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The Road to Singapore

  • 1931
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 9 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,4/10
543
IHRE BEWERTUNG
William Powell and Marian Marsh in The Road to Singapore (1931)
DramaRomanze

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuGossip, snobbery, mistrust, divorce and a mail-order engagement dominate the lives of the British upper class living in the plantation colonies of Southeast Asia.Gossip, snobbery, mistrust, divorce and a mail-order engagement dominate the lives of the British upper class living in the plantation colonies of Southeast Asia.Gossip, snobbery, mistrust, divorce and a mail-order engagement dominate the lives of the British upper class living in the plantation colonies of Southeast Asia.

  • Regie
    • Alfred E. Green
  • Drehbuch
    • Denise Robins
    • Roland Pertwee
    • J. Grubb Alexander
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • William Powell
    • Doris Kenyon
    • Marian Marsh
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,4/10
    543
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Drehbuch
      • Denise Robins
      • Roland Pertwee
      • J. Grubb Alexander
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • William Powell
      • Doris Kenyon
      • Marian Marsh
    • 18Benutzerrezensionen
    • 6Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos15

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    Topbesetzung21

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    William Powell
    William Powell
    • Hugh Dawltry
    Doris Kenyon
    Doris Kenyon
    • Philippa Crosby March
    Marian Marsh
    Marian Marsh
    • Rene March
    Louis Calhern
    Louis Calhern
    • Dr. George March
    Alison Skipworth
    Alison Skipworth
    • Mrs. Wey-Smith
    Lumsden Hare
    Lumsden Hare
    • Mr. Wey-Smith
    Tyrell Davis
    Tyrell Davis
    • Nikki
    • (as Tyrrell Davis)
    A.E. Anson
    • Dr. Muir
    Huspin Ansari
    • Ali, March's Servant
    • (Nicht genannt)
    May Beatty
    May Beatty
    • Bridge Player on Ship
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Colin Campbell
    Colin Campbell
    • Reginald
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Arthur Clayton
    Arthur Clayton
    • Mr. Everard
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Carrie Daumery
    Carrie Daumery
    • Birthday Party Guest
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Douglas Gerrard
    Douglas Gerrard
    • Simpson
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Ethel Griffies
    Ethel Griffies
    • Mrs. Everard
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Charles Lane
    Charles Lane
    • Desk Clerk at Club
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Margarita Martín
    • Ayah
    • (Nicht genannt)
    'Snub' Pollard
    'Snub' Pollard
    • Photographer at Birthday Party
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Drehbuch
      • Denise Robins
      • Roland Pertwee
      • J. Grubb Alexander
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen18

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    6planktonrules

    Both the men who want this woman are major jerk-faces!

    "The Road to Singapore" is a rather old fashioned movie that must have seemed pretty scandalous back in the day when it was a play and later, this film. It's old fashioned in its portrayals of female roles as well as its tacit acceptance of British colonialism. Today, the film would definitely be seen as quite dated.

    The story begins on a cruise ship headed to Singapore. Philippa (Doris Kenyon) is a nurse who is going to Singapore to marry a doctor she once worked with back in Britain. On the ship is also Hugh (William Powell), a major rogue who has a reputation as a bad boy--a despoiler of women. He does his best throughout the cruise to get to know Philippa better and she rebuffs him repeatedly. After all, she doesn't want a one night stand and has a husband waiting for her.

    Once she arrives in Singapore, Hugh doesn't let up and he's obviously a man who thinks no might mean yes. In contrast, however, once Philippa marries Dr. March (Louis Calhern), she discovers he's pretty much the opposite...almost sexless and completely detached from her. He also is a man who seems to have lost his humanity and he's cruel to the locals, as he feels they are beneath him. Add to this mix Dr. March's very young and horny sister, Rene (Marian Marsh). She likes the idea of having a rendezvous with Hugh. To her, he's exciting, sexy and dangerous. You just know at some point a major confrontation, or worse, is going to occur between Dr. March and Hugh...and you aren't sure if it's over Philippa or Rene...or both!

