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J'aimais une femme

Original title: I Loved a Woman
  • 1933
  • Approved
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
490
YOUR RATING
Edward G. Robinson, Kay Francis, and Genevieve Tobin in J'aimais une femme (1933)
Art student John Hayden interrupts his studies in Greece to head his father's meat packing business on his father's death. He marries social climber Martha who taunts him for his ideals regarding worker happiness and meat purity.
Play trailer2:52
1 Video
46 Photos
Period DramaTragic RomanceDramaRomance

Art student John Hayden interrupts his studies in Greece to head his father's meat packing business on his father's death. He marries social climber Martha who taunts him for his ideals rega... Read allArt student John Hayden interrupts his studies in Greece to head his father's meat packing business on his father's death. He marries social climber Martha who taunts him for his ideals regarding worker happiness and meat purity. He begins supporting the musical career of singer ... Read allArt student John Hayden interrupts his studies in Greece to head his father's meat packing business on his father's death. He marries social climber Martha who taunts him for his ideals regarding worker happiness and meat purity. He begins supporting the musical career of singer Laura. During the Spanish American war he sells the Army tainted meat. Martha puts detecti... Read all

  • Director
    • Alfred E. Green
  • Writers
    • Charles Kenyon
    • Sidney Sutherland
    • David Karsner
  • Stars
    • Kay Francis
    • Edward G. Robinson
    • Genevieve Tobin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    490
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Writers
      • Charles Kenyon
      • Sidney Sutherland
      • David Karsner
    • Stars
      • Kay Francis
      • Edward G. Robinson
      • Genevieve Tobin
    • 22User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:52
    Trailer

    Photos46

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    Top cast36

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    Kay Francis
    Kay Francis
    • Laura McDonald
    Edward G. Robinson
    Edward G. Robinson
    • John Mansfield Hayden
    Genevieve Tobin
    Genevieve Tobin
    • Martha Lane
    Robert Barrat
    Robert Barrat
    • Charles Lane
    Murray Kinnell
    Murray Kinnell
    • Davenport
    Robert McWade
    Robert McWade
    • Larkin
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    • Shuster
    Henry Kolker
    Henry Kolker
    • Mr. Sanborn
    George Blackwood
    • Henry
    Walter Walker
    • Oliver
    Henry O'Neill
    Henry O'Neill
    • Mr. Farrell
    E.J. Ratcliffe
    • Theodore Roosevelt
    William V. Mong
    William V. Mong
    • Bowen
    King Baggot
    King Baggot
    • Banker
    • (uncredited)
    Davison Clark
    • Doctor
    • (uncredited)
    Wallis Clark
    Wallis Clark
    • Banker
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Coleman
    Charles Coleman
    • Hayden's First Butler
    • (uncredited)
    James Donlan
    James Donlan
    • Voting Returns Announcer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alfred E. Green
    • Writers
      • Charles Kenyon
      • Sidney Sutherland
      • David Karsner
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.0490
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    Featured reviews

    6xerses13

    Early E.G.R, via Upton Sinclair...

    Seldom seen even on TCM are a series of Edward G. Robinson (E.G.R.) films made at WARNER BROTHERS (W.B.) from 1931 too 1934, with loan-outs to other Major Studios. Many featured themes of rags to riches to rags, with I LOVED A WOMEN (1934) as one such effort.

    E.G.R, John Mansfield Hayden, scion of wealthy Chicago Meat-Packer returns from Greece to take over the business after his Father dies. Not really cut out for it he marries competitors daughter Martha Lane (Genevieve Tobin). Then meets his muse in aspiring opera singer Laura McDonald (Kay Francis). Now with confidence he builds a 'Empire of Meat' and if it means selling a defective product to the U.S. Army, so be it. In the end he is betrayed by his own ambition and lover. Living in exile in Greece (with his ill gotten gains) he escapes indictment, but his mind goes to the point he has no grasp of reality or his former love.

    This story is right out of one of Socialist Upton Sinclair's muck-raking novels. THE JUNGLE (1906) being a prime example of the type. E.G.R. gives it his usual effort and is quite convincing as a turn of Century (19th/20th) 'Robber Baron'! Giving a performance the equal of Warren William, who usually filled that slot at the W.B. of the ruthless 'Business Tycoon'. Fine supporting cast backs him up and film runs in a crisp 90" so will not tax the modern audience. Watch it and be entertained.
    8audiemurph

    The versatile EG Robinson at his best

    This film is a rollicking tour-de-force that has as its primary focus the incredible acting talents of the incomparable Edward G. Robinson. Robinson takes us on a roller-coaster of a ride, as he sails back and forth from joy and elation to depression and pathos and back again. It is sometimes dizzying trying to keep up with the swinging emotions of Robinson's multi-millionaire meat-packer John Hayden. Robinson carries it off beautifully, and I think this film really proves what a fine, fine actor he was.

