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Thirteen Women

  • 1932
  • Approved
  • 1h 13m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
Thirteen Women (1932)
Psychological HorrorSupernatural HorrorCrimeDramaHorrorMystery

A young woman plots astrological revenge on schoolgirls from her past.A young woman plots astrological revenge on schoolgirls from her past.A young woman plots astrological revenge on schoolgirls from her past.

  • Director
    • George Archainbaud
  • Writers
    • Tiffany Thayer
    • Bartlett Cormack
    • Samuel Ornitz
  • Stars
    • Irene Dunne
    • Ricardo Cortez
    • Jill Esmond
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    2.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Archainbaud
    • Writers
      • Tiffany Thayer
      • Bartlett Cormack
      • Samuel Ornitz
    • Stars
      • Irene Dunne
      • Ricardo Cortez
      • Jill Esmond
    • 51User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos30

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Irene Dunne
    Irene Dunne
    • Laura Stanhope
    Ricardo Cortez
    Ricardo Cortez
    • Police Sergeant Barry Clive
    Jill Esmond
    Jill Esmond
    • Jo Turner
    Myrna Loy
    Myrna Loy
    • Ursula Georgi
    Mary Duncan
    Mary Duncan
    • June Raskob
    Kay Johnson
    Kay Johnson
    • Helen Dawson Frye
    Florence Eldridge
    Florence Eldridge
    • Grace Coombs
    C. Henry Gordon
    C. Henry Gordon
    • Swami Yogadachi
    Peg Entwistle
    Peg Entwistle
    • Hazel Clay Cousins
    Harriet Hagman
    • May Raskob
    Edward Pawley
    Edward Pawley
    • Chauffeur Burns
    Blanche Friderici
    Blanche Friderici
    • Miss Kirsten
    Wally Albright
    Wally Albright
    • Bobby Stanhope
    Leon Ames
    Leon Ames
    • Undetermined Role
    • (scenes deleted)
    Phyllis Fraser
    Phyllis Fraser
    • Twelfth Woman
    • (scenes deleted)
    Betty Furness
    Betty Furness
    • Thirteenth Woman
    • (scenes deleted)
    Julie Haydon
    Julie Haydon
    • Mary
    • (scenes deleted)
    Allen Pomeroy
    • Bit Part
    • (unconfirmed)
    • Director
      • George Archainbaud
    • Writers
      • Tiffany Thayer
      • Bartlett Cormack
      • Samuel Ornitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews51

    6.32.1K
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    Featured reviews

    6bkoganbing

    Sorority killings and torment

    Watching Thirteen Women I wonder what Merle Oberon must have thought. She lived in real life what Myrna Loy's character was experiencing in the film. It was only after she died that it came out that Merle was of mixed racial origin. She successfully passed her entire life.

    Loy who was in fact Caucasian until she became the incarnation of the perfect wife and mother played a whole lot of these exotic characters. She borrows a bit from her performance as Fu Manchu's daughter in playing a woman who is exacting terrible revenge on members of a sorority at a finishing school who discovered her background and used it to get her expelled. It was her ticket into the white world and respectability as she saw it.

    Using C. Henry Gordon as a phony swami she has unpleasant horoscopes made against her thirteen enemies. Loy doesn't want to just kill them, she wants to torment them and uses Gordon as her means. Loy wants maximum satisfaction.

    In the case of Irene Dunne who she sees as her chief enemy Loy also has plans for Dunne's child as well.

    A whole lot of women dominate this film as the sisters like Kay Johnson, Jill Esmond, Florence Eldridge and more. Ricardo Cortez plays the police sergeant who tracks down Loy and Edward Pawley plays another of the men she uses in her fiendish schemes.

    As this was a before the Code film, there was some frank talk about racism under the guise of snobbery. No doubt that Dunne and the rest were guilty of it. It drove Loy off the deep end and she enacts a terrible vengeance.

    A really good before the Code film that should be better known.
    6krorie

    Be kind to your classmates or........

