Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaCynthia Warren, independently wealthy through her ability as an illustrator and poster artist, rebels against the premise that every woman is destined for matrimony and motherhood, and decid... Ler tudoCynthia Warren, independently wealthy through her ability as an illustrator and poster artist, rebels against the premise that every woman is destined for matrimony and motherhood, and decides she has as much right as a man to play around sans benefit of marriage. So, leaving beh... Ler tudoCynthia Warren, independently wealthy through her ability as an illustrator and poster artist, rebels against the premise that every woman is destined for matrimony and motherhood, and decides she has as much right as a man to play around sans benefit of marriage. So, leaving behind steady-but-dull Randolph Morgan (who seems to be the primary buyer of her 'art' and in... Ler tudo
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Party Guest
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- Mori
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- Barfly
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- Ship's Steward
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- French Butler
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- Girl
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- Attorney
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- Party Guest
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- Well-Wisher
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- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
This is a pre-Code romantic comedy drama. Cynthia is the 'modern' self-sufficient single gal. Of course, even a modern girl needs to pine for romantic love. I would like her to be much more forceful with Lawton. I disliked him from the first moment he shows up on the screen. I didn't get her being charmed by him. He's a horrible creep. She doesn't come well to ever like him. The resolution of that relationship is totally jarring. The whole movie is a light romp up to that point. It all goes out the window with the incident.
When the story begins, Randolph Morgan (Scott) and Cynthia Warren (Bebe Daniels) are having a bit of a tiff. He insists that they marry and she give up her career....essentially so she can stay home to make babies and care for her master. She, on the other hand, likes being a career woman and wants to use the art degree she worked so hard to get. She also wants to see the world and has booked passage on an ocean liner. He tells her to enjoy herself....and return to him when she realizes that her job in life is to be the 'little woman'. The rest of the film consists of her adventures with men on this vacation.
If this all sounds incredibly sexist, well, it is. Although some pre-code films portray ladies with careers as well as active sex lives, the general message was that the place for a woman is in the kitchen and by her man's side. Like it or not...that was the way things were. Some ultra-feminists will doubtlessly hate the film...which is understandable, though at least the OPTION to be an independent lady is shown in these movies. Times change...but you can still enjoy the movies is you have an open mind and accept that times change.
So is all this worth your time? Possibly. I must admit that there are better films from this era, but it is interesting...especially with its take on 'modern women'.
The big-city, sophisticated naughtiness is implied, except for the cocktail party at the beginning and one brief sequence in which Miss Daniels is with her friend Muriel Kirkland in her slip. Columbia might have a big-city audience, but they made most of their money in the hinterlands, and the disapproving and old-fashioned tone that Mr. Scott takes is that of the movie; the audience knew what was what, but didn't think it necessary to show every detail. If the audience wanted that, they could go see the latest Demille spectacle. The audience for this movie knew where babies came from just as well as they did in New York and Paris, and the ending is just as normative as Demille's epics; only Columbia did it in five reels instead of nine, and kept the costs way down.
Miss Daniels sings one song, composed by the director, Victor Schertzinger. It's okay, just not memorable. Which is what this movie is.
PS...For the record, I found Bebe Daniels fairly delightful, although she should learn to play drunks better), Sidney Blackmer (who could do drunk as he showed in "Come Back Little Sheba", on stage) horribly miscast as a rake who is irresistible to women, and Randolph Scott surprisingly good as an international business tycoon (I say "surprisingly" because I always pegged this guy as strictly Paris, Texas).
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesRandy tells Cynthia that he didn't attend her farewell cocktail party because he didn't have any Flit, and wouldn't go without it. Flit was a brand of insecticide invented in 1923 and used mainly for flies and mosquitoes. Randy is implying that Cynthia's friends are a bunch of bar flies.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe ship as depicted arriving in port in England has a different paint pattern on its funnels than the one shown crossing the Atlantic earlier. And, the final shot of the ship docking, the ship has four funnels - not the three in all the other previous shots.
- Citações
Cynthia Warren: Oh, Olga, have you ever been in love?
Olga Raimoff aka Tessie Burns: Many times.
Cynthia Warren: Tell me about it.
Olga Raimoff aka Tessie Burns: Men are all alike - one day they kiss you... and the next day they kick you.
Cynthia Warren: Well, you can see them every other day, can't you?
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- A Hora do Cocktail
- Locações de filme
- Paris, França(establishing shots)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 13 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1