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IMDbPro

Sadie McKee

  • 1934
  • Approved
  • 1h 33min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.8/10
1.8 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Joan Crawford in Sadie McKee (1934)
DramaRomance

La fortuna de una chica trabajadora mejora cuando se casa por dinero, pero la felicidad no se gana tan fácilmente.La fortuna de una chica trabajadora mejora cuando se casa por dinero, pero la felicidad no se gana tan fácilmente.La fortuna de una chica trabajadora mejora cuando se casa por dinero, pero la felicidad no se gana tan fácilmente.

  • Dirección
    • Clarence Brown
  • Guionistas
    • John Meehan
    • Viña Delmar
    • Carey Wilson
  • Elenco
    • Joan Crawford
    • Gene Raymond
    • Franchot Tone
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.8/10
    1.8 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Clarence Brown
    • Guionistas
      • John Meehan
      • Viña Delmar
      • Carey Wilson
    • Elenco
      • Joan Crawford
      • Gene Raymond
      • Franchot Tone
    • 26Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 18Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 3 premios ganados en total

    Fotos20

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    Elenco principal52

    Editar
    Joan Crawford
    Joan Crawford
    • Sadie
    Gene Raymond
    Gene Raymond
    • Tommy
    Franchot Tone
    Franchot Tone
    • Michael
    Edward Arnold
    Edward Arnold
    • Brennan
    Esther Ralston
    Esther Ralston
    • Dolly
    Earl Oxford
    Earl Oxford
    • Stooge
    Jean Dixon
    Jean Dixon
    • Opal
    Leo G. Carroll
    Leo G. Carroll
    • Phelps
    • (as Leo Carroll)
    Akim Tamiroff
    Akim Tamiroff
    • Riccori
    Zelda Sears
    Zelda Sears
    • Mrs. Craney
    Helen Ware
    Helen Ware
    • Mrs. McKee
    Gene Austin
    Gene Austin
    • Cafe Entertainer
    Candy Candido
    Candy Candido
    • Cafe Entertainer
    • (as Candy and Coco)
    Otto Heimel
    • Cafe Entertainer
    • (as Candy and Coco)
    Norman Ainsley
    • Second Butler - at Downstairs Meeting
    • (sin créditos)
    Hooper Atchley
    Hooper Atchley
    • Intern with Dr. Briggs
    • (sin créditos)
    Nellie Bly Baker
    • Downstairs Laundress
    • (sin créditos)
    Jack Baxley
    • Short-Order Cook
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Clarence Brown
    • Guionistas
      • John Meehan
      • Viña Delmar
      • Carey Wilson
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios26

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    Opiniones destacadas

    8hildacrane

    Satisfying and trim

    I'm a big fan of the Crawford oeuvre, in all its permutations and occasional excesses. That said, her Sadie is refreshingly underplayed and sincere. The mid-Atlantic accent that she tended to is at a minimum here, and there is a fluidity that is in much contrast to the Greek tragic masks, riveting though they are, of some of her later performances. The wonderful Jean Dixon is on hand in a role that is a precursor to Eve Arden's pal of "Mildred Pierce" and "Goodbye My Fancy"--worldly, rueful, self-denigrating. (Mary Phillips took on a similar part in "The Bride Wore Red" several years later.) Esther Ralston does a fine job as the blowsy, sensuous man-stealer--at one point she practically does a Mae West with her intonations and stance. Solid performances also from Franchot Tone and Gene Raymond and the always-reliable, under-appreciated Edward Arnold. The very engaging Earl Oxford appears as "the Stooge" and one wonders why this charmer did not have a film career.

    The story is serviceable, and there is a motif of characters' taking responsibility for their lives, and, as best they can, making amends for wrongs. Note that at the start and end of the film there are scenes in which the camera follows a character from one room to the next in such a way that you realize that there is not any real partition between the two rooms--an enjoyable little breaking of the "fourth wall" premise of theater.
    gerdeen-1

    More likable than you might expect

    "Sadie McKee" was made just before Hollywood got serious about sanitizing its content, and the movie is set squarely in what we now call the pre-Code world. In this world, men are on the make, cops are on the take, rich people do pretty much as they please and prostitution is just another job option.

