Casablanca Poster

Casablanca (1943)

PG 01/15/1943 Drama, Romance 1h 43m
82%
User
Score
8.5/10
99%
100/100

They had a date with fate in Casablanca!

Overview

In Casablanca, Morocco in December 1941, a cynical American expatriate meets a former lover, with unforeseen complications.

Michael Curtiz

Director

Philip G. Epstein

Screenplay

Julius J. Epstein

Screenplay

Howard Koch

Screenplay

Top Billed Cast

Humphrey Bogart

Humphrey Bogart

Rick Blaine

Ingrid Bergman

Ingrid Bergman

Ilsa Lund

Paul Henreid

Paul Henreid

Victor Laszlo

Claude Rains

Claude Rains

Captain Louis Renault

Conrad Veidt

Conrad Veidt

Major Heinrich Strasser

Sydney Greenstreet

Sydney Greenstreet

Signor Ferrari

Peter Lorre

Peter Lorre

Ugarte

S.Z. Sakall

S.Z. Sakall

Carl

Madeleine Lebeau

Madeleine Lebeau

Yvonne

Media

Humphrey Bogart Parts Ways With Ingrid Bergman | Casablanca | TCM

Humphrey Bogart Parts Ways With Ingrid Bergman | Casablanca | TCM

We'll Always Have Paris | Full Ending

We'll Always Have Paris | Full Ending

An Unlikely Classic: Behind The Scenes

An Unlikely Classic: Behind The Scenes

On View: CASABLANCA

On View: CASABLANCA

4K Trailer

4K Trailer

TCM 80th Anniversary Spot

TCM 80th Anniversary Spot

The Arrest of Victor Laszlo

The Arrest of Victor Laszlo

Full Movie Preview

Full Movie Preview

Modern Trailer

Modern Trailer

Hugh Jackman on CASABLANCA

Hugh Jackman on CASABLANCA

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Reviews

A review by barrymost

Written on October 4, 2019

"Everybody comes to Rick's," or so they say. It's the middle of WWII, and one evening a certain lady walks into Rick Blaine's popular cafe. As the familiar notes of "As Time Goes By" drift through the hazy atmosphere of the cafe, Rick's life begins to get really complicated. The top-notch cast is, I think, a big part of what makes this film so memorable, and much-heralded through the years. The script is truly well-written and moving. My only complaint is, how could they do something so awful as killing off Peter Lorre within the first quarter of the film?

Would I recommend? Overall, yes. There's a reason people cite this as one of the best films ever made. Though there are others I like much more, it is very, very good....

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A review by John Chard

Written on March 28, 2020

You must remember this...

Are my eyes really brown?

Casablanca is one of those films that needs no introduction - or in truth - any more in-depth dissection as to its worth. Over the years it has become one of the most quoted ever pictures (sometimes wrongly), and in reality it's arguably more iconic than it is a work of art. Although a truly "A" list production for 1942, fact is nobody in and around the film expected it to be anything other than a good piece that will put bums on the seats in the theatres. Solidly received on release and riding in on the wave of the Allies inroads into North Africa, Casablanca steadily overcame the much discussed production troubles (the script was practically rewritten daily) to be where it is now, one of the most loved film's of all time.

I wou...

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A review by CinemaSerf

Written on June 26, 2022

I've just seen this on a big screen for the first time in over thirty years - no enhancements, 4K, HD - just as Michael Curtiz saw it back in 1942 and it's a cracking piece of cinema. "Rick Blaine" (Humphrey Bogart) runs his Casablanca café as a literal oasis in the North African desert - a refuge for all sorts fleeing the oppression of the Nazis in nearby Europe. Enter "Ilsa" (Ingrid Bergman) and her husband, a Czech resistance leader "Hector Lazlo" (Paul Henried) and we discover that "Rick" and her have a past, and when the pursuing "Maj. Strasser" (Conrad Veidt) and local police chief Claude Rains ("Capt. Renault") get involved in this cocktail of deceit and duplicity things gradually come to the boil in a wonderfully evocative, sophisticated fashion. Bogart and Bergman positively smou...

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A review by Filipe Manuel Neto

Written on July 26, 2022

**One of the best movies of all time.**

Unlike some people, I believe that there are perfect movies. It doesn't happen easily, but they do exist, and I'm pretty sure this is one of them. A classic in its own right, which has withstood the test of time and continues to win sympathies today, it is one of the most outstanding films in American cinema, a work that goes beyond aesthetics, art and culture, and which, over the decades, became part of the collective memory, part of the universal cultural heritage.

The film was made in 1942, in the midst of World War II, and its production was conditioned by severe restrictions on the use of raw materials considered important for the American war effort. So many of the sets are recycled, they were used in a number of other Warner films and ad...

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