    And how lucky we are that a film company like First National existed in the early 30's, pumping out films with stars like EG Robinson at a rate that would leave a current studio breathless. What an exciting time it must have been. We are the beneficiaries of this fascinating time, when studios had to release new films in a rapid succession, such was the hunger for new films.

    "I Loved a Woman" takes place over a 40 year period, taking us from late Victorian Chicago of 1892 to industrial Chicago of just a few decades later. The fashions change subtly over the 90 minutes this film takes. While some of the romantic scenes with Kay Francis are a bit dated, and the lovers' dialogue a little stilted, Robinson never fails to captivate us when he is on screen. If anybody can carry this stuff off, it is him (Robinson even sings in this movie, though happily not too much).

    The supporting cast is strong and full of First National perennials, such as Robert Barrat, playing EGR's father-in-law. A special treat is the speaking appearance of one of John Ford's silent screen favorites, J. Farrel MacDonald.

    This movie also features a speaking role for Theodore Roosevelt, who personally threatens to destroy the meat packer Hayden for selling rotten meat to the soldiers of the Spanish-American War.

    Perhaps the only annoyance is having to put up with Kay Francis repeatedly singing Home on the Range in an opera voice while playing an upright piano. Once, maybe, but three times?....

    One funny thing to look for early in the film: Robinson returns home from abroad after hearing of his father's death. A painting of dad hangs on the office wall - looking exactly like EG Robinson with full whiskers! A very nice touch.

    This is a strong entry from First National Films, and a great way to get know the many sides of Edward G. Robinson. I highly recommend this one.
    7malvernp

    Edward G. Robinson as an Early Meat-Packing Version of Charles Foster Kane!

    In his acclaimed and enjoyable autobiography All My Yesterdays published in 1973 (the year he died), Edward G. Robinson explained in considerable detail the process that produced the interesting but disjointed movie I Loved a Woman (ILAW). Basically, the prevailing Studio System that was then an integral part of Hollywood movie-making allowed for several people (of varying ability and differing agendas) to modify a novel or play as it became the final screenplay that when shot was the film we finally saw in the theater. Each "contributor"to this process may have worked independently of all the others, and the result was somewhat like "putting Bandaids on boils" rather than attempting to produce the best cure for the condition. As Robinson further explained it, he as an actor/artist also took an interest in fashioning the final script, and often frustrating battles ensued over just how much of his input (if any) would be acceptable. No wonder that ILAW seems like a film that some think is too long and others too short---or that some believe contains incomplete or confusing characterizations while others are bothered by the abrupt/inconsistent aspects of the dramatic narrative.

    Nonetheless, ILAW is entertaining and absorbing with its often rambling tale of a Chicago robber baron loosely modeled after real life meat-packer Samuel Insull. And while the romantic scenes between Robinson and his leading ladies Kay Francis and Genevieve Tobin may lack appropriate chemistry or credibility, it cannot be denied that in ILAW Robinson delivered a robust and commanding performance. He was a powerful actor in this early pre-code effort, and certainly gave us every indication that he would evolve into the superb character actor that became his future destiny.

    As for veteran director Alfred E. Green, he would go on to direct The Jolson Story, The Fabulous Dorseys and The Eddie Cantor Story among many other films.

    ILAW is little known today. That is too bad, because it provides an excellent time capsule that captured three accomplished actors as they were moving into their peak career period, as well as just how the Warner Brothers Studio System actually worked in practice. Next time TCM shows ILAW, check it out!
    5planktonrules

    Clearly a pre-code flick from Warner Brothers

    During the so-called 'Pre-Code Era', Hollywood was essentially in charge of policing themselves. Considering that there was no rating system AND Hollywood was really pushing the boundaries of morality in many of their films, there was an uproar and in July, 1934, a new, tougher Production Code was adopted...thus heavily sanitizing films for the next three decades. Gone were the old Pre-Code plots and occasional nudity...in now it was a squeaky clean era. "I Loved a Woman" was a Pre-Code film that certainly could NOT have been made just a year later, as its plot glamorizes and seems to excuse adultery...something specifically outlawed in the new Code, as adultery was either NOT to be in films or was to be heavily condemned.

