to the fascination of both Wilder and American audiences with the multiple legacies of Berlin.[2]

Plot edit

In 1947, a United States congressional committee which includes prim Phoebe Frost of Iowa arrives in post-World War II Berlin to visit the American troops stationed there. Phoebe hears rumors that cabaret torch singer Erika von Schlütow, suspected of being the former mistress of either Hermann Göring or Joseph Goebbels, is being protected by an unidentified American officer. She enlists Captain John Pringle, another Iowan, to assist in her investigation, unaware that he is Erika's current lover.

After seeing Erika with Adolf Hitler in a newsreel filmed during the war, Phoebe asks John to take her to army headquarters after hours to retrieve the singer's official file. In order to distract her, John woos Phoebe, who initially resists his romantic advances but eventually succumbs to his charms.

Colonel Rufus J. Plummer warns John that he is aware of his relationship with Erika and orders him to continue seeing her in the hope she will lead them to another of her ex-lovers, ex-Gestapo agent Hans Otto Birgel, believed to be hiding in the American occupation zone. Meanwhile, Erika and Phoebe are arrested during a raid designed to catch Germans without proper identification papers at the Lorelei, the nightclub where Erika performs. At the police station, Erika claims Phoebe as her cousin in order to secure her release without revealing her identity.

Phoebe, grateful for Erika's intercession on her behalf, goes with her to her apartment, where Erika confesses that John is her lover just before he arrives. Humiliated, Phoebe leaves. Later, at the military airport waiting for the fog to clear, Colonel Plummer attempts to reconcile Phoebe and John. John is targeted by a jealous and armed Birgel at the Lorelei, but Birgel is killed by American soldiers who shoot him first. Erika is arrested for her complicity with Birgel, and Phoebe and John are reunited.

Cast edit

Production edit

While serving with the United States Army in Germany during World War II, Billy Wilder was promised government assistance if he made a film about Allied-occupied Germany, and he took advantage of the offer by developing A Foreign Affair with Charles Brackett and Richard L. Breen. Erich Pommer, who was responsible for the rebuilding of the German film industry, placed what was left of the facilities at Universum Film AG at Wilder's disposal. While researching the existing situation for his screenplay, he interviewed many of the American military personnel stationed in Berlin, as well as its residents, many of whom were having difficulty dealing with the destruction of their city. One of them was a woman he met while she was clearing rubble from the streets. "The woman was grateful the Allies had come to fix the gas", Wilder later recalled. "I thought it was so she could have a hot meal, but she said it was so she could commit suicide".[3]

Marlene Dietrich was Wilder's first choice to play Erika, and Friedrich Hollaender already had written three songs – "Black Market", "Illusions", and "The Ruins of Berlin" – for her to sing in the film (the lyrics were closely tied to the plot), but the director suspected she would be opposed to portraying a woman who collaborated with the Nazis. En route home from Berlin, he stopped in Paris to visit her, ostensibly to hear her opinion about a screen test he had made with June Havoc. "She kept making criticisms and suggestions ... and finally I said, like I had thought of it just that moment, 'Marlene, only you can play this part.' And she agreed with me", Wilder said.[3]

Wilder persuaded Jean Arthur, who was attending college at the time, to come out of retirement to play Phoebe. Throughout filming, the actress felt the director was favoring Dietrich, and late one night she and her husband Frank Ross went to Wilder's home to confront him with her suspicions. "Marlene told you to burn my close-up", an extremely upset Arthur insisted. "She doesn't want me to look better than she does." Wilder, knowing such insecurities were common when two very different personalities were working together, tried to reassure her he was not playing favorites, although of all the actresses he directed, he admired Dietrich most of all. "The crews adored her ... She liked to find somebody with a cold, so she could make chicken soup for him. She loved to cook", Wilder recollected. Years later, Arthur called Wilder to tell him she finally had seen the film and liked it, apologized and said she would act in any future Wilder project.[3]