    So is this any good? Well, it's okay. But it did seem odd that the film showed you two options...a detached jerk of a husband and a womanizing jerk of a lover! You really wonder why Philippa didn't just hop aboard another ship and head back home and leave the two jerks to themselves. Back in the day it just seemed titillating...but now it seems dated. This was especially true in the big confrontation scene at the end....which was amazingly talky. Entertaining....but dated.

    By the way, if you do watch this, note the really nice cinematography....far better than you'd expect to see in 1931.
    7Jim Tritten

    Not one of the Hope/Crosby "Road" pictures

    The Road to Singapore is based upon a play and is therefore limited in its settings. That setting is the British colonial Far East (Khota - on the shipping line between Colombo and Singapore) and involve the Gymkhana Club and its members. Hugh Dawltry has been expelled from the club. He is a cad, a bounder, an unmitigated reprobate who steals other men's wives. But he falls for Phillipa on the steamer and they soon find themselves involved ashore. Phillippa is a former nurse who has come to the colony to join a doctor as his wife. The main plot involves whether she will cast off her cold husband and succumb to the heat wave of the tropics and the assault by Hugh. Complications exist in the form of the doctor's younger sister who is coming of age and of interest in men (pre-Code). The best shot in the entire movie is when the two star crossed lovers are each looking out windows across the divide between their homes -- it alone is worth the price of admission. Two characters waling through with inane arguments (Reggie and Simpson) don't come close to Caldicott and Charters. A somewhat satisfying ending - recommended.
    mukava991

    oh, the heat

    Based on a novel aptly entitled "Heat Wave," and a stage adaptation which was a 1929 London success starring Herbert Marshall and a 1931 Broadway flop with Basil Rathbone, "Road to Singapore" is the type of story one would usually associate with W. Somerset Maugham: British rubber planters in southeast Asia (in this case the fictional outpost of "Khota") and their social rivalries, served up with cocktails, cigarettes, and card games, along with bungalow and club room banter and the inevitable gun shot or stabbing. And of course the heat, not to mention native drums stirring passions in the night.

    The above-the-title star is William Powell, with a "mid-lantic" accent, in the Marshall-Rathbone role as a local cad with a fondness for other men's wives (and, like his "Thin Man" character, for prodigious quantities of hard liquor that seems to have little or no degenerative effect on his looks or bearing). Supporting him are Louis Calhern, with his own "mid-lantic" accent, as an absurdly stuffy local doctor and Doris Kenyon as Calhern's new wife who immediately regrets her marriage to the workaholic martinet in the suffocating backwater. Marian Marsh is Calhern's younger sister who develops an adolescent crush on Powell.

    Colin Campbell and Douglas Gerrard provide silly comic relief, strolling through the proceedings at intervals as veddy British stereotypes named "Reginald" and "Simpson," respectively, who constantly argue about the real meaning of what they've just said to each other. Tyrell Davis, so memorable as "Ernest" in the 1933 film version of Maugham's "Our Betters," despite billing in the opening credits, is wasted, appearing in only two or three group scenes and speaking one minor line. Ethel Griffies also gets practically nothing to do. Alison Skipworth as an overbearing matron has a couple of heavy-handed flirtations with both Powell and Calhern.

    Most of the male characters spend a good deal of time mopping sweat from their faces, which is no surprise given the suits and ties most of them wear; Powell dresses as if he's on his way to the opera at the height of the fall season in London and Calhern sleeps in full length pajamas under blankets no less. The females are better off in this regard and occasionally wear loose dresses with short sleeves while daintily fanning themselves.

    The producers went to some length to provide convincing atmospherics. When bride-to-be Kenyon arrives at Khota, she is greeted by a downpour that turns the dirt road into a river of mud through which she trudges until Powell, whose linen suit is drenched through, rescues her by giving her a lift on his native-driven rickshaw. (Needless to say, not a trace of dirt can be seen on her footwear, nor a wrinkle in his garments, afterward.) There is a celebrated tracking sequence through the jungle that separates Kenyon's house from Powell's, which starts at her face in closeup and ends on his in closeup and then alternates between the two, all to the rhythmic pounding of drums in honor of the local "love goddess."

