A Foreign Affair (1948) | |
Director(s) | Billy Wilder |
Producer(s) | Charles Brackett |
Top Genres | Comedy, Drama, Romance |
Top Topics | Femme Fatale, Post War, Romance (Comic), Singers |
Featured Cast:
A Foreign Affair Overview:
A Foreign Affair (1948) was a Comedy - Drama Film directed by Billy Wilder and produced by Charles Brackett.
SYNOPSIS
Wilder's tongue-in-cheek look at de-Nazification has Arthur and Dietrich in fine form as opposite ends of a Lund taffy pull. The postwar Berlin setting casts Arthur as a congresswoman monitoring the fraternization between Germans and Americans, while Dietrich stakes out familiar territory as the steamy chanteuse, this time with Nazi-infested past. She manages to ensnare Lund while singing numbers like "The Ruins of Berlin," but Arthur, who counters by cooing "Iowa Corn Song," is wise to be her and seems to have fallen for Lund herself.
(Source: available at Amazon AMC Classic Movie Companion).
.
Academy Awards 1948 --- Ceremony Number 21 (source: AMPAS)
Award | Recipient | Result |
Best Cinematography | Charles B. Lang, Jr. | Nominated |
Best Writing | Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder, Richard L. Breen | Nominated |
BlogHub Articles:
A Foreign Affair ( 1948 )
By The Metzinger Sisters on Apr 23, 2023 From Silver Scenes - A Blog for Classic Film LoversDuring World War II, the American, British, and Russian forces bombed Berlin until it was a heap of concrete rubble. After the war, the US Army decided to leave some troops behind to help clean up the mess. This included capturing Nazi members who may have eluded them earlier and also aiding the Ger... Read full article
A Foreign Affair (1948): Billy Wilder and Post-War Germany
By 4 Star Film Fan on Feb 12, 2021 From 4 Star FilmsWhat A Foreign Affair offers is a curious mix of Billy Wilder’s brand of gleeful satire with docudrama. In this regard, it stands alongside the likes of The Search (1948) as one of the earliest American films to explore the world of post-war Europe with so much rebuilding to do both physically... Read full article
A Foreign Affair (Billy Wilder Blogathon)
By Kayla on Jun 22, 2014 From The Cinema DilettanteA Foreign Affair (Billy Wilder Blogathon) June 22, 2014 / The Cinema Dilettante When Aurora and Kellee first announced their jointly hosted Billy Wilder Blogathon, I was eager to sign up. After all, with a career such as his, the hardest part would be narrowing down what movie I w... Read full article
A Foreign Affair (1948)
By Wade Sheeler on Feb 3, 2014 From Pretty Clever FilmsOne of Billy Wilder?s many skills was his ability to take fresh and atypical perspectives on familiar situations and exploit them for maximum humor and insight. Before Stalag 17, who would?ve thought to play a German POW camp with comedy and gallows? humor, or a man who falls so hard for a prostitut... Read full article
Cinema Style--Marlene Dietrich is a Master of Illusion in 1948's A FOREIGN AFFAIR
on Jun 3, 2013 From GlamAmorFor the recent TCM Classic Film Festival, I was honored that Turner Classic Movies asked me to introduce two films from the standpoint of style. The first was Billy Wilder's post-war project A Foreign Affair (1948). Of course Wilder is a wonder of the cinema, writing and directing some of the grea... Read full article
See all A Foreign Affair articles
Quotes from
Phoebe Frost: Sixty-two percent Republican, thank you.
Phoebe Frost: Really, Colonel Plummer... you should have your brakes relined!
Col. Rufus J. Plummer: [as she leaves, he scratches his nose with the middle finger, apparently flipping her off. it WAS Billy Wilder, after all]
Captain John Pringle: Don't tell me it's subversive to kiss a Republican!
read more quotes from A Foreign Affair...
Facts about
Female stars Jean Arthur and Marlene Dietrich were in their late 40s when they shot this film. The leading man 'John Lund' however was a decade younger than both.
Director Billy Wilder said famously of his difficulties with Marlene Dietrich and Jean Arthur in the film. "I have one dame who's afraid to look at herself in a mirror and another who won't stop looking!"
read more facts about A Foreign Affair...