Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSocialite Carol Morgan romps through the depression and her wealth while breaking up with Bill Wade and getting back together with him.Socialite Carol Morgan romps through the depression and her wealth while breaking up with Bill Wade and getting back together with him.Socialite Carol Morgan romps through the depression and her wealth while breaking up with Bill Wade and getting back together with him.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 2 vitórias no total
- Candy Store Proprietor
- (não creditado)
- Truck Driver
- (não creditado)
- Chez Louise Manager
- (não creditado)
- Bit Part
- (não creditado)
- Amanda
- (não creditado)
- Photographer
- (não creditado)
- Diner Proprietor
- (não creditado)
- Mrs. Blainey
- (não creditado)
- Little Woman in Bread Line
- (não creditado)
- Joseph--Butler
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
She's rich, playful, and loves to party (just like her real life persona) and when the handsome, charming Robert Montgomery comes along, she thinks they'll manage nicely on her allowance and his moderate salary. He works in advertising, and his integrity shocks her before their wedding when he declares he has no intention of living off anything other than his weekly wages. Tallulah couldn't stand to be poor, so she breaks up with him.
The first fifteen minutes don't seem like it'll be the greatest movie ever, but keep watching. All the beginning shows is a spoiled, rich girl and an extremely handsome man bickering over excess money. They don't have any real troubles, and enjoy flaunting their privileges in the audience's faces. Keep in mind this movie was made during the Great Depression (and before the Production Code). This is actually quite a racy movie, and you can imagine how much would have been altered just two years later. After a kiss between the happy couple, the camera fades to a clock, showing an hour has passed. Then Tallulah is shown in a negligee and Bob is smoking a cigarette. They joke around that now they have to get married, and when they get in another fight, he says she should be glad society has a different view on premarital sex. "I don't see any shotguns around," he says before he leaves in a huff. See what I mean?
I'm not telling you anything substantial about the plot, or how Tallulah falls from her pedestal. It's much better if you find out for yourself. This is a classic melodrama with unending love at its center. It's a great movie to start off with if you're new to black-and-white classics, or if you haven't seen the two leads before. Faithless has been overshadowed by more famous flicks from 1932, like Grand Hotel, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang, but it's really enjoyable. If you liked the drama of Back Street, you'll like this one!
Bankhead is beautiful at first and becomes appropriately harsh as her character loses her money. She is not exotic the way Marlene Dietrich was, but her accent is detectable.
Montgomery is excellent in this movie. His character is consistent and good and perhaps because of this and his five o-clock shadow, he is absolutely gorgeous.
Overall, this is an entertaining pre-code film with a great cast and a few surprises up it's sleeve.
Bankhead is great as she goes from playgirl to kept girl to street walker. Montgomery also goes bust and gets sick. There is a happy ending.
Hugh Herbert plays a nasty, noncomic part, Louise Closser Hale plays the landlady, Anna Appel is another landlady, Virginia Howell plays Herbert's jealous wife, Maurice Murphy (just dreadful) plays the younger brother,Henry Kolker is a banker, and Sterling Holloway is a photographer.
This is probably Bankhead's best 30s performance on film.... She is glamorous, slinky, funny, and pathetic all at once. Her drunk scene with Hugh Herbert is excellent as she laughs her throaty laugh even though she is lost and knows it. Montgomery us looser than usual. Herbert is surprisingly effective as the cad. And Hale is hilarious as the cheap landlady. This was the seventh of Bankhead's early talkies and her last til Lifeboat; she had also made 5 silent films.
Bankhead's particular style of acting was not effective on film, and it was probably because of the way she was cast. In "Lifeboat," she's perfect - Hitchcock wanted "the most oblique, incongruous person imaginable in such a situation."
Actually, part of her role in "Faithless" fits that description also, but this time, it works against her. Bankhead plays an heiress intending to marry Robert Montgomery. When he insists that they live on his salary, she walks out.
She soon learns that she's flat broke and, after borrowing from everyone she knows, gets a sugar daddy, leaving him when Montgomery comes back in her life. Both broke, the two marry and struggle to keep going.
As one would suspect, Bankhead is great as the heiress but not quite believable when she's poverty stricken trying to get work in a coffee shop. She lacked the vulnerability of a Constance Bennett or the sadness of a Kay Francis.
The film, however, is a very good depiction of life in the depression. This was no MGM romantic comedy or fantasy film. When her husband is injured, the Bankhead character turns to prostitution. The best scene in the film is between her and the landlady, who realizes what she's about to do.
Robert Montgomery plays one of depression's many unlucky - what jobs he gets, he loses because the companies close, and he's finally attacked on the job by employees who feel threatened. Through it all, he keeps his dignity and hope.
Both actors were young stars who were put into this film probably for contractual reasons. They're good, but they're both too elegant and classy to make parts of this film work the way they were supposed to.
Bankhead, however, has some wonderful dialogue that she delivers with aplomb, and it's great to see her before the smoking, drugs, and booze got to her face.
Some of this plays melodramatically, and there's a particularly odious performance by Maurice Murphy as Montgomery's brother. But "Faithless" is an intriguing look at the desperation caused by the depression, and Bankhead is fascinating to watch.
Robert Montgomery is similarly miscast: playing a character chronically unemployed during the Depression, the actor maintains his gentlemanly bearing and patrician manner even as a truck driver. There are settings in which his acting style doesn't work (see also his role as a convict in "The Big House"), and this is one of them.
Hugh Herbert's complete departure from his usual screen character of the dithering boob succeeds where the stars fail - here as a no-nonsense businessman investing, without illusions, in Tallulah as his mistress.
The characters are manipulated by the sudsy plot, meeting when convenient, estranged if the story calls for it, unemployed when dramatically necessary, but reunited, forgiven and suddenly provided with gainful employment when it is time for "The End." And not a moment too soon.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesRobert Montgomery notes that his annual salary as an advertising executive in 1932 is $20,000, a significant amount at that time and about 10 times the average salary when people earned $40 or $50 per week. When adjusted for inflation, his salary is equal to $470,000 in 2025.
- Erros de gravaçãoTodas as entradas contêm spoilers
- Citações
[first lines]
Mr. Ledyard: [on the telephone] But Carol, this bank is your guardian. We're living in 1932, but you persist in spending money as if it were still '29, before the crash. You've forced me to eliminate your charities - even your father's most beloved project - the Morgan Home for Girls.
Carol Morgan: [lounging on her silk sheets] Fine. I don't believe in delinquent girls - silly weaklings.
Mr. Ledyard: But our records show that twenty-nine percent of them went on the street because they didn't have a bed to sleep in.
Carol Morgan: Oh, nonsense. They've just no character. Neglect your character and you lose your self-respect. Go out into the streets and you end up in the gutter - where I might add, you jolly well deserve to end up.
- ConexõesFeatured in Complicated Women (2003)
Principais escolhas
- How long is Faithless?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 203.420 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 17 min(77 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1