A Farewell to Arms is a 1932 film about an American ambulance driver and an English nurse who fall in love in Italy during World War I.
- Directed by Frank Borzage. Written by Benjamin Glazer, based on the novel by Ernest Hemingway.
Dialogue
- Rinaldi: I will see you are decorated for bravery. Perhaps we can get you the medalgio d'argento. But certainly the bronze one. Did you carry somebody out of battle?
- Lieutenant Frederic Henry: I didn't carry anyone. I couldn't move.
- Rinaldi: Surely there was something heroic. Tell me what you did.
- Lieutenant Frederic Henry: I was blown up eating cheese.
- Lieutenant Frederic Henry: We've never been apart, really. Not since we met.
- Catherine Barkley: Not since we met.
- Lieutenant Frederic Henry: And never can be.
- Catherine Barkley: Never apart.
- Lieutenant Frederic Henry: In life and in death. Say it Cat.
- Catherine Barkley: In life and in death, we'll never be parted.
- Lieutenant Frederic Henry: You do believe that, don't you, Cat?
- Catherine Barkley: I believe it, and I'm not afraid.
Taglines
- Here is Ernest Hemmingway's Greatest Novel!
- Unforgettable Story of Undaunted Love!
- The Greatest Love Story of the War.
Cast
- Helen Hayes — Catherine Barkley
- Gary Cooper — Lieutenant Frederic Henry
- Adolphe Menjou — Major Rinaldi
- Mary Philips — Helen Ferguson
- Jack La Rue — Priest
- Blanche Friderici — Head Nurse
- Mary Forbes — Miss Van Campen
External links
- A Farewell to Arms quotes at the Internet Movie Database
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