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The Painted Veil

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Greta Garbo and Herbert Marshall in The Painted Veil (1934)
DramaRomance

A wife neglected by her husband, a medical researcher in China, falls in love with a dashing diplomatic attaché.A wife neglected by her husband, a medical researcher in China, falls in love with a dashing diplomatic attaché.A wife neglected by her husband, a medical researcher in China, falls in love with a dashing diplomatic attaché.

  • Director
    • Richard Boleslawski
  • Writers
    • John Meehan
    • Salka Viertel
    • Edith Fitzgerald
  • Stars
    • Greta Garbo
    • Herbert Marshall
    • George Brent
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Richard Boleslawski
    • Writers
      • John Meehan
      • Salka Viertel
      • Edith Fitzgerald
    • Stars
      • Greta Garbo
      • Herbert Marshall
      • George Brent
    • 37User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos58

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    Top cast62

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    Greta Garbo
    Greta Garbo
    • Katrin
    Herbert Marshall
    Herbert Marshall
    • Walter Fane
    George Brent
    George Brent
    • Jack Townsend
    Warner Oland
    Warner Oland
    • General Yu
    Jean Hersholt
    Jean Hersholt
    • Herr Koerber
    Bodil Rosing
    Bodil Rosing
    • Frau Koerber
    Katharine Alexander
    Katharine Alexander
    • Mrs. Townsend
    Cecilia Parker
    Cecilia Parker
    • Olga
    Soo Yong
    Soo Yong
    • Amah
    Forrester Harvey
    Forrester Harvey
    • Waddington
    Robert Adair
    Robert Adair
    • Polo Player
    • (scenes deleted)
    Mariska Aldrich
    • German Teacher
    • (scenes deleted)
    Maidena Armstrong
    • German
    • (scenes deleted)
    Billy Bevan
    Billy Bevan
    • Bridegroom
    • (scenes deleted)
    Beulah Bondi
    Beulah Bondi
    • Frau Koerber
    • (scenes deleted)
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
      W.H. Davis
      • German
      • (scenes deleted)
      Vernon Dent
      Vernon Dent
      • Chief of Police
      • (scenes deleted)
      • Director
        • Richard Boleslawski
      • Writers
        • John Meehan
        • Salka Viertel
        • Edith Fitzgerald
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews37

      6.51.8K
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      Featured reviews

      10beyondtheforest

      Wish this was in the box set.

      Garbo is luminous in this adaptation of the Somerset Maugham story "The Painted Veil." It's a beautiful, lavish production with great direction from Clarence Brown. The story is a nice adaptation, if truncated. The stars are in especially fine form. George Brent plays a convincing cad. Herbert Marshall is in the role he always played best, as the sincere and kind, but neglected, husband. Other reviewers who noted the morality of the story are correct--this is one of those films which inspires those who watch it to be good people. The moving love story wins the viewer over by the end of the film.

      The score and cinematography were lush. The Asian sets were intriguingly exotic and fun to look at. Also interesting were the title scenes at the beginning of the film, in which the name GARBO stays behind the credits. Truly indicative of the heights Garbo's star power had reached by the time THE PAINTED VEIL was released!
      6AlsExGal

      Garbo after the code

      This film has some rather fantastic elements about it, mainly that Greta Garbo would be playing a spinster, and that having several suitors - as her mother claims that she has - she would hastily accept a marriage proposal from someone for whom she has absolutely no passion. In this case it is Herbert Marshall playing both an unloved husband and a devoted medical researcher into the cause and prevention of cholera. The other fantastic element is trying to believe that there is any chemistry between Garbo and "the other man, George Brent. Brent - who was so wonderful with Kay Francis, Bette Davis, and Ruth Chatterton - is here no more attractive than the husband he is trying to supplant. He has all the chemistry of a cardboard box.

      The best part of the film is once Marshall realizes he has been cuckolded and makes an ultimatum to his faithless wife. He has just learned of a raging cholera epidemic in inland China and must go there and try to get it under control. His wife can stay behind if Brent's character agrees to get a divorce, in which case she can also have one. If he does not agree to this, then Garbo must come along with him on his expedition and thus be exposed to the most extreme danger.

