अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.A dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.A dissolute rich society boy marries a worldly nightclub singer, and she begins to have a wholly unexpected effect on him.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
Theresa Maxwell Conover
- Mrs. William Deane
- (as Theresa Maxwell)
Allan Cavan
- Mr. Lyon
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Bill Elliott
- Nightclub Patron
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Mary Gordon
- Cook
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Ben Hall
- Office Boy
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Selmer Jackson
- Conover
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Tom London
- Thug
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Brief Moment stars Carole Lombard and in this film she is gets married to wealthy Gene Raymond who has a nice arrangement with his father Reginald Mason and brother Donald Cook. Dad makes the money and the two of them spend it. Lombard is a nightclub singer who falls for Raymond, but tries to reform him.
Back in the day a character like Raymond was called a wastrel. It's a 19th century word I wish would come back into common usage describing someone who just wants to have a good time and nothing else. They also are wealthy enough to see it works out that way.
During a time when a quarter of the country was out of work such people were really looked down on. Lombard thinks Raymond has abilities but he won't use them. The crux of the story.
One character does stand out that of Monroe Owsley as Raymond's best friend and fellow partygoer. He's a real piece of work.
Brief Moment is a Depression Era story that probably would not work well with a contemporary audience. It's a museum piece of a film.
Back in the day a character like Raymond was called a wastrel. It's a 19th century word I wish would come back into common usage describing someone who just wants to have a good time and nothing else. They also are wealthy enough to see it works out that way.
During a time when a quarter of the country was out of work such people were really looked down on. Lombard thinks Raymond has abilities but he won't use them. The crux of the story.
One character does stand out that of Monroe Owsley as Raymond's best friend and fellow partygoer. He's a real piece of work.
Brief Moment is a Depression Era story that probably would not work well with a contemporary audience. It's a museum piece of a film.
In the time-old tale of a rich boy falling for a poor girl, Gene Raymond falls for Carole Lombard in Brief Moment, much to his family's disappointment. He threatens to marry her, and they cut him off and out. They marry, but in a twist, his father still writes him checks on the side.
The meat of this story is the dissolution of the marriage. After the beginning, Gene's family practically disappears. Gene and Carole learn quickly that love doesn't conquer all. He drinks and gambles, and Carole's heart breaks with each ruined night. I've seen a lot of these types of movies, and this one isn't the best. It's rather stereotypical, boiling down a troubled marriage to a day at the races and too many martinis. But if you like the leads, you can rent it.
The meat of this story is the dissolution of the marriage. After the beginning, Gene's family practically disappears. Gene and Carole learn quickly that love doesn't conquer all. He drinks and gambles, and Carole's heart breaks with each ruined night. I've seen a lot of these types of movies, and this one isn't the best. It's rather stereotypical, boiling down a troubled marriage to a day at the races and too many martinis. But if you like the leads, you can rent it.
So one cliché, the greedy gold digger, is subverted and replaced by another one, the spoiled heir redeemed through real hard work. This is a one-idea morality tale, and probably not a particularly original one at that.
Yet Carole Lombard and Gene Raymond are very fine, dialogues are brisk and the tempo lively. Some of the supporting actors are also worth a mention - Arthur Hohl as the torch singer's caring boss, friend and wishful would-be husband, Herbert Evans who has a very funny scene as a butler with some useful experience of dealing with his master's hangovers - he looks and sounds like a twin brother of Edward Everett Horton of Lubitsch's fame. That's quite enough to make this simple-minded, unambitious story quite worth watching.
Typical quick time 'soap opera' churned out by all the studios to fulfill their theater chain commitments. This COLUMBIA PICTURES effort clocks in at 71 minutes and entertains for most of them. Not a classic but well worth watching.
The story is a typical one of the period, working girl played by Carole Lombard (ABBY FANE) falls in love and marries upper crust scion. Being in 'show business' she does not meet with approval of her in-laws. The husband played by Gene Raymond (RODNEY DEANE) is a aimless but wealthy drifter heavily under the influence of his friend played by Monroe Owsley (SIG).
ABBY keeps trying to get RODNEY to stand on his own feet and become the man she believes he is. SIG at his parasitical best tries to hold on to a good thing, which means plenty of Booze, Night Clubs and 'Fast Times'! ABBY seeks help from RODNEYs' family to get him on the straight path, but no luck. Usual misunderstandings, separation and then RODNEY has a epiphany realizing ABBY was right all along. Redeems himself and true love triumphs.
Carole Lombard portrays her role with intelligence and sensitivity. Hard to believe this attractive and lithe actress the previous decade was a chubby comedian at MACK SENNETT. Gene Raymond a amiable though limited actor fulfills what is required of him. Monroe Owsley has his parasite gig down to a 'T', making a career of such roles. Though his character of 'SIG' is always in the company of women you get the feeling he swims both ways and his friendship with RODNEY may be more then platonic.
