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Kept Husbands

  • 1931
  • Passed
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
729
YOUR RATING
Dorothy Mackaill and Joel McCrea in Kept Husbands (1931)
DramaRomance

Daughter of a wealthy family decides to marry a poor working man.Daughter of a wealthy family decides to marry a poor working man.Daughter of a wealthy family decides to marry a poor working man.

  • Director
    • Lloyd Bacon
  • Writers
    • Louis Sarecky
    • Forrest Halsey
    • Alfred Jackson
  • Stars
    • Clara Kimball Young
    • Joel McCrea
    • Dorothy Mackaill
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    729
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lloyd Bacon
    • Writers
      • Louis Sarecky
      • Forrest Halsey
      • Alfred Jackson
    • Stars
      • Clara Kimball Young
      • Joel McCrea
      • Dorothy Mackaill
    • 27User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast12

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    Clara Kimball Young
    Clara Kimball Young
    • Mrs. Henrietta Post
    Joel McCrea
    Joel McCrea
    • Richard 'Dick' Brunton
    Dorothy Mackaill
    Dorothy Mackaill
    • Dorothea 'Dot' Parker Brunton
    Ned Sparks
    Ned Sparks
    • Hughie Hanready
    Mary Carr
    Mary Carr
    • Mrs. Brunton
    Robert McWade
    Robert McWade
    • Arthur Parker
    Bryant Washburn
    Bryant Washburn
    • Charlie Bates
    Florence Roberts
    Florence Roberts
    • Mrs. Henrietta Parker
    Freeman Wood
    Freeman Wood
    • Llewllyn Post
    Eddy Chandler
    Eddy Chandler
    • Steelworker
    • (uncredited)
    Lita Chevret
    Lita Chevret
    • Gwen
    • (uncredited)
    Gregory Gaye
    Gregory Gaye
    • Mons. Prinz
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Lloyd Bacon
    • Writers
      • Louis Sarecky
      • Forrest Halsey
      • Alfred Jackson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    5.8729
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    Featured reviews

    tedg

    Encoded

    This is being sold as a pre-code movie, but it has little of what you'd expect.

    Its a simple redemption story of a spoiled rich girl who "buys" a lower class but swell guy as a husband. At the very end, and only in the last few seconds, does she come around. Its more leveraged around class than sex.

    But there is a really interesting scene: our rich girl is miffed at her husband so goes off with an old friend, almost certainly a former sexual partner. He locks the door and they work through a few role games, him chasing her, and she being coy in order to increase the charm of being caught. All the while they are taking archetypal roles from movies. Now, remember that this is 1931, so the roles are relatively new and unsettled.

    What's so amazing about this scene is that you do not know, you are never allowed to see what side she is on, whether she really is running away so as not have sex, or playing the role to enhance the game of seduction. It seems that the actress is carefully in a scintillating state, showing and denying. Its masterful, and very engaging. Its only two minutes or so, but fabulous. Sexy stuff in the story and of the story.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
    6cgvsluis

    I have never seen two more unsuited for one another!

    This is the story of Dick, he plays a football hero turned steel worker. He is of humble (poor) beginnings, but has drive an ambition. He saves some workers at the plant and does not accept the thousand dollar reward for doing so, garnering an invitation to his admiring boss's home for dinner. At dinner, he meets his boss' daughter, Dot. She is selfish and spoiled and while initially prepared to mock and make fun of this poor blue collar steel worker...happens to glance the fob on his pocket watch realizing he is a well-know man local football hero! This changes everything for her and suddenly she is throwing herself at him.

    These two are completely unsuited for one another.

    "There isn't a man in the world that a woman can't land if she wants to."-Dot

    "She's about as useful as a little silky kitten. That's what they should have called her-kitten."-Dick

    This doesn't stop Dot from aggressively pursuing Dick even to the point of proposing, at which time she agrees to live on his salary and everything. A promise she clearly never intended as immediately upon their marriage they go on a European honeymoon where she is buying fur coats and dresses that are far, far beyond Dick's means. When back home the partying lifestyle and spending doesn't end. It really hits the fan when she tries to prevent Dick from going on a business trip her father is sending him on (and he wanted her to go with...but she didn't want to miss out on the local parties!!!!)

    "There is only one thing I'll keep-my self respect!"-Dick

    I am glad it had the ending it did...but I was a little surprised at his mother:

    "All women keep their husbands, some with money others with love."-Mrs. Brunton

    It was clear this was not a live match at least on Dot's part which made this whole film a bit depressing for me. Mixed feelings if I would recommend. I would say proceed at your own risk.
    4planktonrules

    It has an interesting plot idea but fails to capitalize due to the writing.

    This film begins with a rich guy announcing to his family that he's bringing home a worker from his factory. As his family is made up of spoiled rich folks, they assume this guy would be a bumpkin. However, Dick (Joel McCrea) turns out to be well-mannered, quite humble and an All-American football player! He doesn't tell them about the football--the boss' daughter, Dorothy (Dorothy Mackaill) recognizes him. And, although she sure seemed pretty snobby, now she suddenly is VERY interested in Dick (take that how you might) and later announces to her father that she is going to marry that working man. However, even if she does hook him, can it even work out? After all, they are as unlike as can be--he's a decent, hard-working man and she's just a seemingly vacuous rich girl.

    Unfortunately, soon after the marriage, it becomes apparent that Dorothy feels that because she comes from money, she should make all the decisions in the marriage. And, for a while, Dick is emasculated (again, take that how you might). Eventually, however, he gets near the breaking point--he has a great opportunity and she wants him to give it up so he can stay home by her side. Soon, the marriage fizzles. Is there any hope for this couple?

