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The Age of Consent

  • 1932
  • Passed
  • 1h 3min
NOTE IMDb
6,0/10
469
MA NOTE
Richard Cromwell, Arline Judge, and Dorothy Wilson in The Age of Consent (1932)
Coming-of-AgeSteamy RomanceTeen DramaDramaRomance

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueCollege co-eds learn to handle the responsibilities of romance.College co-eds learn to handle the responsibilities of romance.College co-eds learn to handle the responsibilities of romance.

  • Réalisation
    • Gregory La Cava
  • Scénario
    • Sarah Y. Mason
    • Francis M. Cockrell
    • Martin Flavin
  • Casting principal
    • Dorothy Wilson
    • Arline Judge
    • Richard Cromwell
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,0/10
    469
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Scénario
      • Sarah Y. Mason
      • Francis M. Cockrell
      • Martin Flavin
    • Casting principal
      • Dorothy Wilson
      • Arline Judge
      • Richard Cromwell
    • 21avis d'utilisateurs
    • 6avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 victoires au total

    Photos7

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    Rôles principaux15

    Modifier
    Dorothy Wilson
    Dorothy Wilson
    • Betty
    Arline Judge
    Arline Judge
    • Dora
    Richard Cromwell
    Richard Cromwell
    • Michael
    Eric Linden
    Eric Linden
    • The Duke
    John Halliday
    John Halliday
    • David
    Aileen Pringle
    Aileen Pringle
    • Barbara
    Reginald Barlow
    Reginald Barlow
    • Mr. Swale
    Frederick Burton
    Frederick Burton
    • Asst. Dist. Atty. Gifford
    • (non crédité)
    Phyllis Fraser
    Phyllis Fraser
    • Student
    • (non crédité)
    Betty Grable
    Betty Grable
    • Student at Dormitory
    • (non crédité)
    Howard Hickman
    Howard Hickman
    • Doctor
    • (non crédité)
    Buddy Messinger
    Buddy Messinger
    • Junior - A Student)
    • (non crédité)
    Spec O'Donnell
    Spec O'Donnell
    • Confused Student in Cafe
    • (non crédité)
    Mildred Shay
    Mildred Shay
    • Student at Dormitory
    • (non crédité)
    Grady Sutton
    Grady Sutton
    • Student at Dormitory
    • (non crédité)
    • Réalisation
      • Gregory La Cava
    • Scénario
      • Sarah Y. Mason
      • Francis M. Cockrell
      • Martin Flavin
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs21

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    Avis à la une

    6bkoganbing

    Marry Her Or Else

    The Age Of Consent is a terribly dated before the Code film with a Victorian era plot and loaded with sexual innuendo. This would have made a great Cecil B. DeMille silent film.

    The Age Of Consent began as a play called Cross Roads which had the misfortune of opening on Broadway within two weeks of the Stock Market crash. After that Broadway closed a lot of shows because folks couldn't afford the theater. Cross Roads only ran 28 performances and Franchot Tone and Sylvia Sidney were in the supporting roles that Eric Linden and Arline Judge play on the screen.

    The leads are Richard Cromwell and Dorothy Wilson who are in love and going through a lot of angst. Dorothy's a good kid who doesn't want to give it up before she has a wedding ring on her finger. Richard's even ready to quit school. But when she says no he goes off with the local waitress at the college hangout Arline Judge.

    Catching him alone with his daughter puritanical dad Richard Barlow says no one is going to disgrace my daughter, marry her or else because she's still a minor. Poor Cromwell sees his whole life slipping away, all the plans he had for his future, just gone up in smoke.

    It all kind of works out for most of the cast. John Halliday is her as the wise science professor who acts as mentor and father figure to the college kids. Barlow's part is interesting his type is still around today, ignorant and proud of it. Look for a young Betty Grable as one of the coeds.

    It's an interesting story and typical of the times. But thank God we seem to have moved away from the attitudes expressed by Barlow in The Age Of Consent.
    6eebyo

    Separated-at-birth alert!

    This is a better cultural artifact than a movie . . . but it's a very watchable movie. Catch it on TCM.

