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No More Orchids

  • 1932
  • Passed
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
572
YOUR RATING
Carole Lombard and Lyle Talbot in No More Orchids (1932)
DramaRomance

An heiress forced to marry into royalty in order to save her banker father falls in love with another man while on a cruise.An heiress forced to marry into royalty in order to save her banker father falls in love with another man while on a cruise.An heiress forced to marry into royalty in order to save her banker father falls in love with another man while on a cruise.

  • Director
    • Walter Lang
  • Writers
    • Grace Perkins
    • Gertrude Purcell
    • Keene Thompson
  • Stars
    • Carole Lombard
    • Walter Connolly
    • Louise Closser Hale
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    572
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Grace Perkins
      • Gertrude Purcell
      • Keene Thompson
    • Stars
      • Carole Lombard
      • Walter Connolly
      • Louise Closser Hale
    • 17User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos16

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    Top cast18

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    Carole Lombard
    Carole Lombard
    • Anne Holt
    Walter Connolly
    Walter Connolly
    • Bill Holt
    Louise Closser Hale
    Louise Closser Hale
    • Grandma Holt
    Lyle Talbot
    Lyle Talbot
    • Tony Gage
    C. Aubrey Smith
    C. Aubrey Smith
    • Jerome Cedric
    Allen Vincent
    Allen Vincent
    • Dick
    Ruthelma Stevens
    Ruthelma Stevens
    • Rita
    Arthur Housman
    Arthur Housman
    • Serge
    William V. Mong
    William V. Mong
    • Burkhardt
    Jameson Thomas
    Jameson Thomas
    • Prince Carlos
    Sidney Bracey
    Sidney Bracey
    • Holmes
    • (uncredited)
    Belle Johnstone
    • Housekeeper
    • (uncredited)
    Edward LeSaint
    Edward LeSaint
    • Capt. Jeffries
    • (uncredited)
    Wilfred Lucas
    Wilfred Lucas
    • Banker
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Hill Mailes
    Charles Hill Mailes
    • Merriwell
    • (uncredited)
    Harold Minjir
    Harold Minjir
    • Modiste
    • (uncredited)
    Broderick O'Farrell
    Broderick O'Farrell
    • Benton -- Butler
    • (uncredited)
    William Worthington
    William Worthington
    • Cannon
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Walter Lang
    • Writers
      • Grace Perkins
      • Gertrude Purcell
      • Keene Thompson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.5572
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    A Movie That Deserves a Bigger Crowd

    No More Orchids (1932)

    *** (out of 4)

    Interesting, if a tad bit strange, drama about a rich brat (Carole Lombard) who falls in love with an average guy (Lyle Talbot) but her greedy grandfather (C. Aubrey Smith) forces her to marry a rich Prince so that her father will be saved from his debt. NO MORE ORCHIDS isn't a very well known film and even fans of Lombard seems to have never seen it. That's a shame because it turned out to be a pretty good gem even if the final ten-minutes are extremely bizarre and in the end they really don't work. The film benefits from a very strong screenplay as well as some strong performances. The actual story of this thing is the type of melodrama that had been going on throughout the silent era and would continue throughout the 30s as we have the bad girl falling for a good guy only to be forced into the arms of someone else. What makes it seem so fresh and original here is that the screenplay is smart enough to actually make for some nice dialogue scenes where everything plays out in a believable fashion. This includes several scenes of Lombard having to really think through her decision and this makes for some very good drama. The screenplay is smart enough to make her character more than just a single note and the viewer certainly benefits from this. Lombard does a very good job as she was perfectly capable of playing the brat side of this woman but we also believe her when the character slowly starts to change due to her feelings for Talbot. As for Talbot, he too turns in another winning performance as does Walter Connolly as the father and Louise Closser Hale nearly steals the film as the fast-talking grandma. Smith turns in his typical fine performance as well. Fans of pre-code will be happy to see some rather risky dialogue about Lombard not being a virgin and we even get a sequence where she takes her rob off and is standing around in her bra and panties. Not too shocking in today's age but this was 1932 after all. The film takes a rather obvious twist towards the end and I think what the father does, which I won't ruin, doesn't work at all. The screenplay tries to milk this sequence for everything it's worth but I felt it fell flat on its face and didn't pack the punch it was going for. Even so, NO MORE ORCHIDS is still a fine little film that deserves to be seen by more.
    blanche-2

    nice Lombard precode

    Carole Lombard is spoiled heiress Annie Holt - in the '30s, it seems like everyone was writing about spoiled heiresses. Anyway, she's engaged to a prince, but while on a cruise, she falls for Tony Gage (Lyle Talbot). He has no money, isn't impressed by hers, and pays no attention to her. He ultimately tells her that her values are shallow and he doesn't respect her. Lombard cleans up her act and the two fall in love.

    This is a bit of a sticky wicket - Annie's father (Walter Connolly) is in financial trouble and is planning on this marriage to help him out. And Annie's grandfather (C. Aubrey Smith), who set up this royal marriage, is looking forward to it as well. Put it this way - if she doesn't marry this guy, daddy's going to jail.