Location shooting, much of it in the Soviet occupation zone, began in August 1947, and filming continued at Paramount Pictures in Hollywood between December 1947 and February 1948. The film was edited within a week after principal photography was completed, and it premiered at the Paramount Theatre in New York City on June 30, 1948, shortly after Wilder's The Emperor Waltz opened at Radio City Music Hall.[3]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

Bosley Crowther of The New York Times called the film "a dandy entertainment which has some shrewd and realistic things to say" and added, "Congress may not like this picture . . . and even the Department of the Army may find it a shade embarrassing. For the Messrs. Brackett and Wilder, who are not the sort to call a spade a trowel . . . are here making light of regulations and the gravity of officialdom in a smoothly sophisticated and slyly sardonic way". He continued, "Under less clever presentation this sort of traffic with big stuff in the current events department might be offensive to reason and taste. But as handled by the Messrs. Brackett and Wilder . . . it has wit, worldliness and charm. It also has serious implications, via some actuality scenes in bombed Berlin, of the wretched and terrifying problem of repairing the ravages of war. Indeed, there are moments when the picture becomes down-right cynical in tone, but it is always artfully salvaged by a hasty nip-up of the yarn".[4]

In later years, Channel 4 lauded A Foreign Affair as "one of Wilder's great forgotten films ... worthy of rapid rediscovery",[5] while Andrea Mullaney of Eye For Film wrote in 2006 that the film was "talky, intelligent, cynical" and "as relevant to the current American involvement in Iraq as if it had been made yesterday".[6]

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 100% based on 14 reviews, with an average rating of 7.5/10.[7] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 75 out of 100, based on 7 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[8]

The Blu-ray release garnered positive reviews.[9]

Accolades edit

Charles Lang was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Black-and-White Cinematography, but lost to William H. Daniels for The Naked City. Billy Wilder, Charles Brackett, and Richard L. Breen were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay but lost to John Huston for The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, and the Writers Guild of America Award, which was won by Frank Partos and Millen Brand for The Snake Pit.[10]

Home media edit

A Foreign Affair has been released in both VHS and DVD formats. On November 27, 2006, the film was released as part of the 18-film Marlene Dietrich: The Movie Collection for the UK market.[11] However, in April 2007, Dietrich's estate, Die Marlene Dietrich Collection GmbH, obtained an injunction which forced Universal Pictures to withdraw the DVD set due to an alleged contract breach.[12][13]

In 2012, Universal through TCM released the two-DVD set Directed by Billy Wilder featuring Five Graves to Cairo and A Foreign Affair.

On August 25, 2019, A Foreign Affair was released on Blu-ray by Kino Lorber.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ "Top Grosses of 1948". Variety. January 5, 1949. p. 46.
  2. ^ Daum, Andreas W. (2000). "America's Berlin, 1945‒2000: Between Myths and Visions". In Trommler, Frank (ed.). Berlin: The New Capital in the East (PDF). Johns Hopkins University. pp. 49–73.
  3. ^ a b c d Chandler, Charlotte (2002). Nobody's Perfect: Billy Wilder, A Personal Biography. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 136–141. ISBN 978-0-7432-1709-5.
  4. ^ Crowther, Bosley (July 1, 1948). "Jean Arthur, Marlene Dietrich and John Land a Triangle in 'A Foreign Affair'". The New York Times.
  5. ^ "Film4 – Film4". Channel 4. Retrieved April 20, 2016.
  6. ^ Mullaney, Andrea (November 27, 2006). "A Foreign Affair". Eye for Film. from the original on March 10, 2012.
  7. ^ "A Foreign Affair". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved October 14, 2021.
  8. ^ "A Foreign Affair". Metacritic. Retrieved October 14, 2021.
  9. ^ Morgan, Sarah. "A Foreign Affair (1948) – Film Review". On: Yorkshire Magazine.
  10. ^ . Writers Guild of America. Archived from the original on November 30, 2010.
  11. ^ Foster, Dave (November 27, 2006). . The Digital Fix. Archived from the original on December 18, 2013. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
  12. ^ Barnes, Jessica (April 16, 2007). . Moviefone. Archived from the original on January 12, 2018.
  13. ^ Connolly, Kate (April 13, 2007). "Dietrich's sticky situation". The Guardian. Retrieved October 14, 2021.
  14. ^ Bellwoar, Rachel (August 25, 2019). "Blu-ray Review – A Foreign Affair". Diabolique.

