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IMDbPro

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

  • 1947
  • U
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
7.3K
YOUR RATING
Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo in The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947)
Home Video Trailer from HBO Home Video
Play trailer1:44
1 Video
61 Photos
Quirky ComedyRomantic ComedyComedyFantasyRomance

A clumsy daydreamer gets caught up in a sinister conspiracy.A clumsy daydreamer gets caught up in a sinister conspiracy.A clumsy daydreamer gets caught up in a sinister conspiracy.

  • Director
    • Norman Z. McLeod
  • Writers
    • Ken Englund
    • Everett Freeman
    • James Thurber
  • Stars
    • Danny Kaye
    • Virginia Mayo
    • Boris Karloff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    7.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Norman Z. McLeod
    • Writers
      • Ken Englund
      • Everett Freeman
      • James Thurber
    • Stars
      • Danny Kaye
      • Virginia Mayo
      • Boris Karloff
    • 76User reviews
    • 26Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947)
    Trailer 1:44
    The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (1947)

    Photos60

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    Top cast99+

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    Danny Kaye
    Danny Kaye
    • Walter Mitty
    Virginia Mayo
    Virginia Mayo
    • Rosalind van Hoorn
    Boris Karloff
    Boris Karloff
    • Dr. Hugo Hollingshead
    Fay Bainter
    Fay Bainter
    • Mrs. Eunice Mitty
    Ann Rutherford
    Ann Rutherford
    • Gertrude Griswold
    Thurston Hall
    Thurston Hall
    • Bruce Pierce
    Gordon Jones
    Gordon Jones
    • Tubby Wadsworth
    Florence Bates
    Florence Bates
    • Mrs. Irma Griswold
    Konstantin Shayne
    Konstantin Shayne
    • Peter van Hoorn
    Reginald Denny
    Reginald Denny
    • Colonel
    Henry Corden
    Henry Corden
    • Hendrick
    Doris Lloyd
    Doris Lloyd
    • Mrs. Leticia Follinsbee
    Fritz Feld
    Fritz Feld
    • Anatole
    Frank Reicher
    Frank Reicher
    • Karl Maasdam
    Milton Parsons
    Milton Parsons
    • Butler Tyler
    The Goldwyn Girls
    • Dancing Ensemble
    Eddie Acuff
    Eddie Acuff
    • Wells Fargo Cowboy
    • (uncredited)
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Flower Truck Driver
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Norman Z. McLeod
    • Writers
      • Ken Englund
      • Everett Freeman
      • James Thurber
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews76

    6.97.3K
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    Featured reviews

    6rmax304823

    Amusing farce

    Whatever the setting, and there were many, Danny Kaye always played himself -- the hypochondriacal, stuttering, cowardly, nervously fiddling neurotic. That's pretty much what he is here, and if you haven't seen a Danny Kaye movie this is a pretty funny introduction.

    The plot violates James Thurber's short story, the point of which was that Walter Mitty daydreamed so much because his own life was so dull. It's probably Thurber's most popular story, although "If Grant Had Been Drinking at Appomatox" has more outright laughs. Here Kaye is involved in one richly comic episode after another.

    The famous fantasies are pretty much gotten out of the way before the movie is half over. The "real" scenes are at least as amusing. He's a copy editor at a pulp magazine in New York and Boris Karloff, he of the ominous lisp, is pitching him a story about a doctor who murders people without leaving a trace by pressing on a nerve at the base of the skull. "Oh, we've already used that in 'The Revenge of the Gland Specialist'," objects Kaye.

    The plot is a mystery about the planned theft of the Dutch Crown Jewels. Something to do with a murder Kaye witnesses (nobody believes him), a black book, Kaye singing silly songs, a chief conspirator nicknamed "the Boot," and a dazzling innocent blond -- Virginia Mayo -- who has a pretty sassy figure.

    Watching her and Kaye talking about corsets reminded me that when I was a teen, all women seemed to be wrapped up in inexplicable buckles, plastic straps, and clips that only a deranged mechanical engineer could design. Come to think of it, I'm still out of it. I don't know whether women leave body gel on or wash it off, or what bath beads are. And when did "lipstick" turn into "lip rouge," and "rouge" turn into "blush," and "mascara" into "kohl" -- or DID it? Somebody is pulling the wool over somebody's eyes around here.

    You ought to see this if only for the costume design and hair styles. Wow -- what exotica! It's impossible to believe that women ever dressed like this, or hoped to, despite Fritz Feld's glutinous paean to a hat that, although it looks like something Calder might have dreamed up during a horrible hangover, can be disassembled into three -- count 'em -- three separate parts and then be piece together into yet another arrangement. Put a tiny quail under that feathery apparatus and you're talking a two-hundred dollar entree at a four-star Parisian restaurant.

    There's a likable element of running gags in here too. On three occasions Kaye's blustery boss is holding important business meetings when Kaye enters unexpectedly -- once simply late, and twice more crawling backward in through the tenth floor window pursued by pigeons.

    Kaye's decline was sad. He wound up singing "Thumbelina" to a nearly empty night club in later years. But he's at his peak here, and his peak was pretty good.
    10IrisNo11

    A Classic Comedy!

