IMDb रेटिंग
7.1/10
5.9 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA cabaret singer takes up with a millionaire to pay for her gravely-ill husband's operation.A cabaret singer takes up with a millionaire to pay for her gravely-ill husband's operation.A cabaret singer takes up with a millionaire to pay for her gravely-ill husband's operation.
Eric Alden
- Guard
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
William Begg
- Admirer
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Harold Berquist
- Big Fellow
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Glen Cavender
- Ship's Officer
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Emile Chautard
- Chautard, French Nightclub Manager
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Davison Clark
- Bartender Bringing Two Beers
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Marcelle Corday
- Helen's Maid in France
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Cecil Cunningham
- Norfolk Woman Manager
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
कहानी
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाCary Grant said that Josef von Sternberg directed him not really much during the filming, but taught him the most important thing. On the first day Grant came on the set, von Sternberg looked at him and said, "Your hair is parted on the wrong side." So Grant parted it on the other side and kept it that way the rest of his career.
- गूफ़A check is shown on screen written to Helen Jones. This is her stage name so not sure how she will cash the check.
She will cash the check by endorsing it with her stage name. It is not illegal as long as there is no attempt to defraud.
- भाव
Edward 'Ned' Faraday: Dr. Pierce, I have a rather peculiar request to make. I want to sell you my body.
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटOpening credits are shown with a background of water reflected at a swimming hole. As the credits end, it can be seen that women are swimming in the swimming hole.
- इसके अलावा अन्य वर्जनThe original German release and some television prints of this film exclude the opening scene, where Herbert Marshall encounters Marlene Dietrich and friends "skinny-dipping" in a lake.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in The Love Goddesses (1965)
- साउंडट्रैकTreue Liebe Nur du allein
(uncredited)
Music by Friedrich Silcher
Played during opening credits and as background music several times
फीचर्ड रिव्यू
.. in that typical Von Sternberg way that plays with dark, light, and shadow.
Helen (Dietrich) and her friends, who are headlining a local show, are skinny dipping in a pond in Germany. Ned (Herbert Marshall) and his friends are walking in the woods when they come upon the scene. Helen asks the men to leave, Ned says they will not unless she agrees to see him after the show. Fast forward and it's domestic Helen seen next, bathing her young son (Dickie Moore) in a small cluttered apartment. Ned, now her husband, has radium poisoning from some experiments he has been working on the past year and will die unless he can get to Dresden - they now live in America - and take the experimental cure an expensive doctor has. But it will cost 1500 dollars, and during the Great Depression it might as well be 15 million. Though Ned doesn't like it, Helen decides to go back on the stage for the first time since her marriage.
So along comes a millionaire, Nick Townsend (Cary Grant) who sees her nightclub act and hears her tale of woe., He gives Helen the money she needs to get her husband cured, but the husband thinks it's an advance from the manager of the club where Helen is working. Some reviews say Townsend is trading her sex for his money, but it's not like that, although he is very much attracted to her. And that lack of reciprocal expectations has Helen loving him as a result. And then the husband gets cured early and thus comes home unexpectedly, finding an apartment that hasn't been lived in for months. He also discovers that Helen has not been working since shortly after he sails. Complications ensue.
The script, frankly, seems rather rushed and is the stuff of a hundred melodramas made in the early 30s about misunderstood "fallen" women. Where Von Sternberg excels is with his camera work. The cinematography often speaks for the characters. The situations are not exactly classic Great Depression scenes - that was mainly Warner Brothers' stock and trade - but they aren't inconsistent given the times. The only bad thing I can say about it is that the ending seems tacked on and inconsistent given all that has come before.
Helen (Dietrich) and her friends, who are headlining a local show, are skinny dipping in a pond in Germany. Ned (Herbert Marshall) and his friends are walking in the woods when they come upon the scene. Helen asks the men to leave, Ned says they will not unless she agrees to see him after the show. Fast forward and it's domestic Helen seen next, bathing her young son (Dickie Moore) in a small cluttered apartment. Ned, now her husband, has radium poisoning from some experiments he has been working on the past year and will die unless he can get to Dresden - they now live in America - and take the experimental cure an expensive doctor has. But it will cost 1500 dollars, and during the Great Depression it might as well be 15 million. Though Ned doesn't like it, Helen decides to go back on the stage for the first time since her marriage.
So along comes a millionaire, Nick Townsend (Cary Grant) who sees her nightclub act and hears her tale of woe., He gives Helen the money she needs to get her husband cured, but the husband thinks it's an advance from the manager of the club where Helen is working. Some reviews say Townsend is trading her sex for his money, but it's not like that, although he is very much attracted to her. And that lack of reciprocal expectations has Helen loving him as a result. And then the husband gets cured early and thus comes home unexpectedly, finding an apartment that hasn't been lived in for months. He also discovers that Helen has not been working since shortly after he sails. Complications ensue.
The script, frankly, seems rather rushed and is the stuff of a hundred melodramas made in the early 30s about misunderstood "fallen" women. Where Von Sternberg excels is with his camera work. The cinematography often speaks for the characters. The situations are not exactly classic Great Depression scenes - that was mainly Warner Brothers' stock and trade - but they aren't inconsistent given the times. The only bad thing I can say about it is that the ending seems tacked on and inconsistent given all that has come before.
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