IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,5/10
828
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA single mother of four young-adult daughters is just about to remarry when her first husband returns 20 years after deserting his family.A single mother of four young-adult daughters is just about to remarry when her first husband returns 20 years after deserting his family.A single mother of four young-adult daughters is just about to remarry when her first husband returns 20 years after deserting his family.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 wins total
Nat Carr
- Court Clerk
- (Nicht genannt)
Hobart Cavanaugh
- Tourist
- (Nicht genannt)
George Chesebro
- Mike
- (Nicht genannt)
Alice Connors
- Hatcheck Girl
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
... because you've got the same cast, but Four Daughters was John Garfield's film debut, causing an ending that prevented him from being in any sequels.
I liked the film and the performances, but the whole thing just seems odd when you compare it to the previous film. And actually, this film just takes the cast from Four Daughters and puts them in an entirely different plot, taken from a play. In this one, Claude Rains is the father who deserted his family twenty years before and just shows up, not the masterful musician. The mother is alive, and left to raise her daughters alone after dad's desertion. And yet the daughters can't help but eventually warm to dad. Who can resist Claude Rains after all? Even as a cad he is charming. And yet dad's timing couldn't be worse, because mom is about to be remarried to a respectable businessman who is not going anywhere. Another complication - dad was declared dead years ago, but now here he is alive, nullifying that declaration.
This time, though, Priscilla Lane is drawn to ...Gabriel Lopez??? ( I think the name Mickey Borden was more up Garfield's alley) rather than just marrying him as a way of being self sacrificing, and bland Jeffrey Lynn is correctly the suitor who is putting her feet to sleep. May Robson is just the housekeeper here not the elderly relative. You have to remember Ms. Robson is 81 by the time this film is made, and yet she is so energetic.
I'd recommend it. Oddly enough the actual sequels to "Four Daughters" - "Four Wives" and "Four Mothers" were made after this film that had no relation to the actual film trilogy.
I liked the film and the performances, but the whole thing just seems odd when you compare it to the previous film. And actually, this film just takes the cast from Four Daughters and puts them in an entirely different plot, taken from a play. In this one, Claude Rains is the father who deserted his family twenty years before and just shows up, not the masterful musician. The mother is alive, and left to raise her daughters alone after dad's desertion. And yet the daughters can't help but eventually warm to dad. Who can resist Claude Rains after all? Even as a cad he is charming. And yet dad's timing couldn't be worse, because mom is about to be remarried to a respectable businessman who is not going anywhere. Another complication - dad was declared dead years ago, but now here he is alive, nullifying that declaration.
This time, though, Priscilla Lane is drawn to ...Gabriel Lopez??? ( I think the name Mickey Borden was more up Garfield's alley) rather than just marrying him as a way of being self sacrificing, and bland Jeffrey Lynn is correctly the suitor who is putting her feet to sleep. May Robson is just the housekeeper here not the elderly relative. You have to remember Ms. Robson is 81 by the time this film is made, and yet she is so energetic.
I'd recommend it. Oddly enough the actual sequels to "Four Daughters" - "Four Wives" and "Four Mothers" were made after this film that had no relation to the actual film trilogy.
With John Garfield making a sensational debut in Four Daughters with an Oscar nomination there was quite the demand for a sequel. But sad to say Garfield died in Four Daughters.
Jack Warner remedied that with acquiring a play by Dorothy Bennett that ran 247 performances during the 1935 season on Broadway called Fly Away Home. It's the story of a family on the eve of the matriarch's second marriage to a respectable businessman. Out of the blue comes the first husband who left years ago and would like to reclaim his place as head of the family. He starts working a charm offensive to do just that.
Nearly the whole cast of Four Daughters slip into parts that were rewritten for them as the Masters family in Fly Away Home is not all girls. The Lane Sisters and Gale Page are the daughters again and Fay Bainter is their mother and Donald Crisp the businessman she is scheduled to marry. Bainter and Crisp are new to the ensemble.
Claude Rains is the patriarch, not the music master of Four Daughters, but the confirmed vagabond who left his family. He finds a kindred soul in John Garfield who has sparked an interest from Priscilla Lane away from playwright Jeffrey Lynn and toward himself.
If you know what happened in Four Daughters you know what happens here in terms of the pairing ups.
Rains is the best one in this cast by far. You'd go just about anywhere and do anything for him, he's got such charm and apparent knowledge of the world. In the end though he realizes he can be a bad influence as well as a good one.
The same standard for Four Daughters is maintained for Daughter's Courageous.
Jack Warner remedied that with acquiring a play by Dorothy Bennett that ran 247 performances during the 1935 season on Broadway called Fly Away Home. It's the story of a family on the eve of the matriarch's second marriage to a respectable businessman. Out of the blue comes the first husband who left years ago and would like to reclaim his place as head of the family. He starts working a charm offensive to do just that.
