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IMDbPro

Her Man

  • 1930
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
549
YOUR RATING
Phillips Holmes and Helen Twelvetrees in Her Man (1930)
CrimeDramaRomance

A Havana bar girl with a tough "protector" falls for a young sailor.A Havana bar girl with a tough "protector" falls for a young sailor.A Havana bar girl with a tough "protector" falls for a young sailor.

  • Director
    • Tay Garnett
  • Writers
    • Tom Buckingham
    • Tay Garnett
    • Howard Higgin
  • Stars
    • Helen Twelvetrees
    • Phillips Holmes
    • Marjorie Rambeau
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    549
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tay Garnett
    • Writers
      • Tom Buckingham
      • Tay Garnett
      • Howard Higgin
    • Stars
      • Helen Twelvetrees
      • Phillips Holmes
      • Marjorie Rambeau
    • 19User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos53

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    Top cast40

    Edit
    Helen Twelvetrees
    Helen Twelvetrees
    • Frankie Keefe
    Phillips Holmes
    Phillips Holmes
    • Dan Keefe
    Marjorie Rambeau
    Marjorie Rambeau
    • Annie
    James Gleason
    James Gleason
    • Steve
    Ricardo Cortez
    Ricardo Cortez
    • Johnnie
    Harry Sweet
    Harry Sweet
    • Eddie
    Slim Summerville
    Slim Summerville
    • The Swede
    Thelma Todd
    Thelma Todd
    • Nelly
    Franklin Pangborn
    Franklin Pangborn
    • Sport
    Stanley Fields
    Stanley Fields
    • Al
    Matthew Betz
    Matthew Betz
    • Red
    Mike Donlin
    Mike Donlin
    • Bartender
    Vince Barnett
    Vince Barnett
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Brownlee
    Frank Brownlee
    • Drunk
    • (uncredited)
    George Chandler
    George Chandler
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Cramer
    Richard Cramer
    • Detective Mac
    • (uncredited)
    Blythe Daley
    Blythe Daley
    • Dance Hall Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Edgar Dearing
    Edgar Dearing
    • Marine
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Tay Garnett
    • Writers
      • Tom Buckingham
      • Tay Garnett
      • Howard Higgin
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    6.5549
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    Featured reviews

    7AlsExGal

    Pretty good precode

    It is probably notable - although this is a side story -for showing what happened older prostitutes as they began to trade on rapidly diminishing assets. The very first scenes are Annie (Marjorie Rambeau) leaving the Havana bar where she has probably been for decades and leaving a ship with the cops recognizing her and telling her to go back onboard. That with her criminal history she cannot come into the US. Then you just see her feet and legs from the knee down, walking wearily along the street, back to the Havana bar that is her home.

    The central story is about a young prostitute, Frankie (Helen Twelvetrees), her pimp, Johnnie (Ricardo Cortez), and a young sailor, Dan (Phillips Holmes) who sees the good in Frankie and wants to take her away from all of this. The film portrays Frankie as a pickpocket, but nobody dresses in such a ridiculous gaudy fashion just to empty the pockets of drunks, so her true profession is merely implied. What Frankie doesn't know is that Johnnie is a killer and will do anything to keep her in the bar and working for him.

    There is some comedy thrown in that actually works. I say that because during Prohibition it seemed that filmmakers thought that just having someone publicly drunk was supposed to be funny when today it is tiresome. But the duo of Harry Sweet and James Gleason as Dan's two continuously drunk sailor companions is truly funny. So is Franklin Pangborn as a rather distinguished fellow with a bowler hat that the two drunk sailors want to steal. It's odd seeing Pangborn depart from the snooty effete fellows that he usually played. Slim Summerville is a drunk who continuously tries to knock hats off of people's heads. What is this obsession with hats?

    I'm not spoiling anything, because the movie doesn't say this or even imply it, but because Frankie says she doesn't even know her birthday or her folks and has been living a life of cheating and stealing as long as she can remember, I rather wonder if Annie was her mother? Annie seems to focus on Frankie's welfare more than on the other girls in the bar, and if Annie grew up knowing nothing more than what Frankie knew -stealing and prostitution since childhood - maybe she thought that what little she did was what motherhood looked like. The sins of the fathers being visited on the third and fourth generation may not be God being vindictive as much as it is the statement of an unpleasant truth.

    I'd recommend this one. It has good camera work and natural performances for it to be an early sound film.
    6Prismark10

    Her Man

    This pre code film is from the early days of cinema. Yet its production values are not creaky. This spruced up version of the movie has a rather stylish credit sequence of waves washing over the sand.

    The story begins with a woman who tries to disembark in America but she is sent back presumably labelled as an undesirable because of her criminal record, she is a prostitute.

    The tropical island she is returned to is in the Caribbean, maybe Cuba. Set in the raucous, sleazy harbour area.

    Frankie (Helen Twelvetrees) is a good time girl. She get the sailors in the bar drunk, pop in a Mickey Finn so they can lose their wallets. Maybe a little bit more is given if the price is right

    Johnnie (Ricardo Cortez) controls the girls and he can turn nasty when provoked.

    Dan (Phillips Holmes) is a sailor who understands Frankie and the path she has taken is not by choice. He has fallen in love with her and wants both of them to run away together.

