Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueCynthia controls Steve's life, dismisses the nanny, and complicates his marriage to Maris, creating conflict in their small town.Cynthia controls Steve's life, dismisses the nanny, and complicates his marriage to Maris, creating conflict in their small town.Cynthia controls Steve's life, dismisses the nanny, and complicates his marriage to Maris, creating conflict in their small town.
- Réalisation
- Scénaristes
- Vedettes
- Prix
- 2 victoires au total
Joseph Crehan
- Sen. Kingsley
- (as Joseph Creehan)
Barbara Bedford
- Nurse Sherwood
- (uncredited)
Marie Blake
- Miss Van Horn - Ellen's New Nursemaid
- (uncredited)
Ralph Brooks
- Court Witness
- (uncredited)
James Conaty
- Guest at Sen. Kingsley's Party
- (uncredited)
Roger Converse
- Holland's Secretary
- (uncredited)
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Avis en vedette
These girls have jungle red nails too
Woman Against Woman from MGM's B picture unit seems almost a dress rehearsal
for MGM's classic The Women as both Mary Astor and Virginia Bruce scratch and
claw over Herbert Marshall.
Astor and Marshall have been married and have a daughter Juanita Quigley, but Marshall's walking out. Soon enough he meets Virginia Bruce and they get married.
But Marshall wants to have his cake and eat it too. They move into the same suburban town where he lived before with Astor. The town gossips nearly do in Bruce. In the end though a modus operandi is achieved for the sake of the little girl.
Woman Against Woman is a great example of The Code at work. Divorce is a fact of life even the Catholic Breen office couldn't ignore. We could never have Marshall carrying on with Bruce while he was still married. Everyone had to be showed in the best possible light. The three in the triangle act so civilized and polite I thought it was going to end in a menage a trois.
Woman Against Woman is just a dress rehearsal. Wait till the following year when Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford and company really drag the claws out.
Astor and Marshall have been married and have a daughter Juanita Quigley, but Marshall's walking out. Soon enough he meets Virginia Bruce and they get married.
But Marshall wants to have his cake and eat it too. They move into the same suburban town where he lived before with Astor. The town gossips nearly do in Bruce. In the end though a modus operandi is achieved for the sake of the little girl.
Woman Against Woman is a great example of The Code at work. Divorce is a fact of life even the Catholic Breen office couldn't ignore. We could never have Marshall carrying on with Bruce while he was still married. Everyone had to be showed in the best possible light. The three in the triangle act so civilized and polite I thought it was going to end in a menage a trois.
Woman Against Woman is just a dress rehearsal. Wait till the following year when Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford and company really drag the claws out.
What sort of idiot would bring his new wife to the same town as his -ex??!!
"Woman Against Woman" is an excellent film for folks who are dealing with divorce or marrying a divorced person. It shows the manipulation and games that some of these folks have to deal with. And, it shows that clear boundaries must be established or these subsequent marriages will be doomed.
When the film begins, Cynthia (Mary Astor) is being a horrible wife. She is domineering, controlling and seems to care nothing for her husband, Stephen (Herbert Marshall). What she doesn't realize is that she's pushed him to the breaking point and Stephen announces he's divorcing her. Considering Cynthia, this is probably for the best.
Some time passes and Stephen meets Maris (Virginia Bruce). She's a lovely lady but doesn't realize she's in for hell. This is because Stephen is an idiot and takes her back to live in his home town...the same town where Cynthia lives and is the toast of society. Not surprisingly, Cynthia makes Maris' arrival miserable and it's made worse because Cynthia is brilliant and manages to turn everyone against Maris through her manipulations. Even Stephen's mother seems to side with Cynthia! What's next?!
This is a very good film with some nice acting. My reason for giving it a 7, however, is that the end is just too simple and seemed anti-climatic. This film is a good example of one that could have used 15 more minutes--to show a more gradual change in Cynthia. Good but the ending just seemed unrealistic and quick.
When the film begins, Cynthia (Mary Astor) is being a horrible wife. She is domineering, controlling and seems to care nothing for her husband, Stephen (Herbert Marshall). What she doesn't realize is that she's pushed him to the breaking point and Stephen announces he's divorcing her. Considering Cynthia, this is probably for the best.
Some time passes and Stephen meets Maris (Virginia Bruce). She's a lovely lady but doesn't realize she's in for hell. This is because Stephen is an idiot and takes her back to live in his home town...the same town where Cynthia lives and is the toast of society. Not surprisingly, Cynthia makes Maris' arrival miserable and it's made worse because Cynthia is brilliant and manages to turn everyone against Maris through her manipulations. Even Stephen's mother seems to side with Cynthia! What's next?!
This is a very good film with some nice acting. My reason for giving it a 7, however, is that the end is just too simple and seemed anti-climatic. This film is a good example of one that could have used 15 more minutes--to show a more gradual change in Cynthia. Good but the ending just seemed unrealistic and quick.