    All in all, the best way to describe Dorothy's behavior throughout the film is...well,...IMDb won't let me use language like this! She is too awful, as it makes you wonder how a guy like Dick could put up with her for ANY length of time. I wish her part have been a bit more subtle. Because of this, the film is severely impacted. Had she been likable and less one-dimensional, the film would have been significantly better. As for McCrea and his part, he was quite good and this sort of piffle didn't significantly mar his career. Overall, a decent idea for a film but it was in need of a significant re-write.

    By the way, get a load of the Christmas tree (about 20 minutes into the film). It's pretty amazing. And, about three minutes later, watch the ridiculous acting of Dorothy's mother--it made me chuckle. Also, the current image on IMDb seems to imply that this is some sort of saucy Pre-Code film. Well, since it came out before mid-1934, of course it's Pre-Code--but it is NOT a sexy film nor one that would have violated the toughened Production Code. It looks like a case of false advertising.
    drednm

    I Love Dorothy Mackaill

    Long forgotten, Dorothy Mackaill was a Ziegfeld girl who was big in pictures in the late silent and early talkie periods. Then she disappeared. Kept Husbands is a great little film that showcases her talent as an actress. It also boasts a very young Joel McCrea. Racy for its time, it's the story of a spoiled rich girl who proposes to a working man and then runs rampant over his life until the big blowup. Fast paced and funny in spots, this little gem is sure worth watching. The stars are terrific and attractive. Supporting cast includes Robert McWade as the indulgent father, Florence Roberts as the snooty mother, Ned Sparks as comic relief, Mary Carr as McCrea's mother, former silent great Clara Kimball Young in an embarrassing turn as the bitchy society woman, and Bryant Washburn as the creep.

    Filled with funny lines and double meanings, this is a swell little pre-Code film. Mackaill is terrific as the spoiled "kitten" and was a solid actress (see her in Safe in Hell also); McCrea is also very good as the bewildered husband; Mary Carr is also noteworthy as the doting mother. Clara Kimball Young was a sensational star of the teens. She was 41 when she made this film and is just AWFUL. She worked for another decade.

    NOTE: The IMDb lists Llewellyn as being played by Freeman Wood. I think it was Lucien Littlefield, who was also listed in the film's opening credits.
    9GaryWang

    Smart, modern, well-acted and refreshingly credible by 1931 standards

    Last week I watched Joel McCrea turn in an absolutely stunning performance in Merian Cooper and Earnest Schoedsack's brilliant 1932 thriller, "THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME" and again he reminds me here of just what an underrated actor he was during the Golden Age of Hollywood. His natural blond good looks (he pioneered surfing during the sport's early days in Los Angeles) and extremely competent acting on the heels of his residency at the nearby Pasadena Playhouse stand out in stark contrast to other leading men in an era when Billy Haines, George Arliss and Ramon Navarro were still representing America's young marrieds getting into jams as they get on their feet in the early days of The Great Depression. Dorothy Mackaill has the tricky job of playing a spoiled brat who is also in many ways by 2004 standards a modern woman whose doting industrialist father isn't making her emancipation any easier--but she pulls it off, and we wind up liking her! Sounding a little at first like one of the most outlandish stars of the day, Paramount's Mae West knock-off Peggy Hopkins Joyce, Mackaill proceeds to give a spot-on performance that represents some of the most natural acting I have seen out of anyone from the early talkies era; her knows-what-she-wants character Dot is effected flawlessly. I forgot that I was watching an actress perform, so finely tuned is her sense of timing. An Ex-Follies girl who came to the US from England at the age of 18, she is at ease before the camera, apparently aware of the fine line she is walking in a part which few other performers from that shaky time in the industry would have been able to master with such seamless grace. I am surprised and disappointed that her film career was in its twilight and that soon thereafter she would be serving full-time as a caregiver to her disabled mother. The writing and direction are both deserving of praise here, as well. The intelligent dialogue (including the contemporary slang, which I find fascinating whenever I can find it) stands the test of time remarkably well: it is real, never banal or contrived despite the familiar conflicted Depression-era highbrow-working class storyline aspect. When Dot asks her father to pay her new husband $50,000 a year, the kindly industrialist explains that he cannot comply, reasoning quite correctly that "it would hurt the organization"--having served a hitch in B-school, I liked that wise old man and contemporary manager right off the bat! Motherhood receives a tender treatment and ever so effectively. The lighting has a definite early Warners'-First National look to it. Sound recording, almost always a liability in those days, is accomplished neatly, as is the makeup: lips appear to be real rather than painted on and during the proposal scene McCrea's wholesome tan face appears not only untouched but luminescent. Rarely have the actors of 1931 looked quite so good. Helpful Trivia: At the time of production, Miss Mackaill was 28; cowpuncher McCrea, 25.

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    Related interests

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    Drama
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    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Clara Kimball Young, a major star in the silent era makes her sound film debut in this picture after a six-year absence from the screen.
    • Goofs
      The dates presented in the film are impossible. Dick and Dot are engaged on a Wednesday five days before Christmas, which falls on a Monday. Their wedding is held exactly two weeks after Christmas, which would have to be a Monday, but the invitation says it's a Wednesday.
    • Quotes

      Dorothea 'Dot' Parker Brunton: The minute I saw him, I didn't give two hoots if he gargled his soup in the key of A Minor. That boy was made for me, and what's more, I'm going to have him.

    • Connections
      Edited into Your Afternoon Movie: Kept Husband (2022)
    • Soundtracks
      A Midsummer Night's Dream
      • Wedding March (1842) (uncredited)

      Music by Felix Mendelssohn

      Played at the wedding

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 22, 1931 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El obrero y la millonaria
    • Filming locations
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 16m(76 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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