अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंTwo doctors pursue a nurse with a secret - she's married to an insane man. Will she allow one of them to operate on her husband to save his sanity?Two doctors pursue a nurse with a secret - she's married to an insane man. Will she allow one of them to operate on her husband to save his sanity?Two doctors pursue a nurse with a secret - she's married to an insane man. Will she allow one of them to operate on her husband to save his sanity?
- Officer Pat O'Brien
- (as Ed Gargan)
- Male Nurse
- (as Gordon Elliott)
- Ambulance Attendant
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
The premise is different. It's a pre-Code film but the romance has limited heat. It's an old overwrought romance with little buy-in. The hospital dramas are mostly overwrought melodrama with limited excitement. It's equivalent to a weak medical TV show. There isn't much drama until the last act. In fact, it's a rather slow grind before that part. The last part does something dark and intriguing but it's too late to regain the dramatic drive.
"Registered Nurse" is from 1934 and stars Bebe Daniels in her last film before moving to London, Lyle Talbot, John Halliday, Gordon Westcott, and the aforementioned Sidney Toler as a wrestling promoter.
Daniels is Sylvia Benton, unhappily married to Jim Benton (Westcott) who, on their way home from a party, crashes their car. We only see his unconscious body on the ground.
In the next scene, Sylvia seems alone and she's talking about going back into nursing, which she does. She turns out to be quite invaluable at the hospital and attracts the amorous attentions of both a surgeon (Talbot) and the head doctor (Halliday). Both want to marry her. What they don't know is that her husband is alive and locked up in an asylum.
Sylvia can't divorce Jim because the only grounds for divorce in New York was adultery.
Subplots concern the patients: a bordello madam (Irene Franklin), a cop (Ed Gargan), and Toler, whose character has a broken leg.
The limpid-eyed Daniels was a good actress with a beautiful speaking voice, and this cast acquits itself well in this Hollywood melodrama. I imagine during her time at Warners, Daniels and Kay Francis were probably up for some of the same roles.
After moving to England with her husband, Ben Lyon, she became a stage and radio star, and appeared in a few films with her husband. She remained married to Lyon until she died.
Daniels, who started acting as a child, came from an interesting family. She was related to DeForest Kelley of "Star Trek" fame, and her cousin, Lee DeForest, "the father of sound," was responsible for improving sound when it first hit the movies. Her daughter was a singer for Columbia Records, and her son a disc jockey.
Most fascinating of all, Al Capone was a fan, and when her jewels were stolen from a Chicago hotel, he got them back for her.
A woman (Bebe Daniels as Sylvia Benton) is married to a man of means who is also a mean drunk (Gordon Westcott as Jim), let's him drive them home in that condition (bad idea), and tells him she plans to divorce him while he is at the wheel (worse idea). He laughs maniacally as she asks him to slow down, and he crashes their car with his reckless driving. The last thing we see of them together is Sylvia unhurt dragging Jim from the car.
Next scene is Sylvia applying for a job as an R.N., claiming she is single. She said she was an R.N. earlier in the film, but she could have been lying about that too, because apparently nursing in 1934 is all about washing dishes by hand, gossiping about the men in their lives, and smoking heavily - in the hospital! Other than taking temperatures I see very little medicine involved with these nurses, unless Sylvia being chased by a pair of doctors, John Halliday as Dr. Hedwig and Lyle Talbot as Dr. Connolly, counts.
So what happened to Sylvia's husband? Is he dead from the wreck? Is he alive, still a mean drunk, and trying to track her down? Something else? Honorable mention HAS to go to Sidney Toler and Irene Franklin as a feuding couple that rough each other up so badly that they have to be brought to the hospital (in the same ambulance), stay for several weeks to heal, and then walk out together arm in arm as though nothing ever happened. Apparently the bill did not bother them. But in the days when your nurses mainly wash dishes and smoke, I guess hospitals could keep costs down some.
Stick around for Toler and Franklin and also for the spectacle of somebody using the death of a cop to get in a woman's pants - I'll let you watch and see what I mean. And also ponder the question - Is it murder to tell somebody whose private life you know more about than they do that a theoretical person - who happens to be just like them - would be better off and be doing the world a favor if he just jumped out of a high story window...when a high story window is nearby, and then you just leave them to their thoughts.
Worth a look for the novelty of it all.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाFrankie Sylvestrie's car is a 1933 Pierce-Arrow Eight.
- गूफ़Despite his mental condition, Jim's hospital room is on an upper storey and has an unsecured window.
- भाव
Dr. Greg Connolly: They won't put much over on her.
Dr. Hedwig: That sounds like experience talking.
Dr. Greg Connolly: That young lady knows all the answers.
Dr. Hedwig: I take it you haven't got to first base.
Dr. Greg Connolly: First base? I'm still at the plate and the pitching it brutal.
Dr. Hedwig: Well, perhaps she doesn't like being just one of the crowd.
Dr. Greg Connolly: Well, you know me...
- साउंडट्रैकThe Goldfish Song
(uncredited)
Music by Sammy Fain
Lyrics by Irving Kahal
Performed by Vince Barnett at the party
टॉप पसंद
विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- Tajna sestre Silvije
- फ़िल्माने की जगहें
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 3 मि(63 min)
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.37 : 1