Fantastic screenplay
I love the script of Woman Against Woman! It's fresh, smart, and above all, realistic. Villains aren't villains, everyone has her point of view, and no one does anything that she wouldn't do in real life. This is not a cutesy, cavity-inducing flick that gives a happy ending to all. It's a realistic look at marriage in the 1930s when divorce wasn't unheard of, but wasn't common either.
Herbert Marshall is unhappily married to Mary Astor. She wears the pants and keeps him on a very tight leash. When Herbie falls in love with Virginia Bruce, Mary declares a hissing, spitting catfight to hold onto her man. I don't want to tell you any more of the plot, because it's a very fun film to watch as it naturally unfolds, but I will say that it very nearly won a Rag Award for Edward Chodorov's screenplay. All three leads hold their own and bounce off each other with the practiced professionality of a stage performance, so if you like good dialogue and good acting, check out this catfight-I mean film.
Herbert Marshall is unhappily married to Mary Astor. She wears the pants and keeps him on a very tight leash. When Herbie falls in love with Virginia Bruce, Mary declares a hissing, spitting catfight to hold onto her man. I don't want to tell you any more of the plot, because it's a very fun film to watch as it naturally unfolds, but I will say that it very nearly won a Rag Award for Edward Chodorov's screenplay. All three leads hold their own and bounce off each other with the practiced professionality of a stage performance, so if you like good dialogue and good acting, check out this catfight-I mean film.
Mary's the reason to see this
Standard drama of the kind that the studios churned out to fill the bottom half of a double bill back in Hollywood's Golden Age.
Herbert Marshall is torn between the covert scheming of first wife Mary Astor who has no compunction using their child as a weapon to try and get him back and his much more compatible second wife Virginia Bruce.
Since the situations are pat with many of these programmers it falls to the players to make something out of what they are handed.
Mary Astor comes out the victor in that department. Playing another in a long line of vengeful women she makes the small, selfish Cynthia far more interesting than the minor film deserves. A truly versatile actress she could play a poison pill of a creature in one film and turn right around in the next and play a homey, warm character such as Marmee in Little Woman with equal skill.
The usually highly enjoyable Herbert Marshall doesn't fare as well coming across as stiff and disengaged. He always had a reserve which was frequently put to good use but not here, he seems uncomfortable.
Virginia Bruce isn't given much of a role to play but she does get a few zingers in towards the end which she handles well.
Also adding nice little bits are Janet Beecher as Marshall's mother and Marjorie Rambeau as an old rum-pot friend of the couple, she in particular adds a bit of spice to the film whenever she shows up.
Directed economically but with no distinction by Sinclair, Mary still makes it short running time worth the while.
Herbert Marshall is torn between the covert scheming of first wife Mary Astor who has no compunction using their child as a weapon to try and get him back and his much more compatible second wife Virginia Bruce.
Since the situations are pat with many of these programmers it falls to the players to make something out of what they are handed.
Mary Astor comes out the victor in that department. Playing another in a long line of vengeful women she makes the small, selfish Cynthia far more interesting than the minor film deserves. A truly versatile actress she could play a poison pill of a creature in one film and turn right around in the next and play a homey, warm character such as Marmee in Little Woman with equal skill.
The usually highly enjoyable Herbert Marshall doesn't fare as well coming across as stiff and disengaged. He always had a reserve which was frequently put to good use but not here, he seems uncomfortable.
Virginia Bruce isn't given much of a role to play but she does get a few zingers in towards the end which she handles well.
Also adding nice little bits are Janet Beecher as Marshall's mother and Marjorie Rambeau as an old rum-pot friend of the couple, she in particular adds a bit of spice to the film whenever she shows up.
Directed economically but with no distinction by Sinclair, Mary still makes it short running time worth the while.
M Astor in MGM shortie on divorce
A real MGM shortie, at only 61 minutes. The story revolves around Stephen Holland (Herb Marshall), the ex wife Cynthia (played by Mary Astor), and the new wife (Virginia Bruce). Playing referee is Mrs. Kingsley, who is friend to both the old and the new wives, as well as the all-knowing socialite matriarch of the town. Also poking her nose in here and there is Holland's mother, played by Janet Beecher. Acc to IMDb, this was Robert Sinclair's very first directing project, and he did quite well. Since they were a couple years into the movie code by 1938, everyone is quite civil, and we know things can't get TOO out of control. Written by Margaret Culkin Banning, who had been married twice herself, making us wonder if this is based on her own life, at least partially... it's also interesting that M. Astor had been married three times herself when this was made. Herb Marshall would be married FIVE times, and Virginia Bruce FOUR... wow, they sure had the right cast making this one about divorce and marriage.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesIn the scene in the hotel room between Virginia Bruce and Herbert Marshall, she sings a bit of Cole Porter's "I've Got You Under My Skin"--a song she had introduced in the musical Born to Dance (1936) two years earlier.
- GaffesWhen Cynthia is arguing with Stephen about going out to dinner, she takes the first of two accessories out of the dresser drawer twice between shots.
- Bandes originalesTexas Cowboy Song
(uncredited)
Composer unknown
Played and sung by a trio of cowboys at Kingsley's party
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 1m(61 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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