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Verkaufte Töchter

Originaltitel: Our Dancing Daughters
  • 1928
  • Not Rated
  • 1 Std. 25 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
2131
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Joan Crawford and Johnny Mack Brown in Verkaufte Töchter (1928)
Our Dancing Daughters: Leaving The Party
clip wiedergeben1:16
Our Dancing Daughters: Leaving The Party ansehen
1 Video
78 Fotos
Drama

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA flapper who's secretly a good girl and a gold digging floozy masquerading as an ingénue both vie for the hand of a millionaire.A flapper who's secretly a good girl and a gold digging floozy masquerading as an ingénue both vie for the hand of a millionaire.A flapper who's secretly a good girl and a gold digging floozy masquerading as an ingénue both vie for the hand of a millionaire.

  • Regie
    • Harry Beaumont
  • Drehbuch
    • Josephine Lovett
    • Marian Ainslee
    • Ruth Cummings
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Joan Crawford
    • Johnny Mack Brown
    • Nils Asther
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,7/10
    2131
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Harry Beaumont
    • Drehbuch
      • Josephine Lovett
      • Marian Ainslee
      • Ruth Cummings
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Joan Crawford
      • Johnny Mack Brown
      • Nils Asther
    • 36Benutzerrezensionen
    • 15Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 2 Oscars nominiert
      • 2 Gewinne & 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Our Dancing Daughters: Leaving The Party
    Clip 1:16
    Our Dancing Daughters: Leaving The Party

    Fotos78

    Poster ansehen
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    Topbesetzung21

    Ändern
    Joan Crawford
    Joan Crawford
    • Diana Medford
    Johnny Mack Brown
    Johnny Mack Brown
    • Ben Blaine
    • (as John Mack Brown)
    Nils Asther
    Nils Asther
    • Norman
    Dorothy Sebastian
    Dorothy Sebastian
    • Beatrice
    Anita Page
    Anita Page
    • Ann
    Kathlyn Williams
    Kathlyn Williams
    • Ann's Mother
    Edward J. Nugent
    Edward J. Nugent
    • Freddie
    • (as Edward Nugent)
    Dorothy Cumming
    Dorothy Cumming
    • Diana's Mother
    Huntley Gordon
    Huntley Gordon
    • Diana's Father
    • (as Huntly Gordon)
    Evelyn Hall
    Evelyn Hall
    • Freddie's Mother
    Sam De Grasse
    Sam De Grasse
    • Freddie's Father
    • (as Sam de Grasse)
    Helen Brent
    • Party Guest
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Geraldine Dvorak
    Geraldine Dvorak
    • Party Guest
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Mary Gordon
    Mary Gordon
    • Scrubwoman
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Lydia Knott
    Lydia Knott
    • Scrubwoman
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Robert Livingston
    Robert Livingston
    • Party Boy
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Fred MacKaye
    Fred MacKaye
    • One of Diana's Admirers
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Alona Marlowe
    • Party Girl
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Harry Beaumont
    • Drehbuch
      • Josephine Lovett
      • Marian Ainslee
      • Ruth Cummings
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen36

    6,72.1K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    6utgard14

    Wouldst fling a hoof with me?

    Silent movie with music soundtrack is best known today for being the movie that made Joan Crawford a star. She's good here but shown up by Anita Page, whose drunken histrionics provide the movie with its life. The lack of vocal dialogue greatly helps the presence of Johnny Mack Brown, possessor of one of the worst Southern accents the big screen ever saw. First half hour is a little tedious. It's a series of scattered scenes showing flappers hoofing it up and bickering with their mothers who don't want them to be tramps. The rest of the film deals with love triangle between Crawford, Mack, and Page. The over-the-top ending is the best part. Good for curiosity's sake.
    claudiacasswell

    See Joan Dance

    The 1928 silent film OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS is the story of three flappers and their efforts to marry the men of their dreams. Ann (Anita Page) is a conniving little tramp who passes herself off as a 'good girl' in order to win the affections of Ben Blaine (Johnny Mack Brown), millionaire from Birmingham. Diana (Joan Crawford) is a good girl who passes herself off as a bad girl as she too pursues Ben's affections. Bea (Dorothy Sebastian) used to be a bad girl but is now a good girl and hopes to marry Norman (Nils Asther), who must live with the agony of knowing that Bea was once 'free with her love'. Ben doesn't seem to know what the hell he wants and doesn't seem to know very much about women either. Throughout the film, the girls' mothers dispense motherly advice and, inexplicably, share underwear with their daughters.

