Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.A dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.A dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.
Theresa Maxwell Conover
- Mrs. William Deane
- (as Theresa Maxwell)
Allan Cavan
- Mr. Lyon
- (uncredited)
Bill Elliott
- Nightclub Patron
- (uncredited)
Mary Gordon
- Cook
- (uncredited)
Ben Hall
- Office Boy
- (uncredited)
Selmer Jackson
- Conover
- (uncredited)
Tom London
- Thug
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn an early bit of dialogue, Gene Raymond's character listens to his parents say he shouldn't marry a blues singer, and he replies, "Whom should I marry - Schumann-Heink?," referring to a famous opera singer who had just retired in 1932. Ironically, when Raymond himself married in 1937 his bride was an opera singer as well as a movie star: Jeanette MacDonald.
- GaffesIn the montage showing Abby and Rodney living the high life after they are married, the image of William Deane signing Rodney's $4000 allowance check with the same date (October 15th, 1932), and the same check number is used twice, even though several months have supposedly passed between checks.
- Citations
[first lines]
Rodney Deane: Here, we're going out.
Abby Fane: Going out?
Rodney Deane: Yeah, the whole family's waiting for us.
- Générique farfeluCredits appear as electric light signs in Times Square.
- Bandes originalesSay What You Mean, and Mean What You're Saying to Me
(uncredited)
Written by Gerald Marks and Joe Young
Performed by Carole Lombard
Commentaire en vedette
So one cliché, the greedy gold digger, is subverted and replaced by another one, the spoiled heir redeemed through real hard work. This is a one-idea morality tale, and probably not a particularly original one at that.
Yet Carole Lombard and Gene Raymond are very fine, dialogues are brisk and the tempo lively. Some of the supporting actors are also worth a mention - Arthur Hohl as the torch singer's caring boss, friend and wishful would-be husband, Herbert Evans who has a very funny scene as a butler with some useful experience of dealing with his master's hangovers - he looks and sounds like a twin brother of Edward Everett Horton of Lubitsch's fame. That's quite enough to make this simple-minded, unambitious story quite worth watching.
- hudecha
- 22 nov. 2020
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Détails
- Durée1 heure 9 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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Lacune principale
By what name was Brief Moment (1933) officially released in Canada in English?
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