Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaDying Joan Ames meets criminal Dan Hardesty on a luxury liner as he is being transported back to America by policeman Steve Burke to face execution. Joan and Dan fall in love, their fates un... Ler tudoDying Joan Ames meets criminal Dan Hardesty on a luxury liner as he is being transported back to America by policeman Steve Burke to face execution. Joan and Dan fall in love, their fates unbeknownst to one another.Dying Joan Ames meets criminal Dan Hardesty on a luxury liner as he is being transported back to America by policeman Steve Burke to face execution. Joan and Dan fall in love, their fates unbeknownst to one another.
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Avaliações em destaque
I can see Jack Warner's mind at work on this one. The year before George Brent had romanced and treated the terminally ill Bette Davis in Dark Victory. Why not get Brent into a remake of this other film about a dying woman and her last romance? We even get Geraldine Fitzgerald in this one in the same part, best friend to the terminally ill woman.
The part of the police lieutenant escorting Brent is built up considerably from One Way Passage where the role was played by Warren Hymer. Here Pat O'Brien is the cop and he's nobody's fool. Still Brent has friends on board, Frank McHugh who's a con man with a nice drunk act and Binnie Barnes who's a con woman with a phony French accent. She goes after O'Brien and not totally in the line of duty. She's also my favorite in this film.
Oberon and Brent make a beautiful pair of lovers and one had better have as big a supply of handkerchiefs as one did in watching One Way Passage.
It's a remake of 1932's ONE-WAY PASSAGE, the most romantic movie not directed by Frank Borzage. The musical theme is the same; Frank McHugh is the same; Binnie Barnes takes Aline MacMahon's role, and Geraldine Fitzgerald is present for Miss Oberon to make her illness apparent to. Everyone performs their roles well, but at 99 minutes, this lacks the tightness and sense of racing time that makes the original movie's 67 minutes such a sensation. Those high-speed Pre-Code movies from Warner Brothers made their points and moved ahead. This one works, but not as well.
Had I never seen ONE WAY PASSAGE, then I might have been tempted to score this picture much higher. That's because 'TIL WE MEET AGAIN is a remake of ONE WAY PASSAGE and in most every way, the original is a better picture. The original film starred William Powell and he was at his best in this film. While I always love George Brent in films, he just couldn't beat Powell's performance and so he was handicapped from the outset. The original film was also better because it was more concise, didn't rely as much on secondary characters and plots and just sparkled. Side by side, there just isn't much to merit watching 'TIL WE MEET AGAIN. The latter film adds too many plot elements and draws out the eventual parting too long. And, to top it off, create a possible loophole at the end of the film (depending on how you interpret it)--even though there is no way the lovers could have had a happy ending.
Nope...stick with the original.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesBette Davis was offered the lead in this film, but as she'd just played a terminally ill woman in Vitória Amarga (1939), she turned it down.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe doctor states that Joan Ames has angina pectoris and that nothing can be done for her. In fact, nitroglycerine had been used for the treatment of angina since the 1870s.
- Citações
Steve Burke: What are you gonna do after?
Comtesse de Bresac: Tonight?
Steve Burke: No, when you get to be 40 or 45 and you start gettin' old.
Comtesse de Bresac: I'll be dead.
Steve Burke: No, you won't, Liz. I've been watching you and thinkin' about you the last few days... and wondering just what could happen to make you get onto yourself. You know, I've watched thieves grow old. They grow old very badly. They shrivel up, and fear gets in their heart, and... they get on the junk and booze and coke and...
[Liz bows down her head and sobs]
- ConexõesFeatured in Inside the Dream Factory (1995)
- Trilhas sonorasWhere Was I?
(1939) (uncredited)
Music by W. Franke Harling
Lyrics by Al Dubin
Played during the opening credits
Also played on piano when Dan and Joan break their glasses
Played often in the score and sung by the Hawaiian band
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- 'Til We Meet Again
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 39 min(99 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1