Bibliography edit

  • Smedley, Nick (2011). A Divided World: Hollywood Cinema and Emigré Directors in the Era of Roosevelt and Hitler, 1933-1948. Bristol, UK: Intellect. pp. 218–223. ISBN 978-1-84150-402-5. LCCN 2010041838.

External links edit

Streaming audio

foreign, affair, this, article, about, 1948, film, other, uses, foreign, affairs, disambiguation, 1948, american, romantic, comedy, drama, film, directed, billy, wilder, starring, jean, arthur, marlene, dietrich, john, lund, screenplay, charles, brackett, wild. This article is about the 1948 film For other uses see Foreign affairs disambiguation A Foreign Affair is a 1948 American romantic comedy drama film directed by Billy Wilder and starring Jean Arthur Marlene Dietrich and John Lund The screenplay by Charles Brackett Wilder and Richard L Breen is based on a story by David Shaw adapted by Robert Harari A Foreign AffairTheatrical release posterDirected byBilly WilderScreenplay byCharles Brackett Billy Wilder Richard L Breen Robert Harari adaptation Story byDavid ShawProduced byCharles BrackettStarringJean Arthur Marlene Dietrich John Lund Millard MitchellCinematographyCharles B Lang Jr Edited byDoane HarrisonMusic byFrederick HollanderProductioncompanyParamount PicturesDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease dateJune 30 1948 1948 06 30 United States Running time116 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguagesEnglish GermanBox office 2 5 million US rentals 1 The film is about a United States Army captain in post World War II Berlin occupied by the Allies during the early days of the Cold War who is torn between an ex Nazi cafe singer and the United States congresswoman investigating her Though a comedy the film has a serious and cynical political tone attesting to the fascination of both Wilder and American audiences with the multiple legacies of Berlin 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Critical response 4 2 Accolades 5 Home media 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksPlot editIn 1947 a United States congressional committee which includes prim Phoebe Frost of Iowa arrives in post World War II Berlin to visit the American troops stationed there Phoebe hears rumors that cabaret torch singer Erika von Schlutow suspected of being the former mistress of either Hermann Goring or Joseph Goebbels is being protected by an unidentified American officer She enlists Captain John Pringle another Iowan to assist in her investigation unaware that he is Erika s current lover After seeing Erika with Adolf Hitler in a newsreel filmed during the war Phoebe asks John to take her to army headquarters after hours to retrieve the singer s official file In order to distract her John woos Phoebe who initially resists his romantic advances but eventually succumbs to his charms Colonel Rufus J Plummer warns John that he is aware of his relationship with Erika and orders him to continue seeing her in the hope she will lead them to another of her ex lovers ex Gestapo agent Hans Otto Birgel believed to be hiding in the American occupation zone Meanwhile Erika and Phoebe are arrested during a raid designed to catch Germans without proper identification papers at the Lorelei the nightclub where Erika performs At the police station Erika claims Phoebe as her cousin in order to secure her release without revealing her identity Phoebe grateful for Erika s intercession on her behalf goes with her to her apartment where Erika confesses that John is her lover just before he arrives Humiliated Phoebe leaves Later at the military airport waiting for the fog to clear Colonel Plummer attempts to reconcile Phoebe and John John is targeted by a jealous and armed Birgel at the Lorelei but Birgel is killed by American soldiers who shoot him first Erika is arrested for her complicity with Birgel and Phoebe and John are reunited Cast editJean Arthur as Phoebe Frost Marlene Dietrich as Erika von Schlutow John Lund as Captain John Pringle Millard Mitchell as Col Rufus J Plummer Peter von Zerneck as Hans Otto Birgel Stanley Prager as Mike Bill Murphy as Joe Raymond Bond as Congressman Pennecot Boyd Davis as Congressman