    As for the "natives," Calhern slaps one of them for drinking on the job and another, gleaming with sweat, is seen puffing a cigar while leering at the newly-arrived Kenyon, who is the real star here, always convincing, despite being a bit long in the tooth for the type of innocent-young-thing role she's playing, and magnetic from every angle. At different moments this barely remembered holdover from the silent era evokes Constance Bennett, Tallulah Bankhead, Thelma Todd and even Marlene Dietrich in her "Shanghai Express" period, even though she predates them all.
    6marcslope

    Early polished Powell

    Not-especially-interesting romantic melodrama, from a play, of a triangle in the tropics. But it's one of the earliest demonstrations of William Powell in full William Powelldom. As a rich, unscrupulous playboy living a hedonistic existence in Khota (why Khota is never made clear), he's all polished consonants, dapper clothes, and upper-class charm. You can see why Doris Kenyon, unhappily married to dull, work-obsessed doctor Louis Calhern, would respond to his flirtations. And you can see why her younger sister, Marian Marsh, would be similarly captivated. It's a bit clichéd and more than a bit casually racist (when displeased with a servant, kick him), but it's lifted up by a) some spiffy early-talkie camera-work--love the long take panning from Calhern's to Powell's bungalow!--and b) engagingly pre-Code morality, where the callow hedonist isn't entirely punished for his devil-may-care attitude. It's swift, and the ending may surprise you a little.
    8ronrobinson3

    Even if it is not Hope and Crosby, you will NOT be disappointed!

    No! First of all, this is NOT a Bing Crosby and Bob Hope film.

    This film stars William Powell and Doris Kenyon. They are living in the hot jungles of Khota in Southeast Asia. Kenyon is a new bride to a boring doctor who treats the natives. Powell is a ladies' man and cad. He has a past of seducing married women and ruining their lives and marriages.

    When Powell meets Kenyon and goes after her, he realizes that she is "the real thing" and falls for her. Marian Marsh plays Kenyon's young sister who also goes after Powell at the same time.

    I don't normally care for Powell when he is playing the shallow role of a rouge and a blackguard. But in this film, he has a slow awakening and redeems his character into something with more depth and quality.

    I was not as familiar with Doris Kenyon's work. I just saw her in "Alexander Hamilton" released in 09/12/1931 with Arliss. She was good in that, but she really shines in this film.

    Then end is nice. It is logical and works well.

    So whether you are a fan of Powell or not, check out this classic. You will be glad you did!! It will keep you classy!

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    • Wissenswertes
      NYT notes that this was William Powell's first starring role for Warner Brothers. He made a total of nine films at the studio.
    • Patzer
      The footage of the natives and drum players was used again when Hugh and Phillipa looked at them when they were in his bungalow.
    • Zitate

      Dr. George March: [Upon finding his wife at Dawltry's house] There's going to be no scandal in my house. But Dawltry is leaving Khota for good!

      Philippa Crosby March: And so am I, George. And I'm also leaving YOU. I came out here in search of love, and happiness. I found instead a machine - a machine of cold steel. As cold as the instruments you use to probe the bodies of unconscious patients on operating tables... Nursing hasn't changed me from a woman. But surgery in the tropics has changed the man I came to marry. So I turned to Hugh Dawltry for the love and affection you didn't give me.

      Dr. George March: If I didn't know that you were suffering from a pathological complaint common to the tropics, I should think you were neurotic. It's just a physical heat wave!

      Dr. George March: [Now turning to glare at Hugh Dawltry] And that CAD took advantage of it!

      Philippa Crosby March: But not of me, George. YOU did that! All you wanted was a wife. ANY woman would have done as well. And some other woman can take my place from now on!

    • Soundtracks
      African Lament
      (uncredited)

      Music by Ernesto Lecuona

      Lyrics by L. Wolfe Gilbert

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 10. Oktober 1931 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • The Other Man
    • Drehorte
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, Kalifornien, USA(Studio)
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Warner Bros.
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      1 Stunde 9 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Black and White

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