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Brief Moment

  • 1933
  • Passed
  • 1h 9m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
423
YOUR RATING
Carole Lombard and Gene Raymond in Brief Moment (1933)
DramaMusicRomance

A dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.A dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.A dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.

  • Director
    • David Burton
  • Writers
    • S.N. Behrman
    • Brian Marlow
    • Edith Fitzgerald
  • Stars
    • Carole Lombard
    • Gene Raymond
    • Donald Cook
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    423
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • David Burton
    • Writers
      • S.N. Behrman
      • Brian Marlow
      • Edith Fitzgerald
    • Stars
      • Carole Lombard
      • Gene Raymond
      • Donald Cook
    • 18User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos18

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    Top cast22

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    Carole Lombard
    Carole Lombard
    • Abby Fane
    Gene Raymond
    Gene Raymond
    • Rodney Deane
    Donald Cook
    Donald Cook
    • Franklin Deane
    Monroe Owsley
    Monroe Owsley
    • Harold Sigrift
    Arthur Hohl
    Arthur Hohl
    • Steve Walsh
    Irene Ware
    Irene Ware
    • Joan
    Theresa Maxwell Conover
    Theresa Maxwell Conover
    • Mrs. William Deane
    • (as Theresa Maxwell)
    Reginald Mason
    Reginald Mason
    • Mr. William Deane
    Jameson Thomas
    Jameson Thomas
    • Count Armand
    Florence Britton
    Florence Britton
    • Kay Deane
    Herbert Evans
    Herbert Evans
    • Alfred
    Edward LeSaint
    Edward LeSaint
    • Higgins - Office Manager
    Allan Cavan
    Allan Cavan
    • Mr. Lyon
    • (uncredited)
    Bill Elliott
    Bill Elliott
    • Nightclub Patron
    • (uncredited)
    Mary Gordon
    Mary Gordon
    • Cook
    • (uncredited)
    Ben Hall
    • Office Boy
    • (uncredited)
    Selmer Jackson
    Selmer Jackson
    • Conover
    • (uncredited)
    Tom London
    Tom London
    • Thug
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • David Burton
    • Writers
      • S.N. Behrman
      • Brian Marlow
      • Edith Fitzgerald
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.3423
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    Featured reviews

    HarlowMGM

    Not "Brief" Enough!

    I adore Carole Lombard and was looking forward to seeing this early starring vehicle. Lombard's initial Paramount films in her starlet years were hit and miss, but when she was loaned out to Columbia that so-called "poverty row" studio gave her the red carpet treatment, with beautiful photography, elegant productions, and above all, good roles and scripts, as was the case with "Virtue", "No More Orchids", "Lady By Choice", and eventually, "Twentieth Century", the film that made her a major star. The one Columbia vehicle I hadn't seen was "Brief Moment" and it was not only the one dud in the bunch it also gives Lombard her least appealing character ever, more of a castrator than the helpful spouse she is suggested to be.

    Social heir Rodney Deane (Gene Raymond) has fallen in love with sexy nightclub singer Abby Fane (Lombard). He proposes but she is wary how his affluent family will react to her. He brings her briefly to meet the folks where she spends all of five minutes in their presence. They are cordial but frosty and it's clear to the couple they don't approve of the match. The duo go ahead with their plans, apparently cutting the family off completely and then going to Paris for a months-long honeymoon. Returning from the trip, Abby is annoyed that Rodney's best friend Sig (Monroe Owsley) has gone ahead and furnished their new apartment without any request from them although Rodney is happy with the results. Six months into the marriage, Abby is tired of their nightly socializing and bar-hopping and especially the eternal presence of Sig in their lives who she thinks is a bad influence. Abby all but demands Rodney go out and get a job (they've been living on $4,000 a month checks from Deane Sr., though apparently neither of them has bothered with the family since the honeymoon) or she'll leave him. Rodney gets a job on the ground floor of his father's business but is so bored with the low-level job he quits without telling Abby and is off to old tricks, hanging out at the racetrack with Sig when he pretends to be at the office.