    But while many other pre-Code film can leave you with a bleak feeling about human nature, this one is stocked with basically decent characters. Bribe-takers are just ordinary folks trying to get by. A clever seducer can't silence his own conscience. And when an aging, drunken millionaire orders up a young girl and takes her home for the night, the relationship quickly blossoms from exploitation into an odd kind of love.

    Joan Crawford plays the title role, a plucky survivor whose ups and downs would have broken a lesser person. Gene Raymond, Franchot Tone and Edward Arnold play the three very different men in her life. The story is improbable at times, moving from flophouse to sleazy nightclub to mansion. But it's never gets so unrealistic that you stop caring. The ending is somewhat enigmatic, at least to me. I'm still wondering exactly where everyone stood at the end, and where things were headed. That's OK. I like a movie that leaves a little something nagging at you.

    If the story is improbable, there's nothing unbelievable about how Joan Crawford's character turns men's heads. A lot of people still view Crawford through a "campy" lens, remembering her long years as a fading star with a lot of personal baggage (real and reputed). Forget all that stuff. In 1934 she was young and lithe and simply gorgeous. She carries this movie, and she carries it well.
    Poseidon-3

    The stuff that Joan is made of...

    It's easy to see why films like this made Crawford the idol of millions of young women across the country. It's the epitome of a "vehicle".....a film designed to display all the talents of a star and make audiences fall for them. As in many of her early films, she begins at the bottom...the daughter of the cook for a wealthy family including Tone. She gets a hot scene right off the bat when she angrily defends her boyfriend, who is being derided by the aristocrats at the table, by telling them all off (this moment actually brings to mind Emily Watson's similar, yet much more subdued, scene in "Gosford Park".) Soon she and lover Raymond are off to NYC. This section is fascinating as it portrays the way diners were in that era. There's an astonishing coffee dispenser that is shown in one scene and the Automat is quite interesting to behold (not to mention the corned beef hash and 2 poached eggs for $0.35!) Circumstances progress to where she is working in a dance hall (and showing some positively scary legs! It amazing how times have changed in that, today, a similar dancer would have to have sticks for legs and breasts out to there, etc....) Here she becomes associated with a drunken millionaire (Arnold) who takes a major shine to her. Fortunately, for the viewer, she sticks with him, so she can wear an array of dazzling Adrien gowns and furs. Ultimately, each of the men in her life (Tone, Raymond, Arnold) presents her with a variety of conflicts and decisions....all of which she handles with the utmost nobility and grace. She is photographed magnificently throughout with her amazing profile and luminescent eyes featured repeatedly. It's a good thing the film is in black and white because she'd be too much to deal with in color! Everyone knows that Hurrell retouched his amazing portraits of her, but here she looks quite wonderful with just make up and good lighting. The plot is creaky and contrived and the film is just plain out of date, but it's great to see Joan in action in her quintessential role and there's a decent performance from Arnold and nice work by several other supporting players including Hitchcock favorite Carroll. One fun thing to watch for: As a precursor of the later, more antagonistic Crawford, Joan gets fed up with a nightclub singer, barks at her to "Shut up!" and shoves her backwards into a trunk! Fun stuff.
    7AlsExGal

    Nobody suffers quite like Joan Crawford

    This is often forgotten in Joan Crawford's filmography. It has lots of the ingredients of precode Hollywood, released a couple of month before the inception of the Production Code. It also has lots of the components of the films that Crawford made for MGM of the 1930s, but this one came relatively early in her career and thus seems fresh compared to later similar entries.

    Sadie is the daughter of the cook in the home of the wealthy Alderson family. One night when helping out with the serving at dinner, she listens to the son and lawyer of the family (Franchot Tone as Michael) talking about how her boyfriend, Tommy Wallace, is a thief and should get no second chance from the community now that he's been fired from his job. Sadie tells them off and takes off with Tommy (Gene Raymond) to New York City. They have about twenty dollars between them, and pretend to be married to the landlady, planning to be married the next day. Sadie has a job interview, so she and Tommy agree to meet at city hall at noon and be married. He never shows. But this is not an Affair to Remember. Instead, it's exactly what you'd suspect. Brassy nightclub singer Dolly Merrick hears Tommy singing in the boarding house bathroom and offers him a job singing in her act. But the audition would conflict with his wedding. Tommy picks the audition over the wedding, clears out his clothes, and doesn't even leave a note behind.