Giffin Robert Malcolm as Congressman Kramer Charles Meredith as Congressman Yandell Michael Raffetto as Congressman Salvatore Damian O Flynn as a lieutenant colonel Frank Fenton as Major Mathews James Larmore as Lieutenant Hornby Gordon Jones as a military policeman Fred Steele as a military policeman Friedrich Hollaender as pianist at the Lorelei night club uncredited Rex Lease as a military police lieutenant uncredited Edward Van Sloan as German uncredited Bobby Watson as Adolf Hitler uncredited Production editWhile serving with the United States Army in Germany during World War II Billy Wilder was promised government assistance if he made a film about Allied occupied Germany and he took advantage of the offer by developing A Foreign Affair with Charles Brackett and Richard L Breen Erich Pommer who was responsible for the rebuilding of the German film industry placed what was left of the facilities at Universum Film AG at Wilder s disposal While researching the existing situation for his screenplay he interviewed many of the American military personnel stationed in Berlin as well as its residents many of whom were having difficulty dealing with the destruction of their city One of them was a woman he met while she was clearing rubble from the streets The woman was grateful the Allies had come to fix the gas Wilder later recalled I thought it was so she could have a hot meal but she said it was so she could commit suicide 3 Marlene Dietrich was Wilder s first choice to play Erika and Friedrich Hollaender already had written three songs Black Market Illusions and The Ruins of Berlin for her to sing in the film the lyrics were closely tied to the plot but the director suspected she would be opposed to portraying a woman who collaborated with the Nazis En route home from Berlin he stopped in Paris to visit her ostensibly to hear her opinion about a screen test he had made with June Havoc She kept making criticisms and suggestions and finally I said like I had thought of it just that moment Marlene only you can play this part And she agreed with me Wilder said 3 Wilder persuaded Jean Arthur who was attending college at the time to come out of retirement to play Phoebe Throughout filming the actress felt the director was favoring Dietrich and late one night she and her husband Frank Ross went to Wilder s home to confront him with her suspicions Marlene told you to burn my close up an extremely upset Arthur insisted She doesn t want me to look better than she does Wilder knowing such insecurities were common when two very different personalities were working together tried to reassure her he was not playing favorites although of all the actresses he directed he admired Dietrich most of all The crews adored her She liked to find somebody with a cold so she could make chicken soup for him She loved to cook Wilder recollected Years later Arthur called Wilder to tell him she finally had seen the film and liked it apologized and said she would act in any future Wilder project 3 Location shooting much of it in the Soviet occupation zone began in August 1947 and filming continued at Paramount Pictures in Hollywood between December 1947 and February 1948 The film was edited within a week after principal photography was completed and it premiered at the Paramount Theatre in New York City on June 30 1948 shortly after Wilder s The Emperor Waltz opened at Radio City Music Hall 3 Reception editCritical response edit Bosley Crowther of The New York Times called the film a dandy entertainment which has some shrewd and realistic things to say and added Congress may not like this picture and even the Department of the Army may find it a shade embarrassing For the Messrs Brackett and Wilder who are not the sort to call a spade a trowel are here making light of regulations and the gravity of officialdom in a smoothly sophisticated and slyly sardonic way He continued Under less clever presentation this sort of traffic with big stuff in the current events department might be offensive to reason and taste But as handled by the Messrs Brackett and Wilder it has wit worldliness and charm It also has serious implications via