The story is a typical one of the period, working girl played by Carole Lombard (ABBY FANE) falls in love and marries upper crust scion. Being in 'show business' she does not meet with approval of her in-laws. The husband played by Gene Raymond (RODNEY DEANE) is a aimless but wealthy drifter heavily under the influence of his friend played by Monroe Owsley (SIG).
ABBY keeps trying to get RODNEY to stand on his own feet and become the man she believes he is. SIG at his parasitical best tries to hold on to a good thing, which means plenty of Booze, Night Clubs and 'Fast Times'! ABBY seeks help from RODNEYs' family to get him on the straight path, but no luck. Usual misunderstandings, separation and then RODNEY has a epiphany realizing ABBY was right all along. Redeems himself and true love triumphs.
Carole Lombard portrays her role with intelligence and sensitivity. Hard to believe this attractive and lithe actress the previous decade was a chubby comedian at MACK SENNETT. Gene Raymond a amiable though limited actor fulfills what is required of him. Monroe Owsley has his parasite gig down to a 'T', making a career of such roles. Though his character of 'SIG' is always in the company of women you get the feeling he swims both ways and his friendship with RODNEY may be more then platonic.
Visually, I would have to give this little number a solid 10.
Carol Lombard is at her exquisite best, and one could look at Gene Raymond for a long time without blinking. The cinematography (by Ted Tetzlaff) is absolutely wonderful, and the Columbia design studios provided visuals that are eminently worth recording.
The night club where Lombard preforms is decorated with life-size bronze deer, cast after a model dug up at Pompeii. When Carol/Abby is taken to meet her stuffy potential in-laws, the famous Lombard nipples are pointing directly at her fiancée's mother (covered of course by a little something whipped up by the great costumier Travis Banton).
There is a great scene where the newly-weds are standing at the rail of a big ocean liner, an iconic 30's image with Carol wearing a marvelous hat as only she can. The apartment that Gene/Rodney brings his wife home to is swellegant. (This is an actual 30s expression, as I found it in a catalogue of Warren McArthur furniture published c. 1934!)
Mind you, it's not a "great" film, but it is very entertaining visually--the quintessence of the early 1930s. The original play was by S.N. Berman, so it certainly has good bones.
And ANYTHING with Carol Lombard is well worth watching! Not only was she staggeringly beautiful, but her acting is exquisitely nuanced to well capture a broad range of emotions, whatever her role.
Carol Lombard is at her exquisite best, and one could look at Gene Raymond for a long time without blinking. The cinematography (by Ted Tetzlaff) is absolutely wonderful, and the Columbia design studios provided visuals that are eminently worth recording.
The night club where Lombard preforms is decorated with life-size bronze deer, cast after a model dug up at Pompeii. When Carol/Abby is taken to meet her stuffy potential in-laws, the famous Lombard nipples are pointing directly at her fiancée's mother (covered of course by a little something whipped up by the great costumier Travis Banton).
There is a great scene where the newly-weds are standing at the rail of a big ocean liner, an iconic 30's image with Carol wearing a marvelous hat as only she can. The apartment that Gene/Rodney brings his wife home to is swellegant. (This is an actual 30s expression, as I found it in a catalogue of Warren McArthur furniture published c. 1934!)
Mind you, it's not a "great" film, but it is very entertaining visually--the quintessence of the early 1930s. The original play was by S.N. Berman, so it certainly has good bones.
And ANYTHING with Carol Lombard is well worth watching! Not only was she staggeringly beautiful, but her acting is exquisitely nuanced to well capture a broad range of emotions, whatever her role.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाIn an early bit of dialogue, Gene Raymond's character listens to his parents say he shouldn't marry a blues singer, and he replies, "Whom should I marry - Schumann-Heink?," referring to a famous opera singer who had just retired in 1932. Ironically, when Raymond himself married in 1937 his bride was an opera singer as well as a movie star: Jeanette MacDonald.
- गूफ़In the montage showing Abby and Rodney living the high life after they are married, the image of William Deane signing Rodney's $4000 allowance check with the same date (October 15th, 1932), and the same check number is used twice, even though several months have supposedly passed between checks.
- भाव
Abby Fane: Dear, why do you want to marry me?
Rodney Deane: I happen to be terribly in love with you.
Abby Fane: Is that enough?
- क्रेज़ी क्रेडिटCredits appear as electric light signs in Times Square.
- साउंडट्रैकSay What You Mean, and Mean What You're Saying to Me
(uncredited)
Written by Gerald Marks and Joe Young
Performed by Carole Lombard
टॉप पसंद
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विवरण
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 9 मिनट
- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.37 : 1
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