    Ms Crawford was hitting her stride with MGM in '28 and OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS is the best of seven Joan Crawford films released that year and the one that launched her to stardom. The scene in which she danced the Charleston was the highlight of this movie. Unfortunately the title is a bit misleading because there is in fact very little dancing in this film.

    Claudia's Bottom Line: Rather boring and predictable, but check out Joan's Charleston.
    8lugonian

    The Young and the Restless

    OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1928), directed by Harry Beaumont, is memorable today mainly because it made an overnight star of an MGM contractee named Joan Crawford, a resident performer at MGM since 1925. In spite of Crawford's recognition with this particular silent melodrama focusing on three happy-go-lucky party girls out for a wild time finding men, Dorothy Sebastian and Anita Page being the other two dames in question, it is Page, the third party of the trio, who practically gets the most attention due to her immorality and selfishness in her character. It is this, and Page's performance in MGM's first talkie, "The Broadway Melody" (1929) that will be most remembered by film historians for years to come, so long as this, and other films like these, continue to exist on television and appreciated by a new generation of classic movie lovers.

    The story opens with three youthful girls getting themselves ready for another Saturday night on the town: Beatrice (Dorothy Sebastian), a simple-minded girl; Ann (Anita Page), a cute, peppy blonde who's not only immoral and immature, but an out-and-out gold digger; and Diana Bedford (Joan Crawford), a fun-loving socialite noted for her love for fast cars, dancing and wild parties, trying to live her life according to her parental upbringing, on high moral principals. At the party, Diana amuses her friends by stripping off her dress and dancing step-ins. Later, she comes upon Ben Blaine (Johnny Mack Brown), a handsome young man and an heir to millions. Diana becomes very much interested in him, but Ann decides to step in herself, giving Ben the impression that she is pure and innocent. She tricks Ben into marriage, which leaves Ben blind of the fact to what kind of girl Ann really is. As Beatrice finds a partner in marriage with Norman (Nils Asther), Diana remains single, keeping only to herself until sometime later, the unhappily married Ben comes back into her life again, causing friction between Diana and Ann.

    As it appears, OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS is a routinely made silent drama that rises above similar stories made during the bygone roaring twenties era. Watching Joan Crawford as a "jazz age" baby in the vogue of Paramount's own Clara Bow, is interesting to see, but unlike Bow, who retired from the screen in 1933, Crawford adapted to the changing of times, presenting herself in costumes and headdress accordingly to the new era, and improving with each passing decade her skillfulness as an actress, which is why she remained in the public eye of motion pictures until 1970.

    For quite some time, OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS became the only known silent movie starring Crawford from the silent era to circulate either in revival movie houses or on commercial television before becoming part of cable television decades later, namely Turner Classic Movies. Interestingly, as in many silent movies of the late twenties, OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS is currently available two ways, in either 97 minutes (video cassette) or a shorter version (TCM) at 85 minutes. The video presentation from the late 1980s, labeled on its storage box "including original musical score," is, in actuality, consisting of orchestral score used for the public television 13-week film series 50th anniversary to MGM, MOVIES GREAT MOVIES (1973), where OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS premiered in on WNET, Channel 13, in New York City, October 19, 1973, as hosted by Richard Schickel. The 85 minute version shown on Turner Classic Movies is the one with the original 1928 soundtrack consisting of crowd noises, sound effects and off-screen singing by an unknown vocalist crooning to "I Love You Then as I Love You Now." A sharp ear will also hear Diana's name being yelled out amongst the crowd. Watching the movie currently available in both these versions with different underscoring is quite acceptable, but it's the original 1928 soundtrack that gives more of the feel, capturing the mood from that jazz age.

    Also seen in the supporting cast are Eddie Nugent, Dorothy Cumming, Huntley Gordon, Evelyn Hall and Sam DeGrasse. Fans of Universal's SHERLOCK HOLMES film series of the 1940s starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce will take notice that the character actress who played their landlady, Mrs. Hudson, can be spotted as one of the three scrub women at the bottom of the stairs in one of the more memorable highlights involving the drunken Ann (Anita Page).

    The success of OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS paved the way to sequels in name only, all featuring Crawford and Page: the silent OUR MODERN MAIDENS (1929) with Douglas Fairbanks Jr; and the early talkie, OUR BLUSHING BRIDES (1930) with Robert Montgomery and Dorothy Sebastian. With all three being shown occasionally on TCM, the original, which started it all, remains the best known of the trio. (***)
    6bkoganbing

    The Flapper Culture

    The Roaring Twenties has come down to us in history as an era of good times and continual partying until that stock market crashed and one could no longer afford to party. Joan Crawford got her first taste of first billing and stardom with Our Dancing Daughter where she does the ultimate Charleston of the Twenties.