      This was one of Garbo's first films after the production code came into effect earlier in 1934. There were so many limits put on what could be said and shown and even insinuated that it really put a damper on what was supposed to be a pretty torrid love triangle. Trying to perform in a moral straight jacket is probably what really cost this film its potential edge. I'd recommend this for Garbo completists only.
      7Danusha_Goska

      Garbo-gorgeous; Marshall-shines; Altruism & Love

      This movie is imperfect, but I love it anyway.

      Its imperfections:

      The soundstage China of 1933's "Bitter Tea of General Yen" leaves the soundstage China of 1934's "Painted Veil" in the dust. "Yen's" China draws you in and intoxicates you. "Painted Veil's" China is fun, but it's a bit silly and superficial. A San Francisco Chinatown Chinese New Year's parade would be more profound.

      George Brent is at his worst here. I've never seen him do anything quite like what he does here -- a fly-by-night and exploitative romancer who toys with women's hearts.

      Brent wasn't great looking, but he was very good at playing the grounded, reliable foil to electric characters like Bette Davis' Judith Traherne in "Dark Victory."

      Here, as Townsend, while speaking serious words, Brent adopts a silly smile, and -- literally -- renounces everything he says in the very next sentence. Maybe a much better looking, or more conventionally handsome, actor could have made this character charming in a snake-like, dangerous way (Erroll Flynn?) but Brent didn't really have the equipment to make Townsend as charming to the audience as he might have been to a neglected wife in China.

      Garbo plays a near spinster who watches her younger sister marry, and, on the rebound, marries a man she doesn't love out of desperation.

      How on earth could anyone make sense of *Garbo* as a desperate spinster? The movie doesn't even try to make sense of that. It just asks us to believe it. The viewer has to try to make up reasons for her spinster status. (Her parents kept her locked in a closet the first thirty or so years of her life? She had a horrible facial deformaty that suddenly fell off?)

      BUT!

      I still love this movie.

      I love it for the moment when Herbert Marshall says, with the kind of real passion you expect of a contemporary production of a Eugene O'Neill play, that he despises himself for loving Garbo, after she has cuckolded him.

      It's great to see Marshall, who so often played helpless men ill used by women ("The Letter," "Duel in the Sun," "The Little Foxes"), here finally able to effectively express his bitterness at being so ill used, and take some action in response, even if that action is intended to be fatal.

      I love it for the complications that arise in the final portion. Hearts are changed. Suffering and human sacrifice changes them. Love is born of the kind of big events that sometimes do change people, and life stories, in real life.

      This ending, though not in compliance with Maughm's novel, didn't strike me as a "Hollywood" "happy" ending at all. It struck me as a profound ending. It reminded me of a more recent film, Bertolucci's "Besieged," that also talks about the role of altruism in love and eroticism.

      For those features, I deeply value this movie, in spite of its superficial imperfections.
      7dglink

      Screen Goddess Garbo Glows

      GARBO...the five-letter name, synonymous with glamour and mystery, fills the screen and overwhelms the film's title and the rest of the cast. The legendary actress, Greta Garbo, warranted the outsize billing, and her glowing image dominates this romantic triangle based on a novel by W. Somerset Maugham. Dr. Walter Fane is a research assistant in Austria, and he harbors romantic intentions for Katrin, the daughter of his superior. Summoning the courage to propose, Fane quickly weds Katrin, and the pair head to China, where Fane's friend, Jack Townsend from the British embassy, aggressively courts the often neglected Katrin. Further complications ensue when a cholera epidemic breaks out, and Fane insists that Katrin accompany him further into the Chinese interior, where she will be separated from Townsend, and he will fight the disease.