    This movie is rather boring to begin with but Lombard's character further wrecks the story. First, it's hard to believe a posh nightclub singer would have such an unyielding middle-class mentality that a man has to work even if he doesn't need the money and her delusionment with Raymond seems strange given this this the Rodney she had always known when dating, the on the town playboy. Sig at one point refers to Rodney as "henpecked" and while that's not what the screenwriters were suggesting, it's undeniably true, Abby tells Rodney what he is to do with his life and there is no if's, and's or but's for her. Her control freak edge is indicated early with her cutting his family completely out of their lives after one five-minute meeting, never trying to make build bridges and make amends and yet the movie makes it like Abby is in the right at all times. The script clearly has an anti-upper classes stance that presumes the general working-class moviegoing public of the era will agree that the rich are the real ones without class.

    Lombard is gorgeous in this as always but this unpleasant characterization is hard to take. When she's not barking orders, Abby is crying - more than getting a job, Rodney needs to run like hell! I hate the see the wonderful Carole playing such a harpie Gene Raymond was never one of the better actors among the era's leading men but he's ok here. Arthur Hohl as Abby's sole friend, the unhandsome nightclub owner who has an unrequited love for her is the one sympathetic character in the film. Sole acting honors go to Monroe Owsley as caustic, shallow buddy, Sig, a role in which the famous theatre critic Alexander Woolcott made his stage acting debut to great acclaim.

    I could not believe this dull, anti-rich drama was based on an S. N. Berhman play. Behrman made his name for his social comedies on the stage and this would really be biting the hand that buttered his bread. I looked up the plot of the play and while Abby and Rodney are both nightclub singer and playboy in it, there's little else in common with this hokum. In the play, Rodney proposes to Abby because he likes her drive, having none of his own. She admits he's not the love of her life but she agrees to marry him for the chance to crash society. When Abby again meets the playboy polo player who was her true love but wouldn't marry her, she plots to humilate him as he did her, flirting with him as if they might resume their affair as they hit the town and cause a scandal. Her plans backfire though and it's Rodney who wants out and Abby realizes she needs to stick with what she has, even if it burns out after a "brief moment". Behrman's play was a sharp comedy but certainly Hollywood was not going to make a glib movie about semi-open marriages in the 1930's so screenwriters Brian Marlow and Edith Fitzgerald came up with this bucket of self-righteous slop. Hopefully Behrman was well paid for the bastardization.
    7elginbrod2000

    Pleasing little melodrama.

    Carole Lombard wanted to get out of her next project at Paramount, "A Girl Without a Room" and so went to Harry Cohen at Columbia and asked him to find her something better. He came up with this respectable play by S.N. Behrman. The two main characters, Abby and Rodney, are very ably and sympathetically portrayed, and this saves the picture. On the other hand, Gene Raymond's "best friend" in the picture, Sig, played by Monroe Owsley is a perfect devil, tempting Rodney at every opportunity to ignore his wife and instead spend his nights drinking and his days at the race track. Sig is the personification of evil because he actually doesn't know any other reality that the one he's living sponging off his rich friend, Rodney. Carole on the other hand recognizes the potential in Rodney and does everything in her power to save him.

    This film is interesting and enjoyable light soap opera fair. At one point when Carole's character almost looses her composure in front of Rodney's father, the viewer is ready to applaud the explosion, but alas the moment passes. This film could have been well served by a little more action and violent emotion. Perhap's the problem stems from the rather static direction of director David Burton. This is also the first film of Carole's to benefit from the cinematography talents of Ted Tetzlaff. He was able to light Carole in such a way that removed that certain hardness from her face evident in earlier pictures.
    8adrianovasconcelos

    Flawed yet honest take on rich/poor marriage

    Director David Burton must have been one of the pioneer Hollywood directors and he does a splendid job with this 1933 production, BRIEF MOMENT. Not only does he extract top performances from Lombard, Raymond, Cook and Hohl, he serves a rich vs poor marriage in the Depression years, which studio heads must have regarded as socially thorny box office poison.

