Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA shy, naive New York children's librarian must become stronger and wiser after she discovers that her new husband is a liar, a cheat, and a fraud.A shy, naive New York children's librarian must become stronger and wiser after she discovers that her new husband is a liar, a cheat, and a fraud.A shy, naive New York children's librarian must become stronger and wiser after she discovers that her new husband is a liar, a cheat, and a fraud.
Roscoe Ates
- Mike - Pool Hall Bartender
- (as Rosco Ates)
Blanche Friderici
- Miss Gordon - Librarian
- (as Blanche Frederici)
Harry Stubbs
- Promoter
- (as Harry O. Stubbs)
Robert Brower
- Aged Library Patron
- (Nicht genannt)
Nora Cecil
- Landlady
- (Nicht genannt)
Ray Cooke
- Pool Player
- (Nicht genannt)
Jim Farley
- Policeman
- (Nicht genannt)
Frank Mills
- Dance Hall Bartender
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The forgotten Helen Twelvetrees is effective as a lonely children's librarian who falls for a small-time, big-talking guy beneath her station. He is played interestingly by the really forgotten Eric Linden. The floozy is Arline Judge, and she is great. She makes us want to smack her.
An antique that holds up quite well.
An antique that holds up quite well.
This is an entertaining little movie. Helen Twelvetrees plays Allie Smith, a young woman who has few friends and keeps to herself. She meets Eric Linden, as Charlie Riggs who is always working on the big deal that will set him financially for life. She is swept off her feet and after her marriage she finds out that Charlie is not the man she thinks he was. In true Hollywood fashion everything works out after they both hit rock bottom. Good performances make this film rise above all the cliches.
In this story of love among the tenements, the fantasizing Twelvetrees finds the man of her dreams in streetwise Linden, a loudmouthed pool-hall hustler who flaunts his manhood among the local taxi-dancing floozies. When Twelvetrees learns the nature of the man she has married--not too difficult within the confines of their one-room boarding-house domicile--she contemplates suicide. Linden wins some money at pool, but loses it to the mercenary Judge. When Linden attempts to recover the money, he is beaten. His lesson learned, the contrite lad creeps back to his bride a changed man. Early kitchen-sink drama with restrained performances and excellent support.
The great thing about Turner Classic Movies is that no matter how many old movies you have seen, you will regularly come across actors and actresses whose names you have never heard before, but once you see them, are fascinated, and glad to make their acquaintance. So it was with the beautiful and oddly named Helen Twelvetrees. She was a very good blond actress whose career barely spanned the decade of the 1930's. Here, in "Young Bride", she is delicate and vulnerable, but not in an annoying weak way; she has a face full of beautiful character, one that you want to comfort and murmur to how everything will be alright. A lovely find, and too bad she was not a major star.
On the other hand, I have never been a fan of Eric Linden, who plays her immature braggart of a husband. I think it is that horrendous Bronx accent of his; even when he is playing sympathetic, which is rare in this film, I just don't find him to be all that appealing. I don't think I was the only one who felt this way, as his career dried up quickly as the 1930's moved on.
A very interesting cultural aspect of this film is how so much of it takes place in a "dance hall"; this is a public tavern where men came and bought tickets to dance with the female hired help. It appears that there was a great demand for these kinds of establishments, as a way for men to meet girls and socialize in a pre-TV and pre-Internet Depression-era society. Particularly fascinating is that it seems that at a certain weird level, open lewd behavior was strictly prohibited; at one point in this film, the fellow who is in charge of watching the dancers sternly calls to Eric Linden to "keep your feet moving"! (ie - no hanky-panky on the floor!) I wonder if such places really existed. Certainly this is a portrait of an urban America that died a long long time ago...
When not in the dance halls or Twelvetree's apartment, most scenes take place in a public library. Isn't that a weird combination? Throw in the fabulously stuttering Roscoe Ates as a bartender and you have a unique, slightly odd movie that, primarily thanks to the delightful screen presence of Helen Twelvetrees, is worthy of an hour and a quarter of your time.
On the other hand, I have never been a fan of Eric Linden, who plays her immature braggart of a husband. I think it is that horrendous Bronx accent of his; even when he is playing sympathetic, which is rare in this film, I just don't find him to be all that appealing. I don't think I was the only one who felt this way, as his career dried up quickly as the 1930's moved on.
A very interesting cultural aspect of this film is how so much of it takes place in a "dance hall"; this is a public tavern where men came and bought tickets to dance with the female hired help. It appears that there was a great demand for these kinds of establishments, as a way for men to meet girls and socialize in a pre-TV and pre-Internet Depression-era society. Particularly fascinating is that it seems that at a certain weird level, open lewd behavior was strictly prohibited; at one point in this film, the fellow who is in charge of watching the dancers sternly calls to Eric Linden to "keep your feet moving"! (ie - no hanky-panky on the floor!) I wonder if such places really existed. Certainly this is a portrait of an urban America that died a long long time ago...