Nearly the whole cast of Four Daughters slip into parts that were rewritten for them as the Masters family in Fly Away Home is not all girls. The Lane Sisters and Gale Page are the daughters again and Fay Bainter is their mother and Donald Crisp the businessman she is scheduled to marry. Bainter and Crisp are new to the ensemble.
Claude Rains is the patriarch, not the music master of Four Daughters, but the confirmed vagabond who left his family. He finds a kindred soul in John Garfield who has sparked an interest from Priscilla Lane away from playwright Jeffrey Lynn and toward himself.
If you know what happened in Four Daughters you know what happens here in terms of the pairing ups.
Rains is the best one in this cast by far. You'd go just about anywhere and do anything for him, he's got such charm and apparent knowledge of the world. In the end though he realizes he can be a bad influence as well as a good one.
The same standard for Four Daughters is maintained for Daughter's Courageous.
This is the first of the "Four Daughters" series that I've ever seen, or was even aware of. Judging by this film, it's a wonder that they don't have a better reputation than they do. This movie is very engaging and entertaining throughout. The story may be a little too by-the-numbers, but the likability of the three Lane sisters plus one helps to overcome that mild complaint easily. The dialog is as snappy as that of a contemporary sitcom and the direction is fresh and forward-looking for a film over sixty years old. Claude Rains shines in his role. This also marks the first time I've understood why John Garfield commands the devoted following he has. "Daughters Courageous" should be enjoyed by anyone who likes the older Hollywood films and will likely appeal to a significant percentage of younger viewers if they give it a chance.
This is an odd digression from the series begun with "Four Daughters." Claude Rains has left the Lane sisters and their mother. She is about to remarry. John Garfield reappears and Pricilla Lane is drawn to his bad-boy ways.
I found the mother, Fay Bainter, the most poignant player. Bainter is always touching. She is given many close-ups -- which allow us to see her beautiful eyes. They are amazingly warm. I have a similar fondness for Bealah Bondi. She isn't in this -- but May Robson, another real charmer is. She plays the family housekeeper.
Bainter's beau is played beautifully by the versatile Donald Crisp. He gives a fine performance as a stuffy but goodhearted man.
And of course there is Rains. I suppose he was too major a star to be called a character actor. But was he a romantic lead? He was extraordinarily versatile and seemingly incapable of turning in a bad performance.
I found the mother, Fay Bainter, the most poignant player. Bainter is always touching. She is given many close-ups -- which allow us to see her beautiful eyes. They are amazingly warm. I have a similar fondness for Bealah Bondi. She isn't in this -- but May Robson, another real charmer is. She plays the family housekeeper.
Bainter's beau is played beautifully by the versatile Donald Crisp. He gives a fine performance as a stuffy but goodhearted man.
And of course there is Rains. I suppose he was too major a star to be called a character actor. But was he a romantic lead? He was extraordinarily versatile and seemingly incapable of turning in a bad performance.
DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS (Warner Brothers, 1939), directed by Michael Curtiz, with title inspired by the box-office success to CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1937), is one that often gets confused with the studio's earlier hit of FOUR DAUGHTERS (1938), even to a point of classifying it as its sequel. FOUR DAUGHTERS did have a sequel, in fact, two, titled FOUR WIVES (1939) and FOUR MOTHERS (1941), Capitalizing on the success of FOUR DAUGHTERS by using the same major leading players and its director, DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS is an original screenplay that happens to be a rehash of FOUR DAUGHTERS, if nothing else. Though there are comparisons regarding its characters in both films, the format in general plays more like a tear-jerker from the silent movie era. Yet its direction and how it's performed feels quite modern and agreeable making both FOUR DAUGHTERS and DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS to be of equal status, if not, a notch better than the original.
The story opens with plot development involving the Masters family: Nan (Fay Bainter) who has raised four daughters to adulthood: Buff (Priscilla Lane) Tinka (Rosemary Lane), Linda (Lola Lane) and Cora (Gale Page), after her husband, James, had abandoned them twenty years ago to drift around the world. Buff is loved by playwright, Johnny Heming (Jeffrey Lynn); Tinka goes for football player, Eddie Moore (Dick Foran) while Linda loves George (Frank McHugh). Cora is a serious-minded girl wanting to become an inspiring actress by taking a small role in Johnny's upcoming play for the Colony Players. The Masters household also consists of Penny (May Robson), their housekeeper who helped raise the four daughters since birth. Now beautiful young ladies, the four daughters learn their mother intends to remarry, to a respected businessman, Sam Sloane (Donald Crisp). Sam looks forward to his new family and becoming the head of the house. Aside from Buff taking an interest in Gabriel Lopez (John Garfield), a fisherman whom her mother disapproves, their lives are interrupted by the arrival of the girls' father, James (Claude Rains). His one ambition is to win back their love and respect lost to him now that his four daughters are all strangers to him. Featuring Berton Churchill (Judge Henry Hornsby); George Humbert, castly Hobart Cavanaugh, Eddie Acuff and Tom Dugan in smaller roles.
