Poster
Watch

Madame Curie

Madame Curie

  • Status: Released
  • 16-12-1943
  • Runtime: 124 min
  • Score: 7.131
  • Vote count: 42

Poor physics student Marie is studying at the Sorbonne in 1890s Paris. One of the few women studying in her field, Marie encounters skepticism concerning her abilities, but is eventually offered a research placement in Pierre Curie's lab. The scientists soon fall in love and embark on a shared quest to extract, from a particular type of rock, a new chemical element they have named radium. However, their research puts them on the brink of professional failure.

Greer Garson

Marie Curie

Walter Pidgeon

Pierre Curie

Henry Travers

Eugene Curie

Albert Bassermann

Professor Jean Perot

Robert Walker

David Le Gros

C. Aubrey Smith

Lord Kelvin

May Whitty

Madame Eugene Curie

Victor Francen

President of University

Elsa Bassermann

Madame Perot

Reginald Owen

Dr. Becquerel

Van Johnson

Reporter

Margaret O'Brien

Irene Curie - Age 5

James Hilton

Narration Spoken By (voice)

Mariska Aldrich

Tall Woman (uncredited)

Tony Carson

Man at Accident (uncredited)

Ruth Cherrington

Swedish Queen (uncredited)

Ray Collins

Lecturer (voice) (uncredited)

Guy D'Ennery

Professor (uncredited)

George Davis

Cart Driver (uncredited)

Harold De Becker

Professor (uncredited)

Franz Dorfler

Assistant Tailor (uncredited)

Justine Duney

Woman at Accident (uncredited)

Tay Dunn

Man at Accident (uncredited)

William Edmunds

Cart Driver (uncredited)

Nestor Eristoff

Board Member (uncredited)

Al Ferguson

Man at Accident (uncredited)

Edward Fielding

Board Member (uncredited)

Howard Freeman

Prof. Constant (voice) (uncredited)

Linda Lee Gates

Perot Granddaughter (uncredited)

Marie Louise Gates

Perot Granddaughter (uncredited)

Lisa Golm

Lucille (uncredited)

Ilka Grüning

Seamstress (uncredited)

Lumsden Hare

Professor Roget (uncredited)

Teddy Infuhr

Son (uncredited)

James Kirkwood

Board Member (uncredited)

Isabel La Mal

Woman at Accident (uncredited)

Gene Lockhart

Bit Part (uncredited)

Miles Mander

Businessman (uncredited)

George Meader

Singing Professor (uncredited)

Dickie Meyers

Master Michaud (uncredited)

Noel Mills

Wedding Guest (uncredited)

Leo Mostovoy

Photographer (uncredited)

Alan Napier

Dr. Bladh (uncredited)

Moroni Olsen

President of Businessman's Board (uncredited)

María Pagés

Woman at Accident (uncredited)

Gigi Perreau

Eve at 18 Months (uncredited)

Francis Pierlot

Monsieur Michaud (uncredited)

Nita Pike

Woman at Accident (uncredited)

Dorothy Raye

Nurse (uncredited)

Almira Sessions

Madame Michaud (uncredited)

Arthur Shields

Businessman (uncredited)

Wyndham Standing

King Oscar (uncredited)

Ray Teal

Driver (uncredited)

Charles Trowbridge

Board Member (uncredited)

Michael Visaroff

Proud Papa (uncredited)

Marek Windheim

Jewelry Salesman (uncredited)

Frederick Worlock

Businessman (uncredited)

Eustace Wyatt

Doctor (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

Fresh from their successful pairing in “Mrs Miniver”, Greer Garson and Walter Pidgeon join forces for a melodrama about the French scientists who worked tirelessly to discover radium. Why, you might ask? Well, their friend had alerted them to the fact that a certain rock he found is capable of glowing in the dark? They know it isn’t one of the already identified elements and so Pierre Curie and his research assistant and soon to be wife Marie set about trying to get to the bottom of things. This is an onerous process with little backing from their peers, and indeed when Mme. Curie starts to see some ill effects that could suggest cancer, they begin to wonder if they shouldn’t just abandon the whole thing. Rather intuitively, though, they conclude that if this substance can kill healthy cells then maybe it can also nobble malevolent ones too? Now what ensues is actually quite a tough film to watch as their manual labours and sacrifices are really quite powerfully portrayed amidst frozen and rudimentary conditions in a glorified shed. There’s a solid chemistry between the two stars, the film’s production design is convincing and it obliquely looks at issues of sexism and establishment scepticism too. Speculative, sure, but quite enjoyable.