    BRIEF MOMENT encapsulates the spirit of the film: everything happens briefly and in the moment. Rodney (Raymond) falls for cabaret singer Abby (Lombard); introduces her to his doubting family and shows backbone in marrying her regardless; the two live the high life paid for by his father; she decides it is not right they should live so carefreely whilst others work their fingers to the bone; she demands that he find a job; he finds a job in Dad's company, promptly leaves it to attend horse races without telling Abby; meanwhile, honest friend Steve (Hohl) loves Abby and tells her about Rodney's deception and the latter commendably tells her the truth; the next brief moment they separate, he rejoins the rich life, she the cabaret; then the final moment, when he has the backbone to go job hunting so he can win her over again. At the end, he proudly shows her his hard earned salary check... but how long will that moment last? You can see the strains of a failing marriage, of excessive outside influence by friends and family, and you know this will be no long-lasting love story.

    For 1933 I think it a darned intelligent flick, with a keen insight into men's and women's values, even if I found it tough to swallow that a beautiful woman like Lombard would in real life ever pass up on a life of luxury to have her rich hubby start from the bottom instead.

    Nearly a century later, much has changed, women have gained importance in the labor market, but the momentum remains in state hands, to skin the taxpayer to the marrow and get men and women involved in paying for state folly under the guise of national interest.

    Interesting, 69 minutes long, eminently watchable. 8/10.
    7hudecha

    No good prince meets selfless but demanding pauper

    So one cliché, the greedy gold digger, is subverted and replaced by another one, the spoiled heir redeemed through real hard work. This is a one-idea morality tale, and probably not a particularly original one at that. Yet Carole Lombard and Gene Raymond are very fine, dialogues are brisk and the tempo lively. Some of the supporting actors are also worth a mention - Arthur Hohl as the torch singer's caring boss, friend and wishful would-be husband, Herbert Evans who has a very funny scene as a butler with some useful experience of dealing with his master's hangovers - he looks and sounds like a twin brother of Edward Everett Horton of Lubitsch's fame. That's quite enough to make this simple-minded, unambitious story quite worth watching.
    6ricardojorgeramalho

    Lombard Moralist

    Brief Moment is a moralistic melodrama, starring Carole Lombard and Gene Raymond.

    Instead of the bar singer, a gold-digger, who hunts down a millionaire to live in leisure and abundance for the rest of her life, we have a young, idealistic and passionate woman who intends, through marriage and love, devoted to her husband, to transform an alcoholic and idle playboy into a modest worker, proud to earn his living by his own means.

    As a script it is weak and unconvincing. American moralism, which makes Lombard a guardian angel, hidden in the vicious night of the city, to save a young millionaire from himself, from bad companies and from the vices of abundance and a frivolous life.

    A role reversal that would have pleased some audiences in the 1930s, but today, honestly, doesn't convince anyone.

    A bearable film, just for the pleasure that it is, always, to see Carole Lombard fill the screen with her charm and elegant beauty.

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    Romance

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In an early bit of dialogue, Gene Raymond's character listens to his parents say he shouldn't marry a blues singer, and he replies, "Whom should I marry - Schumann-Heink?," referring to a famous opera singer who had just retired in 1932. Ironically, when Raymond himself married in 1937 his bride was an opera singer as well as a movie star: Jeanette MacDonald.
    • Goofs
      In the montage showing Abby and Rodney living the high life after they are married, the image of William Deane signing Rodney's $4000 allowance check with the same date (October 15th, 1932), and the same check number is used twice, even though several months have supposedly passed between checks.
    • Quotes

      Abby Fane: Dear, why do you want to marry me?

      Rodney Deane: I happen to be terribly in love with you.

      Abby Fane: Is that enough?

    • Crazy credits
      Credits appear as electric light signs in Times Square.
    • Soundtracks
      Say What You Mean, and Mean What You're Saying to Me
      (uncredited)

      Written by Gerald Marks and Joe Young

      Performed by Carole Lombard

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 29, 1933 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Skandal i societén
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 9m(69 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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