      As Katrin, Garbo is luminescent. No surprise as to why, because she was photographed by William H. Daniels, who lensed 21 Garbo films, and was garbed by Adrian, who dressed her in some of her greatest roles. The screen goddess, a moniker the actress richly merits, is flawless in dress or image, whether profile or three-quarter view, close-up or full figure. When she quickly wraps a white scarf around her hair to go out, she emerges as pure elegance in full length white attire. Displaying all the mannerisms that her audience adored, from the fluttering eyelids and raised eyebrows to the subtle trembling of her mouth, Garbo is reason enough to see "The Painted Veil." Whether watching a Chinese pageant that resembles an act from the Ziegfeld Follies or running through streets filled with panicked Chinese, Garbo's makeup is pristine, her clothing spotless, and her air poised. The term "star" was coined for a screen presence such as hers.

      Not surprisingly, Garbo's two male co-stars in the film pale in comparison. While neither Herbert Marshall nor George Brent were particularly memorable actors, they were often paired with strong actresses like Garbo or Bette Davis that unfairly cast them into the shadows. However, both Marshall and Brent were skilled and acquit themselves well here, although cognizant that audiences were there to see Garbo and not them. Whatever merits the Maugham novel possesses, the film's brief 85-minute running time is rushed, and motivations are not particularly convincing. The Marshall-Garbo marriage seems arbitrary and loveless from the start, and Townsend's pursuit of his friend's wife is a cold-hearted stab in the back. However, audiences did not come to analyze the characters or the plot, they came to see Garbo, and she gloriously commands attention in "The Painted Veil."
      blanche-2

      Garbo is to die for

      Greta Garbo stars with Herbert Marshall, George Brent, Warner Oland, and Jean Hersholt in "The Painted Veil," from 1934, based on the novel by Somerset Maugham. Garbo plays an Austrian woman, Katrin, who grabs at the chance to marry her father's research assistant, Walter Fane (Marshall) after her sister marries and leaves home. At first, they are happy, as Katrin gets to see parts of the world she hasn't seen. Soon, however, she becomes lonely, as Walter is busy fighting a cholera epidemic.

      Katrin falls for Jack Townsend (George Brent) from the British embassy, and the two enter into a passionate affair. Walter finds out; then Katrin is humiliated when she realizes that Jack cares more for his reputation than her and does not seem willing to get a divorce. Walter insists that she travel with him as he goes deeper into China to fight the epidemic; she realizes he just wants her to get sick and die.

      Garbo is incredible in this film - warm, sweet, and flirtatious in the beginning, and rising to the dramatic challenges later, she gives a beautifully layered, sympathetic, and powerful performance. Marshall is very good, as is the rest of the cast - but Garbo just walks away with the whole thing. A very unusual presence and talent, very passionate and committed. It's such a shame that she didn't pursue opportunities for films in Europe after the war.

      Also, the Chinese atmosphere (totally MGM backlot) feels very authentic.

      This film ends differently from the 2006 version. Though I liked the 2006 version, it lacks the magic of this one. Magic, spelled G-a-r-b-o.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Queen Christina (1933) and The Painted Veil (1934) were both huge hits in Europe (making twice their budget in the UK alone), but were underwhelming US successes.
      • Goofs
        A box is marked "Scotch Whiskey", which is the American spelling of whiskey. In the United Kingdom, however, it is spelled with no 'e' and is simply "whisky". Therefore, had the whisk(e)y been imported directly from Scotland, it should have had the 'whisky' spelling.
      • Quotes

        Katrin Koerber Fane: [after Townsend impulsively kisses Katrin] How could you?

        Jack Townsend: I could.

      • Crazy credits
        Greta Garbo's name in the opening credits uses a font that forms the same Gothic arch in the letters as is used in W. Somerset Maugham's symbol. The other credits also use this to a lesser extent.
      • Connections
        Featured in The Good Earth (1937)
      • Soundtracks
        Bridal Chorus (Here Comes the Bride)
        (1850) (uncredited)

        from "Lohengrin"

        Written by Richard Wagner

        Played as background music in the wedding scene

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • November 23, 1934 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • United States
      • Languages
        • English
        • Mandarin
      • Also known as
        • Bračna lomača
      • Filming locations
        • China(background shots)
      • Production company
        • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

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      • Budget
        • $947,000 (estimated)
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

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      • Runtime
        • 1h 25m(85 min)
      • Color
        • Black and White
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.37 : 1

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