    Crawford at first glance is one wild child, but it's just a pose. Down deep she knows when to put on the brakes. She's got two friends she parties with, Dorothy Sebastian who's reticent now, but at one time was the wildest child of all. Sebastian knows that those loose morals of the past have irreparably damaged her reputation. She'd like to really settle down, but whomever she dates is expecting only one thing.

    Then there's Anita Page who comes off to her friends as prim and proper, but is really the wildest child of all. She's got a nice image, but when she parties, she really parties.

    Both are after young Johnny Mack Brown who is playing what he was in real life, a recently graduated All American halfback from the University of Alabama. He likes them both and wants a wife to settle down with, but he's not a good judge of character. In fact he's a bit of a dope. He rejects Crawford and marries Page and regrets it soon enough.

    MGM was stepping into the age of sound ever so cautiously. Sound effects are heard and several songs of the era are interpolated into a soundtrack either sung or played instrumentally. All these players would be talking soon enough on screen.

    Our Dancing Daughters is a must for Joan Crawford fans and it's a great look at the culture of the Twenties, the Flapper Culture.
    d_fienberg

    A surprisingly provocative late-Silent Era Gem

    It sounds absurd, but I would suggest that Harry Beaumont's 1928 silent film Our Dancing Daughters would make an amusing double bill with Whit Stillman's 1990 film Metropolitan. Both films are rather sophisticated critiques of life among society's elite, the gala balls, the flippant attitudes, and crushing realities of romance, treachery and friendship. Written by three women, Our Dancing Daughters is an interesting example of early female empowerment, teaching women that being true to yourself is better than letting others shape you to their ends.

    A young Joan Crawford, Anita Page, and Dorothy Sebastian play three wild girls in the early Jazz age who are coming to terms with their place in society and the repercussions of their "flapper" ways. Crawford is "dangerous" Diana, wild, intelligent, and sexual beyond her years. She's unapologetically flirtatious and provocative. Page is Anne, saucy and flirtatious as well. Anne is also poorer than her friends and her mother is counting on her to marry into wealth, urging her to use her virtue as a tool. Sebastian's Beatrice is largely reformed, but she has some kind of past, which bothers her more than it bothers the man who's devoted to her (at first, at least). When Johnny Mack Brown's Ben Blaine (a millionaire and former college football star) enters the picture, he falls for Diana and Anne decides that she will win his heart.

    In one of her earliest roles, Crawford is amazing. If you've only seen her later performances (like her Oscar winning Mildred Pierce) or Faye Dunaway's impression of her in Mommie Dearest, it's possible to forget just how beautiful and lively she was. She's a marvelously liberated character, the type woman Hollywood frequently featured in the late silent period before forgetting about them for decades of regressive female characters. She is supported by her parents and feels strength in her independence. When she sees herself falling in love, she seems genuinely surprised and when Anne steps in, she seems genuinely heartbroken.

    Our Dancing Daughters (lensed by George Barnes, who later shot several Hitchcock classics like Rebecca) is a rather joyous production when it isn't commenting on society and gender. The film had a jazzy original score written for it and the film comes alive during the several large party/dance scenes. Showing all of the freedom that late-silent films allowed, the camera is mobile and amidst the dancing. The film also features several moments of synchronized sound, mostly involving applause from the crowd.

    Our Dancing Daughters is intellectually ahead of its time and it features excellent performances and fine writing. I'm telling you, look at it with Metropolitan. I bet it works well.

    I'd give this one a solid and positive 7.5 out of 10.

    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The film that made Joan Crawford a star.
    • Patzer
      When Ann is at the top of the stairs watching the women scrub the floor at the bottom, her hair changes drastically between the medium shot of her and the following close-up.
    • Zitate

      Diana 'Di' Medford: I'm going to the Yacht Club. See you at dawn!

    • Verbindungen
      Edited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
    • Soundtracks
      I Loved You Then (As I Love You Now)
      (1927) (uncredited)

      Music by William Axt and David Mendoza

      Lyrics by Ballard MacDonald

      Played during the opening credits and as background music often

      Sung by an offscreen chorus at the party and danced to by the guests

      Sung offscreen often by both a male solist and a female solist and as a duet

    Top-Auswahl

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • Oktober 1929 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Männerfang
    • Drehorte
      • Pebble Beach, Kalifornien, USA(Historical photographs)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
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    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 178.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 25 Min.(85 min)
    • Farbe
      • Black and White
    • Sound-Mix
      • Silent

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