    I looked forward to seeing this film on TCM. I was disappointed in what I saw. I've read that several minutes were cut from the original for censorship and other reasons and have never been restored. Even Turner who usually attempts to present features uncut and in as pristine condition as is humanly possible hasn't done much with this early talkie, even the sound was bad. So I have to go with what I saw. First, being an early talkie, many of the actors were still gesticulating and shouting their lines as if on stage or doing a silent flick. Particularly guilty of this was C. Henry Gordon who played a key character Swami Yogadachi. Fortunately for the viewer he is killed not long after the movie begins. The two future divas, Irene Dunne and Myrna Loy, do much better and appear very modern with their acting skills. Ursula Georgi (Myrna Loy) is sinister and evil to the core yet smiles like an adorable angel. Irene Dunne as Laura Stanhope plays the type role that she would perfect in later movies. Ricardo Cortez as Police Sergeant Barry Clive does a decent job in a role that isn't all that demanding.

    Second, the writing is good with an intriguing plot: twelve former classmates of a boarding school are being killed off by rejected classmate number thirteen through the use of phony horoscopes. The plot should have enabled the story to move along at an even pace. Yet there are places in this approximately one hour film that are very boring. These boring stretches are broken by a few exciting moments. The trapeze scene is a dandy as is the final scene aboard the fast-moving train. Cinematography is exceptional in some places considering the age of the film, especially the final scene featuring Myrna Loy. Also impressive is the car chase sequence when the chauffeur is attempting to make a getaway with Laura Stanhope captive in the back seat.

    Third, though the racial prejudice angle is bold and enlightening for 1932 when Hollywood was notorious for racial stereotyping, it actually only figures in at the very end of the movie in one extremely well-done and well-written scene when the two protagonists Ursula and Laura (Loy and Dunne) confront one another in a spell-binding moment of truth and retribution.

    How long must we wait until a restored version of this film is released on DVD so we can make a more accurate assessment?
    6Doylenf

    Interesting little museum piece from 1932...

    What struck me first about THIRTEEN WOMEN (just shown on TCM this evening), is the fact that it has a musical score by Max Steiner at a time when early thirties movies seldom used much music on the soundtrack for atmospheric purposes. But here, at least, Max does let loose with some sinuous exotic strains for a few scenes.

    The second thing was how beautiful MYRNA LOY photographed, playing a half-caste who is determined to avenge what snobbish sorority sisters did to her in finishing school where she was exiled because she wasn't white. Loy at this stage was still playing these exotic roles, complete with slanting eye make-up--but as a woman with an hypnotic gaze she was quite convincing. C. HENRY GORDON as Yogadachi, the fake Swami, was rather hammy here--whereas five years later he was very effective as a turban-wearing Indian in CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE.

    ***POSSIBLE SPOILER AHEAD***

    IRENE DUNNE is the last of the sorority girls to survive and the last one to be punished by Loy. However, as suspense builds to a climax aboard a speeding train, Loy's plan fails with the police hot on her trail.

    The 59 minute running time means that some fifteen minutes were cut from the original release and it shows. The ending is much too abrupt and before you know it "The End" is flashed on the screen. Someone was busy with the scissors on this one, particularly during those final moments.

    Would love to see the complete film some day, but I suppose that's not going to happen if the footage hasn't been restored by now. All the performances are rather standard, including RICARDO CORTEZ as the detective who's able to solve the case. FLORENCE ELDRIDGE is almost unrecognizable as one of the women and KAY JOHNSON is a bit over the top as one of the victims who shoots herself.

    Summing up: Not bad and certainly worth a watch.
    7AlsExGal

    Malevolent Myrna

    Ursula Georgi (Myrna Loy) is a half-white, half-Indian girl who a missionary sends to an exclusive finishing school so that she can learn to "pass" as white. But the 13 women in a particular exclusive sorority learn that Ursula is "half caste'", expose her, and as a result she is expelled from the school. If these racial attitudes all sound very archaic it's because they are, but then this film is over 90 years old. So bear with me.

    So Ursula has apparently been itching for revenge ever since. And 15 years later she puts her plan into action. One of the girls asks for horoscopes for all 13 from the imminent Swami Yogadachi. His lover happens to be Ursula who has hypnotic powers of her own. Yogadachi casts the horoscopes, which seem at least semi positive. Ursula then puts the Swami in a deep sleep and replaces the horoscopes with her own for each woman, warning of death, prison, insanity, etc. With Yogadachi's usefulness to her finished , she then hypnotizes him so that he runs into the path of a moving train. This woman is NOT a nice person!