    John Hayden (Edward G. Robinson) is the heir to a meatpacking fortune and has just learned that his father has died. Despite claiming to being the champion of improved working conditions, wages and cleanliness, he spends the next few years leaving the company to essentially run itself while he devotes his energy towards raising a family. However, he slowly realizes that his company is going bankrupt AND his wife couldn't care less, as her father is the head of a group of meatpackers who are opposed to Hayden's STATED ideals. I say stated because during his absence from the company, he pretty much ignored his fine talk of running a progressive company.

    Now with a company in trouble and a marriage a bit rocky, Hayden decides to run the company like the rest....or worse. Cleanliness and safe hygience mean nothing to him. In addition, he's got a new sweetie (Kay Francis) and his energies are focused on her and making millions...his wife, well, she's expendable. When war breaks out, he's more than happy to sell the government tainted meat for the soldiers! Nice guy, huh? If you haven't guessed, he's essentially a jerk!

    So what did I like and not like about this film? What I didn't like was that Hayden changed so dramatically...too dramatically to make any sense. One minute he's a champion of the little people and a good husband, the next he's the opposite. His change was just too abrupt to be believable. On the positive side, the acting is very nice and the film has all the polish you'd expect from a Warner Brothers epic...though I could have done without all the times the film used "Home on the Range". Overall, decent but hardly among Robinson's best...and much of it is because no one in this film is likable and so you lose interest along the way. Plus, it never seems to know when to quit...so it's overlong to boot.
    6AlsExGal

    How exactly was Orson Welles spending his time in 1933?...

    ... because at first blush this forgotten Warner Brothers film looks an awful lot like 1941's Citizen Kane, except without the polish. The film was based on David Karsner's book about a determined businessman, loosely based on the life of Samuel Insull. However, it also bears some resemblance to the life of William Randolph Hearst, and specifically how that life was interpreted in Citizen Kane.

    Edward G. Robinson stars as John Hayden. The film opens in 1892 with him as a young man buying up all the art he can find in Europe, when he is called home at his father's death to take over the family packing business in which he really has no interest. He falls in love with and marries the daughter of a rival packer (Genevieve Tobin) and finds her exciting and thinks she is a reformer, but she soon transforms into just another social climber and their romance cools. When that happens he falls in love with an ambitious opera singer (Kay Francis), and offers to build her an opera house??? Now tell me that Orson Welles the teenager was not in the front row of the theater, chowing down on popcorn, and thinking how he might spruce up this tale when he got his big chance?

    The similarities between the tales end there, and it turns out Kay Francis' character is no Susan Alexander Kane, and also the ignored wife turns out to be more persistent and vindictive than Kane's wife. The film is ultimately a variation on a common Warner Brothers' Depression era theme - a cautionary tale against greed for greed's sake.

    Kay Francis may be second billed, but ultimately Edward G. Robinson is the whole show. Since Robinson was two inches shorter than Francis, it looks like the director came up with all kinds of inventive ways for them to embrace and it not look like she was picking him up off the ground to kiss him. Finally, why would anybody think "Home on the Range" would be a good tune to be "our song" for any couple? It's all part of the wonderful weirdness that was early 30s Warner Brothers. Recommended for the novelty of it all.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Although a novel by David Karsner is credited onscreen as the source, none has been located; it may not have been published. However, David Karsner's biography "Silver Dollar: The Story of the Tabors" was made into a film the previous year, also starring Edward G. Robinson named Valet d'argent (1932).
    • Goofs
      The newspaper item "10 Years Ago Today" near the end of the film stated that Hayden fled to Greece on the same day that the Chicago White Sox defeated Detroit, 10-6. But an item next to it noted that it was the 50th anniversary of the death of Scottish physicist James Clerk-Maxwell, which occurred in November 1879. Because the baseball season in 1919 ended in September, the anniversary of the White Sox-Tigers game could not have been on the same date as the anniversary of Maxwell's death.
    • Quotes

      Charles Lane: John, you're mad!

      John Mansfield Hayden: Yes. Maybe I am mad. But it's madmen who run the world today.

    • Soundtracks
      Home on the Range
      (1904) (uncredited)

      Music by Daniel E. Kelley (1904)

      Lyrics by Brewster M. Higley (1873)

      Played during the opening credits and at the end

      Played on piano and sung by Kay Francis

      Whistled and sung a cappella by Edward G. Robinson twice

      Reprised by Kay Francis twice

      Played by a band at the election celebration

      Played as background music often as a love theme for John and Laura

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 7, 1935 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • I Loved a Woman
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • First National Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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