    The alert is for Richard Cromwell, who plays the young man in what I'll call "a situation" with a townie waitress. He's a pretty good actor I've not seen in any other pictures -- and a 24-carat ringer for Leonardo DiCaprio! Their resemblance is beyond close; it's frightening: looks, body language, the whole package. (I am not a good judge of voices, but I don't think they're too far apart.) . . . Since IMDb is insisting on 10 lines' worth of comment even tho' I'm done, I agree w/ the other posted comments about the snappy yet smarmy pre-Code tone of this movie. That's what makes it such an artifact. If I were Robert Osborne (and we're all SO lucky I'm not), this movie would be double-billed with "The Story of Temple Drake," a bleaker look at the same good-time era starring Miriam Hopkins.
    71930s_Time_Machine

    I wasn't expecting such a thought provoking, intelligent melodrama as this!

    The title and synopsis suggest that this might be some silly pre-code fluffy nonsense but it's absolutely not! This is a mature and thought provoking drama with naturalistic acting, realistic dialogue giving a shocking insight into who we were in the 1930s.

    Hopefully I'm not making it sound like some dry documentary - this is pure slap you in the face type melodrama but also a real education! It explains so much about the attitudes and ideas of the time. What makes it so compelling isn't just the themes it's the likeability and the surprising realism of the characters. Even Eric Linden who's often atrocious is great in this. Likewise, pretty Arline Judge who's pretty awful in other pictures in this, with a good director, is fantastic, channeling her 'inner-Barbara Stanwyck.'

    University life in 1932...or really the late twenties when this was written, doesn't seem too different to how it was in my time in the 1980s. Although nobody's arguing about whether Pink Floyd or Yes are best or what to watch on the TV, they're still a) not discussing course work and b) obsessed with sex. It's all weirdly relatable.

    The plot, which as I say, explains the attitudes of so many 1930s movies centres on a student who has sex with a waitress....they're caught by her dad who informs the student that she's under-age...so he has two choices according to the law: a) go to jail or b) marry his daughter. Before the eleventh century, if you had sex with someone you were legally married.... times hadn't changed too much had they but this is the 1930s not the Middle Ages! I was staggered that this was the pronouncement of a court.

    'But we don't love each other.' they'd argue. 'What's love got to do with marriage?' they'd reply ad though answering the most absurd question ever, 'Marriage isn't about love, it's about doing the right thing.' I guess this explains why so many people in 1930s pictures get married so quickly without really getting to know each other. No sex before marriage wasn't just an idea, it was part of our make-up, one of our unbreakable, unquestionable Ten Commandments.

    To a lesser degree, the other topic this pokes into is class. When I was in Oxford there was a distinct line between town and gown. It was either Dr Who or Star Trek where two separate communities existed on the same planet in the same space but were separated somehow so they never knew of each other's existence - Oxford was a bit like that in the eighties but in the late twenties of this film, that segregation was even wider. Only the super-rich could afford to go to university back then so what happened between this testosterone filled student and the randy teenage waitress is an exploration of what happens classes clash - could an entitled son of a millionaire live happily ever after with an 'uneducated' working class daughter of a labourer? Society says they must!

    This belongs with those other early thirties pictures such as NIGHT COURT, BABY FACE, SHE HAD TO SAY YES, BAD GIRL etc. Which make you realise that you wouldn't really want to have lived back then.
    7atlasmb

    Surprisingly Intelligent Story About College Students

    Based upon a play, "The Age of Consent" is a film of ideas. Although it might first seem like just another flippantly written pre-code story about young love, the title is the first clue. The age of consent in a particular jurisdiction is the age at which one can legally consent to sexual acts. Knowing this, the viewer might consider it an allusion to the line between immaturity and maturity that the students of State University ride. They are not yet ready for the responsibilities of adult life, but the educational process asks them to consider the large issues of life.

    A stone bench on campus is the second clue to the serious ideas this film explores. "In loco parentis" is a Latin phrase meaning "in the place of a parent" and it is a concept regarding the (if you will, fiduciary) legal role of a college, upon accepting a student in its care, to assume some responsibilities of a parent and, therefore, some legal liabilities. That phrase is carved into this bench, where we see Professor David Matthews (John Halliday) offer parental advice and comfort to student Mike Harvey (Richard Cromwell).

    Both legal concepts figure heavily in the story. The campus is a seemingly idyllic setting where students can exist in an ivory tower, away from the harsh realities of the outside world, to explore controversial and abstract ideas, like free love. But innocence resides there with burgeoning passions and the difficulties they present.

    The moral relativism that many feared would result from abstract ideas and newer scientific principles, e.g. Darwinism and a revised astronomical view of man's place in the universe, come head to head with the "older" moral certainties of absolutism and church dogma. Will love find a place in the crossfire?