Regardless of star billing going to the up and coming John Garfield, the story centers more on Fay Bainter, Claude Rains and their "Four Daughters," as they are castly billed. Rains as usual is excellent. He and Garfield outshine the material as does the rest of the cast. Although a drama, the movie features amusements, such as its opening set on the beach where a lifeguard is saved from drowning. The one that stands out for me is how Rains attempts to win the sympathy from his daughters individually by shivering while sleeping on the living room couch near an open window blowing wind his way. Fay Bainter, on loan from MGM, having two earlier 1938 Warners successes as JEZEBEL and WHITE BANNERS to her name, along with Donald Crisp, are two performers added to the assortment of the FOUR DAUGHTERS cast consisting of Rains, The Lane Sisters, Page, Garfield, Lynn, Robson, McHugh, Foran and Robson. Though no sequel was made for DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS using a title like WIVES COURAGEOUS for example, this sole venture stands on its own through its fine blend of humor with sentiment for much of its 107 minutes.
Available on DVD, DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS often plays on Turner Classic Movies cable channel for fans of the FOUR DAUGHTERS franchise and beyond. (***1/2)
The story opens with plot development involving the Masters family: Nan (Fay Bainter) who has raised four daughters to adulthood: Buff (Priscilla Lane) Tinka (Rosemary Lane), Linda (Lola Lane) and Cora (Gale Page), after her husband, James, had abandoned them twenty years ago to drift around the world. Buff is loved by playwright, Johnny Heming (Jeffrey Lynn); Tinka goes for football player, Eddie Moore (Dick Foran) while Linda loves George (Frank McHugh). Cora is a serious-minded girl wanting to become an inspiring actress by taking a small role in Johnny's upcoming play for the Colony Players. The Masters household also consists of Penny (May Robson), their housekeeper who helped raise the four daughters since birth. Now beautiful young ladies, the four daughters learn their mother intends to remarry, to a respected businessman, Sam Sloane (Donald Crisp). Sam looks forward to his new family and becoming the head of the house. Aside from Buff taking an interest in Gabriel Lopez (John Garfield), a fisherman whom her mother disapproves, their lives are interrupted by the arrival of the girls' father, James (Claude Rains). His one ambition is to win back their love and respect lost to him now that his four daughters are all strangers to him. Featuring Berton Churchill (Judge Henry Hornsby); George Humbert, castly Hobart Cavanaugh, Eddie Acuff and Tom Dugan in smaller roles.
Regardless of star billing going to the up and coming John Garfield, the story centers more on Fay Bainter, Claude Rains and their "Four Daughters," as they are castly billed. Rains as usual is excellent. He and Garfield outshine the material as does the rest of the cast. Although a drama, the movie features amusements, such as its opening set on the beach where a lifeguard is saved from drowning. The one that stands out for me is how Rains attempts to win the sympathy from his daughters individually by shivering while sleeping on the living room couch near an open window blowing wind his way. Fay Bainter, on loan from MGM, having two earlier 1938 Warners successes as JEZEBEL and WHITE BANNERS to her name, along with Donald Crisp, are two performers added to the assortment of the FOUR DAUGHTERS cast consisting of Rains, The Lane Sisters, Page, Garfield, Lynn, Robson, McHugh, Foran and Robson. Though no sequel was made for DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS using a title like WIVES COURAGEOUS for example, this sole venture stands on its own through its fine blend of humor with sentiment for much of its 107 minutes.
Available on DVD, DAUGHTERS COURAGEOUS often plays on Turner Classic Movies cable channel for fans of the FOUR DAUGHTERS franchise and beyond. (***1/2)
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThis film is often mistakenly considered a sequel to Vater dirigiert (1938) since it has the same primary cast - (Claude Rains, John Garfield, Jeffrey Lynn, May Robson, Frank McHugh, Dick Foran, Gale Page and the real life Lane sisters : Priscilla Lane, Rosemary Lane and Lola Lane - all in somewhat similar roles, most specifically Page and the Lanes portraying four sisters to Rains' father) and even the same director, Michael Curtiz, but technically is not - the actors play different characters in this film. Four Wives (1939) and Four Mothers (1941) are true sequels to Vater dirigiert (1938).
- PatzerAfter Buff tells Gabriel she came and will be going home from the nightclub with Johnny, Gabriel leaves and leaves his accordion with the coat-check girl. However, before sunrise the next morning he and Buff are on his father's boat. He is playing his accordion and she is singing.
- Zitate
Penny: [sternly] When are you going to stop sliding down the banister?
Buff Masters: [excitedly] When they stop making 'em.
- VerbindungenFeatured in The John Garfield Story (2003)
- SoundtracksMy Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean
(uncredited)
Traditional
Heard on the radio
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- Daughters Courageous
- Drehorte
- Colton Hall, Monterey, Kalifornien, USA(Courthouse)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 47 Min.(107 min)
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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