

- #The smiling lieutenant 1931 ok.ru movie#
- #The smiling lieutenant 1931 ok.ru code#
- #The smiling lieutenant 1931 ok.ru series#
"The Smiling Lieutenant" (1931) finds Chevalier at the ideal place in his stardom, established but still flowering. Imagine explaining Mae West to someone who has never seen her. He is impish, and his behavior borders on ridiculous, but there's a wise current underneath, an Old World understanding that the pleasures of life are the essence of life. With Chevalier onscreen, it was always understood that he has gone to bed with hundreds if not thousands of women and has been faithful to none of them, but no one minds because, hey, he's French. He was America's idea of a Frenchman: charming, fun-loving and sexually insatiable.
#The smiling lieutenant 1931 ok.ru series#
In Chevalier's prime - captured in this series - he embodied onscreen a character that was libidinous, playful, insinuating and sexually rapacious. Today, to the extent that he's remembered at all in America, he's an old man singing "Thank Heaven for Little Girls" on a park bench in 1958's "Gigi." In fact, to know Chevalier for that alone would be like knowing Paul McCartney solely for his most recent album.
#The smiling lieutenant 1931 ok.ru movie#
Three of the movies star Maurice Chevalier, a name probably unknown to younger movie fans and misunderstood by even those familiar with him. The films, made from 1929 to 1932, are some of the most urbane - and in some cases risque - that Hollywood produced at that time. These days people are bound to feel differently about "The Smiling Lieutenant," and the three other musicals in the four-DVD set. He was asking Paramount how it could waste his time on such licentious, offensive trash when everyone knew it was his job to shield the public from such monstrous, amoral horrors as "The Smiling Lieutenant." Basically, he suggested turning the movie into a short subject. Paramount went to the PCA in 1936 with such a request concerning director Ernst Lubitsch's "The Smiling Lieutenant" (1931) - one of the four films included in the Criterion Collection's new Eclipse series DVD package "Lubitsch Musicals." PCA chief Joseph Breen screened the movie and came back suggesting not one or two or three cuts - but 27. Please, please can we rerelease it?" Often the PCA would say no, but sometimes it would say, "OK, sure, but only if you make these cuts." The studio would say, "Hey, we have this movie that was made before the Code.

#The smiling lieutenant 1931 ok.ru code#
In the years after a rigid Production Code imposed morality on American cinema, occasionally a studio would go begging to the Production Code Administration.