    But Ursula never seems to finish what she starts. She disposes of only three of the 13 women when they read the horoscopes, become obsessed with the inevitability of their predicted fates, and actually cause their horoscopes to come true. Ursula then becomes oddly focused on Laura Stanhope (Irene Dunne) who is urging the others to ignore these horoscopes as so much hogwash. She seems determined to break Laura, not because she was particularly cruel to her, but because she is resisting her little game. Complications ensue.

    The film does have something to say about the power of the mind over situations. And Ursula is not in the least bit a sympathetic character given that she has no natural affection towards anyone. She has enemies and men she uses to get revenge on those enemies - Those are the only two kinds of relationships she seems to have as an adult.

    I'd say the one hokey thing that the film does consists of the special effects. For some reason a bright star appears in the center of the screen every time a sorority sister fulfills her face or Ursula hypnotizes someone to do her bidding. It's short at just under an hour and pretty entertaining.
    7robert-temple-1

    Myrna Loy is really scary in this rarity

    This is a very unusual film, not least because Myrna Loy, best known for cheerier films, here plays an extremely sinister character. What is more surprising is that she is extremely convincing in that kind of role. There must have been another side to Myrna! Even more unusual, she plays an Anglo-Indian woman. For those who don't know, that means people who were born in India during the Raj who were half English and half Indian. The Anglo-Indians experienced a great deal of prejudice in India because they were not accepted by the Indians, being 'half-breeds', and were also looked upon as inferior by the English. Here, Myrna has a huge chip on her shoulder and is obsessed with resentment at having been treated in a humiliating manner at her boarding school by the other girls. She is, not to put too fine a point on it, dangerously mad. She is determined to get even despite the fact that it is so many years later. She tracks down the other twelve 'girls', now obviously women, and starts killing them one by one. I first came across this film under the title TREIZE FEMMES ('thirteen women'), and wrongly dated 1936, as a DVD release in the RKO Series by Editions Montparnasse in Paris. On its rear cover is the boast, in the form of a quote from Serge Bromberg: 'A rarity never distributed in France' (in French of course.). Well, things have changed, it is now widely available, as more and more forgotten old movies get released. Another reason for the French to get excited was that the film was directed by the French-born director George Archainbaud, who emigrated to America when he was 25 and became a director of 146 films, including the TV series THE LONE RANGER (1949-50), HOPALONG CASSIDY (1952-54), ANNIE OAKLEY (1954-57), and a host of other such Americana. He was therefore very drastically 'un-Frenched' in his new environment, something that the French find incomprehensible, fascinating, and also alarming. The film includes a somewhat subdued performance by Irene Dunne, who four years later would become an eternal icon for her starring role in SHOW BOAT (1936). Both Irene Dunne and Myrna Loy doubled up and played two of the other twelve girls who were minor characters, though this was not revealed in the credits. Another interesting feature of this film is that Myrna uses hypnotic powers to wreak her vengeance. Spell-binding stuff!

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    Crime
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    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      There were only 11 actresses in the movie, not 13. Scenes involving the remaining two, Phyllis Fraser and Betty Furness, ended up on the cutting room floor. Several other roles also were telescoped in the editing process when the film was shortened from its original 73 minutes to 59 minutes for theatrical release.
    • Goofs
      In the newspaper with the headline "Horoscope Murders Still Baffle Police", there are two other stories with the smaller headlines of "Air Hero Honored" and "Judge Carrol Hands Out Good Advice and Admonitions with Stiff Fines". It can be seen that the text of those stories is composed of random lines of text.
    • Quotes

      Jo Turner: I do envy you, Laura. To me, life is just an ashtray full of cigarette butts.

      Laura Stanhope: Why don't you marry again, Jo?

      Jo Turner: Oh, I would if I were sure of getting a kid like Bobby.

      Laura Stanhope: What about the present fiancé?

      Jo Turner: Oh, he's a lot of fun. But all he wants is a well-stocked cellar, a racehorse, bridge... anything but babies. Laura, why don't you marry again sometime?

      Laura Stanhope: No. I could never be dependent on anyone again. I love standing on my own feet.

      Jo Turner: I wonder if any woman can.

      Laura Stanhope: Why not?

      Jo Turner: I say, do you remember how you were always afraid the boys would go too far, and I was afraid that they wouldn't?

    • Connections
      Featured in Arena: Hollywood Babylon (1991)

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    • How long is Thirteen Women?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 16, 1932 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Trece mujeres
    • Filming locations
      • La Grande Station, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA(train station)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $125,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 13m(73 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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