Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaJane Langley has always done all she can for her selfish sibling Nancy. After both sisters fall in love with handsome Bill Prentice, Jane graciously steps aside. Relationships among all thre... Leggi tuttoJane Langley has always done all she can for her selfish sibling Nancy. After both sisters fall in love with handsome Bill Prentice, Jane graciously steps aside. Relationships among all three are further complicated when the now-married Bill realizes he's still in love with Jane.Jane Langley has always done all she can for her selfish sibling Nancy. After both sisters fall in love with handsome Bill Prentice, Jane graciously steps aside. Relationships among all three are further complicated when the now-married Bill realizes he's still in love with Jane.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Tina - Bridesmaid
- (as Laura Elliot)
- Betsy Prentice
- (as Laura Lee Michel)
- Emily Burroughs - Nurse
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- Man at Bar
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- Talkative Woman Patient
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- Tired Woman Patient
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- Marc Hickman
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- Mrs. Hickman - Silent Woman Patient
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Recensioni in evidenza
Robert Cummings stars with Lizabeth Scott and Diana Lynn in "Paid in Full" from 1950.
Cummings plays Bill Prentice, who works side by side with Jane (Scott) in the advertising section of a department store. She's in love with him, but he is in love with her gold-digging sister, Nancy (Diana Lynn). He has bought an engagement ring for Nancy and wants to propose.
If you thought Veda Pierce was bad, Nancy has her beat. Right after a millionaire gives her the kiss-off, Bill proposes, and Nancy accepts. You can tell right away there are going to be problems - he wants a wedding with just Jane and a couple of other people present. She wants a $500 wedding gown (almost 6,000 in today's money) that her sister gets for her. The wedding turns into a packed church affair with bridesmaids.
Nancy is terribly unhappy - Bill doesn't pay enough attention to her. She makes him miserable. Jane, meanwhile, still in love with Bill, is dating. Since her mother died giving birth, there's apparently a genetic problem, and Jane won't be able to have children. It is her great sorrow.
Nancy has a baby but is jealous of the attention Bill gives her, is angry with Jane for decorating the nursery, and winds up cutting off Jane and doing what she can to keep her husband away from the baby.
I won't tell you the rest - it's the stuff of soap operas. Lizabeth Scott is lovely, but no one is that good a person. Diana Lynn plays her role beautifully, she's a terror. Cummings, as the man in the middle, doesn't have much to do, but he's always likeable. Eve Arden, as a coworker of Jane's and Bill's, is an outspoken riot.
This is a woman's picture, all right, the kind Kay Francis did in the early '30s.
Lynn has a baby, but she's psychotic with jealousy and hates sharing the child with Cummings or anyone. After a few plot twists which lead to divorce. Scott marries Cummings and has a baby even though she has the same disease her mother had.
Scott often played rotten ladies, sort of a queen of noir films in the 40s and 50s, but here plays the goody good girl, while perky Lynn, often cast in kid sister roles, seemingly exults in playing the witch. Cummings stands around. Eve Arden plays the man-hungry co-worker, Stanley Ridges the kindly doctor, and Carol Channing makes her film debut. A rather lurid women's picture but well worth catching.
Her life with her sister appears to have been totally self-sacrificed for her younger sister, as she feels responsible for her, as their mother died at her birth, and she herself is well aware that she cannot have children without risks to her life. All this information of course raises some concern with the audience about her condition of giving birth. The younger sister marries Robert Cummings, a dashing young upstart ready for a career, and they have a daughter, but the marriage is not a success, as she never really loved him, while the one who really loved him was Lizabeth Scott. There's the intrigue.
The story is authentic, it was found in "Reader's Digest" and made a decent film of directed the accomplished William Dieterle, who presents another of his invaluably sensitive creations, with appropriate romantic music by Victor Young sung by Dean Martin - the finest scene of the film before everything falls asunder, - so it is not really a noir which usually was Lizabeth Scott's acting realm, but rather a psychological drama about motherhood. The most interesting scenes are the discussions with the doctor of the sisters, who is perfectly aware of all the details of the case of the sisters and their mother, but who is powerless against the ways of destiny. It leads up to a meltdown, you keep hoping until the end, but at least there will always be a continuity.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBased on a true story that originally appeared in Reader's Digest.
- BlooperNear the beginning of the picture, Dr. Fredericks asks the nurse to call Dr. "Pete" Winston in Los Angeles; yet when Jane and Nancy go to see Dr. Winston in his office, Jane repeatedly calls him "Dr. Phil".
- Citazioni
Dr. P.J. 'Phil' Winston: It's just that every time I ask them that question about why they want their baby, so many of them answer like Nancy did.
Jane Langley: To have something for her very own...
Dr. P.J. 'Phil' Winston: You see - it hits you just exactly the same way as it always hits me. Not a word about the husband and making him happy, or even making the child happy. Oh no. That child is coming into this world with a job to perform - to make Nancy happy.
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingue
- Celebre anche come
- Paid in Full
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 38 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1