When not in the dance halls or Twelvetree's apartment, most scenes take place in a public library. Isn't that a weird combination? Throw in the fabulously stuttering Roscoe Ates as a bartender and you have a unique, slightly odd movie that, primarily thanks to the delightful screen presence of Helen Twelvetrees, is worthy of an hour and a quarter of your time.
It seems like half of all films made in the early thirties used this same story - this one however does it really well and gives you a real authentic taste of early thirties life in the big city. Nothing exciting happens, there's no great revelations, there's no scathing indictments on society - it's basically just a soap but it's so well made it transports you mind and body back in time. Any picture featuring a taxi dance hall ticks my box!
Most surprising thing about this is that Eric Linden is actually good in it - on the level, no kidding! Eric Linden was often typecast as pathetic weaklings such as his limp and nauseatingly naïve 'Bud' in BIG CITY BLUES. He was usually so annoyingly pathetic that when he was playing Cagney's kid brother in THE CROWD ROARS, you wanted him to crash. This film however shows he could act! He really does convey the necessary levels of arrogance and selfishness required to make his self-obsessed waste of space both totally unlikeable and believable. At first it seems a bit weird watching him do a third rate Cagney impersonation but after a while you grow to accept it.
In the stage version of this role of 'Good Time Charlie' was taken by young Spencer Tracy whom you could imagine would have been a natural for this but Linden rises admirably to the challenge. His usually hidden acting skill gets you to really dislike his character immediately. He's not nasty, he's not a bad person, he's just a complete and utter botty hole. He's the sort of person that even the Delai Lama would want to punch in the face. As to why sweet Helen Twelvetrees, even though she's meant to have had a sheltered life, falls for him is beyond me.....but mis-matches like this clearly existed. That was life..... and that was one of the criticisms at the time. Contemporary reviews complained that it's just an everyday story of everyday life...... that however is exactly what makes this so watchable ninety years later!
Helen Twelvetrees plays the role she found herself often typecast into playing: that of the sweet and trusting naive long suffering wife but maybe she got typecast in such roles because she was so good at playing them. She's absolutely adorable in this and manages to engender real emotion in you. It's a great shame this lovely young lady worked for financially crippled RKO, or rather RKO-Pathé as it was then because when Selznick jumped ship, she was one of the many actors whom the company could no longer afford to keep - had circumstances been different, she might have been one of the great actresses. This pretty mundane but moving slice of life as a good example of how good she could be.
Most surprising thing about this is that Eric Linden is actually good in it - on the level, no kidding! Eric Linden was often typecast as pathetic weaklings such as his limp and nauseatingly naïve 'Bud' in BIG CITY BLUES. He was usually so annoyingly pathetic that when he was playing Cagney's kid brother in THE CROWD ROARS, you wanted him to crash. This film however shows he could act! He really does convey the necessary levels of arrogance and selfishness required to make his self-obsessed waste of space both totally unlikeable and believable. At first it seems a bit weird watching him do a third rate Cagney impersonation but after a while you grow to accept it.
In the stage version of this role of 'Good Time Charlie' was taken by young Spencer Tracy whom you could imagine would have been a natural for this but Linden rises admirably to the challenge. His usually hidden acting skill gets you to really dislike his character immediately. He's not nasty, he's not a bad person, he's just a complete and utter botty hole. He's the sort of person that even the Delai Lama would want to punch in the face. As to why sweet Helen Twelvetrees, even though she's meant to have had a sheltered life, falls for him is beyond me.....but mis-matches like this clearly existed. That was life..... and that was one of the criticisms at the time. Contemporary reviews complained that it's just an everyday story of everyday life...... that however is exactly what makes this so watchable ninety years later!
Helen Twelvetrees plays the role she found herself often typecast into playing: that of the sweet and trusting naive long suffering wife but maybe she got typecast in such roles because she was so good at playing them. She's absolutely adorable in this and manages to engender real emotion in you. It's a great shame this lovely young lady worked for financially crippled RKO, or rather RKO-Pathé as it was then because when Selznick jumped ship, she was one of the many actors whom the company could no longer afford to keep - had circumstances been different, she might have been one of the great actresses. This pretty mundane but moving slice of life as a good example of how good she could be.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe play opened in New York City, New York, USA on 12 November 1929 and had 31 performances.
- Zitate
Library Patron Seeking Aphrodite: [Loudly] Say, where can I get an illustrated copy of "Aphrodite?"
Miss Margaret Gordon, the Librarian: Young man, you're evidently unaware that that book is not in circulation.
- VerbindungenReferenced in The Complete Citizen Kane (1991)
- SoundtracksWhispering
(1920) (uncredited)
Music by John Schonberger
Lyrics by Malvin Schonberger
Played as dance music at the Chinese restaurant
Danced by Polly Walters and Cliff Edwards and other couples
Reprised on piano at the restaurant
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Love Starved
- Drehorte
- Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA(establishing shot of the St. Charles and Breakers hotels)
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 16 Minuten
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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