    This film features good, sparkling dialogue and some excellent acting. The ending may be a surprise for many viewers.
    5blanche-2

    College in 1932

    Gregory LaCava directed this 1932 film, The Age of Consent, starring Richard Cromwell, Dorothy Wilson, Aileen Pringle, John Halliday, and Arline Judge.

    It's a precode story of kids in college, with lots of talk encouraging young women to loosen their morals, all kinds of sexual innuendo.

    Michael (Cromwell) is a young man of high ideals who doesn't appreciate his buddy Duke's (Eric Linden) outrageous flirting and sexy talk, especially when it comes to Michael's girlfriend Betty (Wilson).

    He confides to one of the professors (Halliday) that he's thinking of giving up college for marriage. This is evidently because of raging hormones.

    When he's caught with an underage waitress, Dora (Judge), after a night of drinking, Dora's father demands they marry at once. This is one of those so subtle blink and you miss it. We are given the impression that they maybe kissed while drunk. I don't think so. She asks, are you sorry - I think they had sex. Other reviewers weren't sure.

    The premise seems to be, leave college and get married rather than just shack up. In a way it's odd, since other precodes have people living together before marriage.

    Anyway I have a soft spot for Richard Cromwell due to Emma and the fact that he was briefly married to Angela Lansbury. He did not stay in show business. He was a very talented artist and died at 50.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The mention of the Jericho Turnpike places the setting as being on Long Island, New York. State Route 25 is known at the Jericho Turnpike for most of its length across Long Island.
    • Gaffes
      (at around 28 mins) When Betty lays back after Mike kisses her, the ground can be seen moving under her head when she moves.
    • Citations

      Dora Swale: [as Mike enters the restaurant where she is a waitress] Hello, pollywog.

      Michael 'Mike' Harvey: Hello, Dora.

      [while looking for an empty booth to sit in, he overhears a couple talking loudly]

      Unseen Female I: Whaddyou care if they're sharp or not? You can rub your beard off with a towel.

      Unseen Male I: Wait'll you start to shave. Alright, alright, what about free love?

      Unseen Female I: There's nothing free about MY love, Romeo. Just remember that.

      Unseen Male I: You for sale?

      Unseen Female I: Let's broaden the conversation.

      Unseen Male I: When I get on a subject I like to stay with it. Hey, how about that butter?

      [Disgusted with what he's hearing Mike gets up and moves to a different booth]

      Unseen Female II: Stop it!

      Unseen Male II: [Brays stupidly] I'm gonna find out things for myself. How do I know? Ya may be knock-kneed.

      [Brays again]

      Unseen Female II: I thoughtcha came to college to develop your brain.

      Unseen Male II: Aw, who cares about brains? I come from a long line of people who work with their hands.

      [Brays yet again, and we hear a slap]

      Unseen Male II: Alright, alright, whaddya wanna talk about?

      [Girl giggles incessantly]

      Unseen Male II: That's not so funny.

      [Mike rolls his eyes and moves a second time]

      Dora Swale: Are you working out for the track team or is this a new game?

      Michael 'Mike' Harvey: I don't like free love with my meals.

      Boy in next booth: Trouble is with you, you're old fashioned.

      Girl in next booth: Maybe so, but what was good enough for my grandmother is good enough for me.

      [She picks up her purse and starts to leave]

      Boy in next booth: Well I don't want to be honorable with you unless it's absolutely necessary.

      Girl in next booth: I'll call ya up sometime when I break training.

      [laughs and walks out]

      Michael 'Mike' Harvey: Don't they ever talk about anything else?

      Dora Swale: What else is there to talk about? How about somethin' to eat?

      Michael 'Mike' Harvey: Oh, I don't know what I want.

      Dora Swale: Gimme three guesses?

      Michael 'Mike' Harvey: People ever talk about marriage any more?

      Dora Swale: Some of the older people.

      Michael 'Mike' Harvey: Why don't you get married? What do you hang around a dump like this for?

      Dora Swale: Scrambled eggs are nice.

    • Bandes originales
      Paradise
      (1931) (uncredited)

      Music by Nacio Herb Brown

      Lyrics by Nacio Herb Brown and Gordon Clifford

      Played at the dance and danced by Dorothy Wilson and Eric Linden and other couples

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    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 19 août 1932 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Crossroads
    • Lieux de tournage
      • RKO Studios - 780 N. Gower Street, Hollywood, Los Angeles, Californie, États-Unis(Studio)
    • Société de production
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 125 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 3 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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    Richard Cromwell, Arline Judge, and Dorothy Wilson in The Age of Consent (1932)
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    By what name was The Age of Consent (1932) officially released in India in English?
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