Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueSeasoned grifter Dolly Crandall returns to the 'badger game' but has a change of heart when she falls in love with a young man she believes is a rich Southerner.Seasoned grifter Dolly Crandall returns to the 'badger game' but has a change of heart when she falls in love with a young man she believes is a rich Southerner.Seasoned grifter Dolly Crandall returns to the 'badger game' but has a change of heart when she falls in love with a young man she believes is a rich Southerner.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Johnny Mack Brown
- Steve Crandall
- (as John Mack Brown)
Buddy Messinger
- Hank Crandall
- (as Buddie Messinger)
Charles K. French
- Prison Warden
- (non crédité)
Polly Moran
- Hotel Maid Who Coughs
- (non crédité)
Walter Percival
- Police Sgt. Matheson
- (non crédité)
Bert Roach
- Fat Man Who Flirts With Dolly
- (non crédité)
Adele Watson
- Western Union Clerk
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Norma Shearer's final silent is an amiable lightweight romantic comedy in which she plays a con woman who marries for money only to discover that her new husband lives in a shack with his mother and kid brother. Lowell Sherman and Gwen Lee provide fun support as a rival pair of grifters who try to horn in on Shearer's mark.
"A Lady of Chance" was Norma Shearer's last silent film. The Turner Movie Classic channel debut of this forgotten gem with a brand-new score, took place on August 15, 2001. It was a total delight! The print was in excellent condition and looked just as audiences first saw it in 1928. Norma, who never looked lovelier, was in top form and showed how adept she was as a silent movie actress. Never let anyone say that she couldn't handle comedy! It's a fun film to watch and I recommend it to anyone, not just Shearer fans.
In a "ritzy" hotel, seductive Norma Shearer (as Dolly "Angel Face" Morgan) uses her job as telephone operator to connect with wealthy gentlemen. Recently paroled, Ms. Shearer shows off her thighs under torn stockings while sharing a hard luck story, then lures the men to her apartment. There is, of course, a high price to be paid; in case on screen, Shearer makes out with a tidy $10,000. The plot thickens when Shearer's crooked cohorts Lowell Sherman (as Bradley) and Gwen Lee (as Gwen) want a piece of her solo action. Shearer successfully scams the pair, but they turn up to cause more trouble when she sets her sights on handsome cement tycoon Johnny Mack Brown (as Steve Crandall), who has a surprise of his own to reveal...
This was Shearer's last "silent" film; though MGM seemed reluctant to move their stars into talking pictures, several of them became even bigger stars, so the delay worked out very well for those. Curiously, this film has been shown without its "Synchronized Musical Score and Sound Effects" (SSE) on "Turner Classic Movies" (TCM). TCM premiered "A Lady of Chance" with an "all-new" music score in 2001, but had host Robert Osborne discussing the original soundtrack before a 2012 "Silent Sunday" airing, apparently unaware TCM was not showing the original version. Late 1920s "silent films" (which were never "silent") were typically released with SSE. Hopefully, the original soundtracks will be restored; the present trend needs reversing.
***** A Lady of Chance (12/1/28) Robert Z. Leonard ~ Norma Shearer, Lowell Sherman, Johnny Mack Brown, Gwen Lee
This was Shearer's last "silent" film; though MGM seemed reluctant to move their stars into talking pictures, several of them became even bigger stars, so the delay worked out very well for those. Curiously, this film has been shown without its "Synchronized Musical Score and Sound Effects" (SSE) on "Turner Classic Movies" (TCM). TCM premiered "A Lady of Chance" with an "all-new" music score in 2001, but had host Robert Osborne discussing the original soundtrack before a 2012 "Silent Sunday" airing, apparently unaware TCM was not showing the original version. Late 1920s "silent films" (which were never "silent") were typically released with SSE. Hopefully, the original soundtracks will be restored; the present trend needs reversing.
***** A Lady of Chance (12/1/28) Robert Z. Leonard ~ Norma Shearer, Lowell Sherman, Johnny Mack Brown, Gwen Lee
Story of female con artist who falls for her scam victim is just a backdrop for Shearer, who photographs beautifully and shows a remarkable range without uttering a word (check out the "wedding veil" scene, where she moves from mocking the idea of marriage to momentarily embracing the idea, all within a few seconds of subtly-evolving facial gestures). Entertaining, even if plot takes a couple of slightly unbelievable twists, with nice balance of comedy and drama (again, Shearer's range of emotion in the last scenes of the film are impressive and engaging). Clearly shows why Norma Shearer was a major MGM star even before the advent of sound.
I don't watch many silent films (wish they'd take the time to get the speed right) but this one was okay, partially because I didn't have to put up with Norma Shearer's exaggerated acting voice! Silent (and pleasantly so), she did a good job as a former con artist who thought she married money but ended up in love, only to discover her new husband may soon be the wealthy man she thought he was! Just when she's about to have it all, her past comes back to haunt her.
Will she allow herself to be blackmailed? Will her husband find out the truth? Will it matter to him if he does? Will she beat her former associates at their own game?
Tune in and find out.
Will she allow herself to be blackmailed? Will her husband find out the truth? Will it matter to him if he does? Will she beat her former associates at their own game?
Tune in and find out.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThis movie originally was filmed as a silent picture. With the advent of sound though, audiences began skipping silent films and only spending their money to see "talkies". M-G-M, one of the last studios to adopt sound, did not have any "talkies" to release. So, M-G-M began taking silent films they had not yet released, such as this film, and, post-production, added sound sequences to them. Unfortunately, these sound sequences and the accompanying sound track apparently have not survived, and so a modern musical score has been added. Many consider this as more detrimental rather than an enhancement to the action on the screen.
- Citations
Steve Crandall: [to Angel Face] I never realized how uninteresting cement was until I met you.
- Versions alternativesMGM also released this movie in a totally silent version in 1928.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Hollywood Hist-o-Rama: Norma Shearer (1962)
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 18min(78 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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