    Sadie, now a hardened jaded woman, gets a job dancing in a night club act where she meets the very wealthy Jack Brennan ( Edward Arnold). He's drunk when he meets her, drunk when he marries her, in fact the guy is perpetually drunk to the point I get tired of him, and it is so hard to get tired of the talented Edward Arnold. The complicating factor is that Michael Alderson is Brennan's lawyer, thinks the worst of Sadie, and is still a pompous glass bowl, although he was right about Tommy having no character. Sadie can't forgive him for that either.

    Then comes the day when Sadie is told Brennan will die if he doesn't quit drinking, Sadie sees Tommy again and the old feelings surface, and Michael AND all of the servants think she is just a scheming tramp trying to let Brennan die drinking so she can become the rich widow. Complications ensue.

    This film had lots of precode moments. There is the insinuation that Tommy and Sadie, in spite of their promises to each other to wait, do share a bed that one night they are in the rooming house. And there is the delightful Jean Dixon as Sadie's hard boiled friend who looks at the bedroom arrangements after Sadie marries Brennan and says "I've done a lot more for a lot less".

    Recommended if it ever comes your way. It packs a lot of plot into its running time.
    6claudio_carvalho

    Great Conclusion

    In Richley, New York, Sadie McKee (Joan Crawford) works as a maid in the Alderson mansion where her mother is the cook. When the son of their employee, the successful lawyer Michael Alderson (Franchot Tone) that was raised with her, returns from New York after two years, his family offers a dinner party to family and friends. While serving soup, Sadie hears the comments made by Michael about her boyfriend Tommy Wallace (Gene Raymond), who was fired from the Alderson factory accused of being a dishonest person. Sadie reacts and tells that they are insensitive. Sadie decides to flee with Tommy to New York to get married and find job. They befriend Opal (Jean Dixon) and she takes them to the low- budget boardinghouse where she lives. On the next morning, Sadie leaves the boardinghouse to seek a job and marry her beloved Tommy. But his next room neighbor Dolly Merrick (Esther Ralston) overhears him singing and seduces Tommy to travel with her in an itinerant show business. Sadie prepares to return home, but Opal convinces her to stay and finds a job of dancer in a nightclub. Ten days later, Sadie is helped by an alcoholic costumer to get rid of an abusive one and he invites her to join him at his table. She learns that he is the millionaire Jack Brennan (Edward Arnold) and his friend is Michael Alderson. When Michael patronizes her telling to leave Jack, she is still angry with Michael and stays with Jack that proposes to marry her. She accepts and is seen by the society as a gold-digger. But Sadie is still in love with Tommy. What will happen to her?

    "Sadie McKee" is a Pre-Code drama with the story of a working girl in love with a rascal that marries a wealthy girl. The role is perfect for Joan Crawford. The amoral story has a great open conclusion where the viewer needs to guess the birthday wish of Michael. My vote is six.

    Title (Brazil): "Três Amores" ("Three Loves")

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      One of the first films to treat alcoholism as a serious problem, instead of a comic device.
    • Errores
      When Tommy is in his hospital room he makes Dr. Briggs promise not to tell Sadie of his condition. However, when Dr. Briggs leaves the room, Sadie is there with the other doctors and she already knows. Dr. Briggs then says, "He made me promise he wouldn't tell her." This dialogue obviously makes no sense and is wrong. What he meant to say was, "He made me promise not to tell her."
    • Citas

      Sadie McKee Brennan: [showing off her bedroom] Here it is.

      Opal: Lady, when you say, "I do take thee," how you take him.

      Sadie McKee Brennan: [chuckles]

      Opal: Got this all to yourself?

      Sadie McKee Brennan: Yep, all to myself.

      Opal: Always all to yourself?

      Sadie McKee Brennan: Yep.

      Opal: Well, a whole lot of us do a whole lot more for a whole lot less.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in ¿Qué pasó con Baby Jane? (1962)
    • Bandas sonoras
      All I Do Is Dream Of You
      (1934) (uncredited)

      Music by Nacio Herb Brown

      Lyrics by Arthur Freed

      Played during the opening credits

      Sung by Gene Raymond three times

      Sung also by Earl Oxford in a show

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    Preguntas Frecuentes17

    • How long is Sadie McKee?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 9 de mayo de 1934 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Vackra Sadie McKee
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios - 10202 W. Washington Blvd., Culver City, California, Estados Unidos(Studio)
    • Productora
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 612,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 33 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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