some actuality scenes in bombed Berlin of the wretched and terrifying problem of repairing the ravages of war Indeed there are moments when the picture becomes down right cynical in tone but it is always artfully salvaged by a hasty nip up of the yarn 4 In later years Channel 4 lauded A Foreign Affair as one of Wilder s great forgotten films worthy of rapid rediscovery 5 while Andrea Mullaney of Eye For Film wrote in 2006 that the film was talky intelligent cynical and as relevant to the current American involvement in Iraq as if it had been made yesterday 6 On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 100 based on 14 reviews with an average rating of 7 5 10 7 Metacritic which uses a weighted average assigned the film a score of 75 out of 100 based on 7 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 8 The Blu ray release garnered positive reviews 9 Accolades edit Charles Lang was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Black and White Cinematography but lost to William H Daniels for The Naked City Billy Wilder Charles Brackett and Richard L Breen were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay but lost to John Huston for The Treasure of the Sierra Madre and the Writers Guild of America Award which was won by Frank Partos and Millen Brand for The Snake Pit 10 Home media editA Foreign Affair has been released in both VHS and DVD formats On November 27 2006 the film was released as part of the 18 film Marlene Dietrich The Movie Collection for the UK market 11 However in April 2007 Dietrich s estate Die Marlene Dietrich Collection GmbH obtained an injunction which forced Universal Pictures to withdraw the DVD set due to an alleged contract breach 12 13 In 2012 Universal through TCM released the two DVD set Directed by Billy Wilder featuring Five Graves to Cairo and A Foreign Affair On August 25 2019 A Foreign Affair was released on Blu ray by Kino Lorber 14 References edit Top Grosses of 1948 Variety January 5 1949 p 46 Daum Andreas W 2000 America s Berlin 1945 2000 Between Myths and Visions In Trommler Frank ed Berlin The New Capital in the East PDF Johns Hopkins University pp 49 73 a b c d Chandler Charlotte 2002 Nobody s Perfect Billy Wilder A Personal Biography New York Simon amp Schuster pp 136 141 ISBN 978 0 7432 1709 5 Crowther Bosley July 1 1948 Jean Arthur Marlene Dietrich and John Land a Triangle in A Foreign Affair The New York Times Film4 Film4 Channel 4 Retrieved April 20 2016 Mullaney Andrea November 27 2006 A Foreign Affair Eye for Film Archived from the original on March 10 2012 A Foreign Affair Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved October 14 2021 A Foreign Affair Metacritic Retrieved October 14 2021 Morgan Sarah A Foreign Affair 1948 Film Review On Yorkshire Magazine Writers Guild Awards Awards Winners Writers Guild of America Archived from the original on November 30 2010 Foster Dave November 27 2006 Marlene Dietrich Movie Collection in November The Digital Fix Archived from the original on December 18 2013 Retrieved December 14 2013 Barnes Jessica April 16 2007 Marlene Dietrich s Daughter Stops Dietrich Box Set From Being Released Moviefone Archived from the original on January 12 2018 Connolly Kate April 13 2007 Dietrich s sticky situation The Guardian Retrieved October 14 2021 Bellwoar Rachel August 25 2019 Blu ray Review A Foreign Affair Diabolique Bibliography editSmedley Nick 2011 A Divided World Hollywood Cinema and Emigre Directors in the Era of Roosevelt and Hitler 1933 1948 Bristol UK Intellect pp 218 223 ISBN 978 1 84150 402 5 LCCN 2010041838 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to A Foreign Affair A Foreign Affair at IMDb nbsp A Foreign Affair at AllMovie nbsp A Foreign Affair at the American Film Institute Catalog nbsp A Foreign Affair at the TCM Movie Database nbsp Streaming audio A Foreign Affair on Screen Directors Playhouse March 6 1949 A Foreign Affair on Screen Directors Playhouse March 1 1951 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A Foreign Affair amp oldid 1210147889, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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