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1938 • Comedy / Romance • 85m

Bluebeard's 8th Wife

"He married in haste and repeated with pleasure!"

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107 critic reviews

72%

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American multi-millionaire Michael Brandon marries his eighth wife, Nicole, the daughter of a broke French Marquis. But she doesn't want to be only a number in the line of his ex-wives and undertakes her own strategy to tame him.

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Top Cast

Claudette Colbert
Claudette Colbert
Nicole De Loiselle
Gary Cooper
Gary Cooper
Michael Brandon
Edward Everett Horton
Edward Everett Horton
Marquis De Loiselle
David Niven
David Niven
Albert De Regnier
Elizabeth Patterson
Elizabeth Patterson
Aunt Hedwige
Herman Bing
Herman Bing
Monsieur Pepinard
Warren Hymer
Warren Hymer
Kid Mulligan
Franklin Pangborn
Franklin Pangborn
Assistant Hotel Manager
Rolfe Sedan
Rolfe Sedan
Floorwalker
Lawrence Grant
Lawrence Grant
Professor Urganzeff
Tyler Brooke
Tyler Brooke
Clerk
Leon Ames
Leon Ames
Ex-Chauffeur (uncredited)
Gino Corrado
Gino Corrado
Waiter Arranging Furniture (uncredited)
Joseph Crehan
Joseph Crehan
American Tourist (uncredited)
George Davis
George Davis
Maurice - Second Porter (uncredited)
Lenore Aubert
Lenore Aubert
Party Guest (uncredited)
Eugene Borden
Eugene Borden
Waiter on the Stairs (uncredited)
Barlowe Borland
Barlowe Borland
Uncle Fernandel (uncredited)
Director: Ernst LubitschScreenplay: Charles BrackettScreenplay: Billy WilderProducer: Ernst LubitschExecutive Producer: William LeBaron

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Reviews

T
tmdb28039023
2022-09-15
60%

Bluebeard's Eighth Wife was the first of two collaborations between director Ernst Lubitsch and then up-and-coming screenwriter Billy Wilder. The film, all style and surface, is more Lubistch than Wilder, but the script co-written by Wilder and Charles Brackett (a tandem that would create, among others, The Lost Weekend and Sunset Boulevard) lends itself perfectly to the famous 'Lubistch touch' — the German filmmaker’s characteristic shrewd and methodical humor. For Lubitsch, making laugh is like making love, and he isn’t the slightest bit interested in instant gratification; in fact, his approach is the comic equivalent of Hitchcock's definition of suspense. Michael (Gary Cooper) suffers from insomnia; Nicole (Claudette Colbert), whom he meets at the beginning of the story in the store where he goes to buy a pijama shirt (but no pants, which itself to an elaborately humorous visual gag), recommends “Professor Urganzeff's method ... take a long word, like 'Czechoslovakia' ... While you spell it backwards, you stretch and yawn between each letter … You only have to worry about 'slovakia.' By the time you get to "Czech" you will be fast asleep." The second half of the film actually takes place in Czechoslovakia, where we finally get the real punchline to a joke that Lubitsch set up some half-hour ago (and to top it off, near the end of the movie we find out that there really is a Professor Urganzeff). Michael is a 'serial husband'; marriage is such a revolving door for him that the suit he wears to his most recent wedding still has rice on it from the previous ceremony. Nicole is horrified to learn that Michael has been married seven times previously and calls off the wedding, much to her father's dismay. Michael explains that he gives each of his wives a prenuptial agreement that guarantees $50,000 a year for life if they divorce. Nicole agrees to marry for double that amount, and proceeds to apply withhold sex (not in so many words, of course) to precipitate a divorce and because otherwise "it wouldn't be fair to my next husband." As usual, Lubitsch knows that 'love' is not the stuff of drama but of farce, and that lovers are not so much to be pitied as ridiculed; on the other hand, he has a sincere appreciation for his characters, who are like little children, and he ultimately laughs with them, and not at them.

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Details

Status
Released
Origin
US
Languages
English, French
Studios
Paramount Pictures

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