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The Private Affairs of Bel Ami (1947)

6.4 | Apr 25, 1947 (US) | Drama | 01:52

All women take to men who have the appearance of wickedness

A self-serving journalist uses influential women in late-1800s Paris and denies the one who truly loves him.

Featured Crew

Director, Screenplay
Assistant Director
Director of Photography
Choreographer
Set Decoration
Makeup Department Head
Production Design
Art Direction
Conductor, Original Music Composer

Cast

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George Sanders
Georges Duroy
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Angela Lansbury
Clotilde de Marelle
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Ann Dvorak
Madeleine Forestier
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John Carradine
Charles Forestier
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Susan Douglas
Suzanne Walter
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Hugo Haas
Monsieur Walter
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Warren William
Laroche-Mathieu
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Frances Dee
Marie de Varenne
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Albert Bassermann
Jacques Rival
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Marie Wilson
Rachel Michot

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
7 | Jun 03, 2024
George Sanders was always great as the cad, and rarely better than here. He is the seriously ambitious "Duroy" who decides that he can use woman as stepping stones to social acceptability. He's broke and jobless, but luckily encounters his war-time buddy "Forestiere" (John Carradine) who gets him job at a newspaper. Networking opportunities beckon. Initially, it's bar-fly "Rachel" (Rachel Wilson) who keeps him entertained, then he alights on the slightly more sophisticated "Clotilde" (Angela Lansbury) whom he has a genuine soft spot for, but she isn't going to get him anywhere near far enough up the greasy pole. For that he needs "Madeleine" (Ann Dvorak) and she not only opens an whole new social world, one that gets his mind set on a bit of malevolent manipulation and you just know that sooner or later his chickens are going to come home to roost. His unstinting ability too think only of himself is really quite entertainingly nauseous and somehow Sanders manages to encapsulate that selfishness and venality really quite smug and chillingly. There's the odd splash of colour in here, too, and with the ladies delivering strongly throughout - especially Lansbury but also Wilson too, this is a smartly written observation of dastardly deeds.