    Before there was Mike Meyers, Adam Sandler, Eddie Murphy, JIM CARREY -- of course -- there was the great and late Danny Kaye. In "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty", Mr. Kaye gives a brilliant and hysterical performance as the highly imaginative Walter Mitty, who escapes his own real life and pictures himself as a whole new person, whether it's a hat designer, professional gambler, a war hero, surgeon, etc. Yet his imagination is no longer fiction when a real life event and adventure takes place in the dull, but unique life of Walter Mitty.

    Anyhow, I was really surprised at this movie. I thought it was going to be boring, because 1947 is 34 years before I was born, but I was really impressed by this movie. As a matter of fact, I thought it was A LOT funnier than a few comedy films they have these days. Danny Kaye really puts a smile on your face in this film. Anyone would love watching this film! It's a true classic! :o)
    7claudio_carvalho

    Hilarious Comedy

    In New York, the clumsy Walter Mitty (Danny Kaye) is the publisher of pulp fiction at the Pierce Publishing house owned by Bruce Pierce (Thurston Hall). He lives with his overprotective and abusive mother (Fay Bainter) and neither his fiancée Gertrude Griswold (Ann Rutherford) and her mother (Florence Bates) nor his best friend Tubby Wadsworth (Gordon Jones) respects him. Walter is an escapist and daydreams into a world of fantasy many times along the day. When Walter is commuting, he stumbles in the train with the gorgeous Rosalind van Hoorn (Virginia Mayo) that uses Walter to escape from her pursuer. Walter unintentionally gets involved with a dangerous ring of spies that are seeking a black book with notes about a hidden treasure.

    "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" (1947) is a hilarious comedy about a clumsy daydreamer that gets into a dangerous ring of spies. Last Saturday I watched the annoying "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty" (2013) with Ben Stiller and I decided to seek the original 1947 movie that is better and better, with many gags. Danny Kaye is very funny performing the clumsy and coward Walter Mitty. Forget the 2013 remake and prefer to see the original 1947 comedy. My vote is seven.

    Title (Brazil): Not Available
    Sargebri

    Danny Kaye At His Finest

    This is probably the finest role in Danny Kaye's career. I think its because I can relate to the fact that he is a daydreamer with a vivid imagination and he let's his imagination goes wild. Walter represents every put upon person and his daydreams are his way of escaping. I especially loved the gambler sequence, especially when he wakes up and the cards go flying.
    8l_rawjalaurence

    Superb Star Vehicle for a Much-Missed Comedy Performer

    Watching the Danny Kaye version after having watched the Ben Stiller remake is a fascinating experience. The modern remake has definite virtues - notably Stiller's little-boy-lost performance in a sophisticated world of New York advertising, as well as the subtext offering an elegy to LIFE magazine, now doomed to appear on the internet only. On the other hand Norman Z. Mcleod's Technicolor version of the Thurber story contains one of Danny Kaye's best performances on film. He was nothing short of a genius - a brilliant slapstick comedian, with an apparently limitless range of facial expressions, with a natural instinct for delivering comic songs full of verbal pyrotechnics. Structurally speaking, the film has a story of sorts, but is basically a star vehicle for Kaye to show off his talents, playing a distressed sea- captain, an English flying ace (complete with cut-glass RP accent), a brilliant card-sharper (complete with cheroot) and a cowboy storming into a studio-set bound western town. His wife Sylvia Fine provides the music and lyrics for two specialty tunes; in one of them he plays a mid- European professor impersonating most of the instruments of the orchestra. With all this verbal and visual wizardry going on, it's hard to concentrate on the plot; but it doesn't really matter, as Kaye is such an endearing performer that he can quite easily win his way into the audience's affections, especially when he plays direct to camera as if performing in the live theater. The film contains one or two good supporting performances, notably from Virginia Mayo as the love-interest playing several roles in Kaye/Mitty's fantastic dreams, and Boris Karloff as a crooked psychiatrist trying to push Kaye/Mitty out of the window of an upper-floor skyscraper, and then putting him under psychological influence in an attempt to extract vital information out of him. But basically the film belongs to Kaye, a superb star vehicle for a fantastically talented actor and performer, who was as much at home in front of a live audience as he was in front of a movie camera.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Author James Thurber offered producer Samuel Goldwyn $10,000 to not make the film.
    • Goofs
      The swastikas shown on the Spitfire are originally shown in reverse. Shortly thereafter they are shown the correct way round. Clearly the studio mocked up one side of a Spitfire and simply reversed the filmed image to 'show' both sides of the plane.
    • Quotes

      Walter Mitty: Your small minds are musclebound with suspicion. That's because the only exercise you ever get is jumping to conclusions.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Dick Cavett Show: Danny Kaye (1971)
    • Soundtracks
      The Words and Music for
      "Symphony for Unstrung Tongue"

      by Sylvia Fine

      Performed by Danny Kaye (uncredited)

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1948 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Tajni zivot Voltera Mitija
    • Filming locations
      • 1050 Arden Road, Pasadena, California, USA(on location)
    • Production company
      • The Samuel Goldwyn Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $956,625
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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