    Good movie because of the wonderful cast, though the ending is a little bit of a downer. Lombard is gorgeous. She was a gal who could really turn a phrase. I wish that I could have met Lyle Talbot when he was alive - in a 56 year film career, he worked with everyone. The stories he could have told of his experiences in film, on stage, and on TV, where he did two series at one time.

    Walter Connolly was a wonderful and sympathetic actor who died way too young, but he certainly made his mark. C. Aubrey Smith did an excellent job being mean as dirt, and Louise Closser Hale did a good job as the no-holds-barred grandmother.

    A good film to watch but sad, too, to think that Lombard died so young. She was a true star, beautiful, radiant, funny, warm, and above all, an excellent actress. Always worth watching.
    5bkoganbing

    Reality hits her hard and soon

    Carole Lombard was loaned from Paramount to Columbia to star in No More Orchids in which she plays a spoiled heiress, not unlike the one she played in her later classic My Man Godfrey.

    She lives pretty high on the hog, but the pig is about to be slain as this is the Great Depression and the bank that her father Walter Connolly heads is about to go belly up. Her grandfather C. Aubrey Smith does not like his son-in-law.

    But he does like his granddaughter and he wants Lombard to marry some empty suit with a title. He fancies being in-laws to nobility. He's got the empty suit picked out. but Lombard wants to marry lawyer Lyle Talbot.

    In the end it's Connolly who makes the sacrifice so that Lombard can live her life with whom she loves. Won't say how.

    Good performances all around. The revelation here is C. Aubrey Smith who usually plays stern but upstanding upper crust types is a real no good in this one. Good but way off type for him.
    6marcslope

    Nice try, Carole

    Rather schizophrenic comedy-drama from post-Prohibition but pre-Hays Code, meaning Carole Lombard gets to strut around in her flimsies, make prurient wisecracks, and be not the least timid about getting what she wants. She's a rich girl with a bumbling banker dad (Walter Connolly, playing virtually the same role as a year later in "It Happened One Night") and an aren't-I-adorable grandma (Louise Closser Hale, trying to be May Robson) who falls for unrich Lyle Talbot (a perfectly OK leading man, who looks a bit like the pre-mustachioed Gable, and has some of the Gable swagger). Why her awful grandpa would insist on her marrying somebody else isn't clear, nor is it clear why the sacrifice at the end makes everything all right. But ignore the plot and enjoy the ribald ripostes, and, especially, Carole looking gorgeous and wriggling around with great vivacity. She has star quality, but beyond that, she's a real actress, and you'll notice how carefully she's building and sustaining a not-always-likable character. Fine work.
    HarlowMGM

    Orchids To All

    NO MORE ORCHIDS is just a little programmer movie but it's an incredibly elegant one. Columbia studios in the early 1930's was thought of as something as a poverty row studio yet this film looks as slick and expensive as any potboiler the more uptown MGM or Paramount might have produced.

    Carole Lombard stars as a spoiled society girl who is engaged to a prince in a marriage arranged by her controlling grandfather C. Aubrey Smith. On the ocean-liner back to America, she falls in love with white collar worker Lyle Talbot (who in her pampered world qualifies as "penniless") and eventually breaks his cool barrier. Lombard's pal of a dad, Walter Connally, and paternal grandmother Louise Closser Hale are crazy about Talbot but mean old grandpa Smith is not about to let his plans fall through, having seen his own late daughter marry "beneath" her.

    Carole Lombard is superb as the frivolous but good-hearted socialite and she surprisingly is matched by Lyle Talbot, one of the era's reliable but usually bland leading men; in this picture, Talbot exhibits a sex appeal seldom tapped in the scores of bread-and-butter pictures he cranked out. Connally is very good in one of his first movie roles as father to a screwball romantic comedy queen (although this picture ventures more toward soap opera "women's picture" despite some nice comedy bits). Talented character player Louise Closser Hale seems a bit miscast, she's a bit too cutesy and lacks the saltiness a May Robson might have brought to the part. Smith essays a rare villainous part in a rather brief but pivotal role. Ruthelma Stevens and the very cute Allen Stevens have the only other somewhat featured parts as two of Lombard's good-time buddies in the society crowd; these small parts are among the larger ones for each of them, as they generally played bits.

    Lombard is so strikingly beautiful and assured in her performance here it's hard to believe she was little more than a starlet at the time and not yet a major Hollywood star. She is sensationally photographed, although one scene makes her facial scar from an early car wreck more visible than I've ever seen it in one of her films. NO MORE ORCHIDS is just another Hollywood movie but it moves quickly and smoothly and is well worth your time if you love films from the 1930's.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Walter Connolly (Bill Holt) and Jameson Thomas (Prince Carlos) would again play a father and his prospective son-in-law in It Happened One Night (1934).
    • Goofs
      (at about 6 mins) When Anne Holt is told to take off her dress, she is clearly not wearing a bra. Two edits (six seconds) later, Anne is seemingly struggling to pull her dress below her hips while wearing a bra, which she would not have had time to put on while simultaneously removing her dress.
    • Quotes

      Tony Gage: Why, I hardly make enough to keep you in orchids.

      Anne Holt: Then there'll be no more orchids.

    • Connections
      References The Poor Little Rich Girl (1917)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 25, 1932 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La consentida
    • Filming locations
      • Wall Street, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(establishing shot for the Banker's Club scene)
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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