    Frankie knows that leaving Johnnie will not be easy. He will set his thugs on Dan. Maybe Dan's two drunken sailor friends will help him out.

    The story is so-so and over the years become cliched being copied by other movies. Being set before the Hays Code, the sleaziness works well but a lot of it is implied such as the prostitutes in the harbour.

    There is a lot of slapstick with Dan's drunken friends over the ownership of a bowler hat that has been stolen. There is a running gag as they play a slot machine where one wins money and the other does not.

    Actually the slapstick becomes tiresome. There is a lot of visual flair by director Tay Garnett who has given a lot of thought to planning his shots.

    I did think the look of Dan would now be regarded as camp. He looks like something dreamt up by Jean Paul Gaultier.
    6AAdaSC

    Frankie and Johnny

    It's a variation of the Frankie and Johnny story with the same cast names and even a Nelly thrown into the mix courtesy of Thelma Todd. Bad guy Ricardo Cortez (Johnny) pimps out Helen Twelvetrees (Frankie) to steal from drunken visitors in a seedy dive on the waterfront in somewhere like Cuba. It's a rough bar that is frequented by sailors and people generally looking for a fight. Occasionally, if a customer gets too friendly with Helen, then that's the end for him - knife in the back.

    As in the song - "He was her man and he was doing her wrong" - Cortez has a friendship with Todd. He doesn't seem too nice a person when he's around Twelvetrees. Into the bar strolls a new crop of sailors headed by Phillips Holmes (Dan) and it's love at first sight on his part leading him to dangerously pursue this 'taken' woman.

    This film has a gritty, seedy setting which holds an interest with realistic characters. However, the film has to lose marks on 2 counts especially. The first is Phillips Holmes and his attempt to portray a tough sailor. He really doesn't need to puff out his chest when he walks. It's the blueprint for Popeye. Secondly, there was way too much attempted comedy with drunken sailors that just got tiresome. The women, in particular, in this film are good so it's a special mention for Twelvetrees, Todd and drunken lush Marjorie Rambeau (Annie).
    9robert-temple-1

    Wonderful Period Piece on Frankie and Johnnie Theme

    This is a superb rarity, a period piece with a terrific lead performance by Helen Twelvetrees, who plays Frankie Keefe, the Frankie of the 'Frankie and Johnnie were lovers' story. (Her lover plays this song on the piano throughout the film in true honky tonk fashion.) The film is mostly set is a large seedy waterfront bar named Thalia, in Havana. Frankie works as a hostess in the bar, trying to lure seamen in to having another gin. One of her recurring lines is: 'Two gins', one of which is water for her and the other is real for the sailor. Her boyfriend Johnnie, pianist at the Thalia, is a ruthless amoral pimp, who takes all her tips from her clients every night and generally abuses her and beats her up sometimes. Frankie has about as much sense of self-worth as a flea, but is a charming fairylike creature underneath. She dreams of getting away from 'the joint', having been born in one just like it and never known any other existence. Tay Garnett wrote the original story and did an excellent job of directing this atmospheric film. He does some excellent and daring shots sometimes. In one case he puts a camera on a high dolly and follows a tray with two gins on it, held aloft by an agile waiter, from the bar through a teeming crowd to the table on the other side of the room. Helen Twelvetrees was an actress with real depth to her. She conveys the wistfulness and dreams of Frankie in those rare moments where she dares to let down her guard for a moment, and then suddenly slips into her assumed tough-gal mode which is her usual manner. The two personalities of Frankie battle it out as she vacillates between hope and despair throughout the story. She portrays Frankie as a truly pathetic abused waif. Johnnie is played by Ricardo Cortez, with heartless cunning and psychopathic intensity. He likes to kill people with his small knife. Marjorie Rambeau plays a washed-up elderly prostitute who is a hopeless alcoholic but who loves Frankie and tries to save her. She features in a unique twist in the last shot of the film, which adds a sudden and unexpected insight at the end of the story, which I cannot reveal. The ray of sunshine which offers Frankie the promise of escape comes in the form of a young cheery sailor played by Phillips Holmes, a very handsome and delightful fellow, who gets round Frankie's tough pretences by laughing at her and knows exactly how to draw her out and eventually gain her confidence. He wants to save her and take her away to a new life and marry her, but Johnnie cottons onto this and has other ideas, and turns to his usual solution, his knife. Will she or won't she escape? Will the film end as a tragedy or will everything turn out all right? Helen Twelvetrees is so entrancing as the waif Frankie that we really care. She was only 21 when she made this film, and by the age of 30, her career was over. She took an overdose of pills and died when she was only 49. She seems to have had an all too genuine and profound melancholy deep within her, which makes her performance shine with such pathos here. This film has remarkable beginning and end credits, with everything written in the sand and then repeatedly washed over and erased by the surf, which is very original and effective. The film is well worth seeing.
    8Maliejandra

    Technically Impressive

    The Wexner Center for the Arts screened the 4K restoration of this film on May 24th as part of their Cinevent preview. For such an early talkie, the camera is surprisingly fluid and the sound is ambient. The impressive movement makes this decent story better than average.

    The story is very loosely based on the song "Frankie and Johnny." Frankie (Helen Twelvetrees) is a prostitute working in a saloon called the Thalia in a seedy island town. She frisks drunken sailors and characters of ill-repute and her pimp Johnny (Ricardo Cortez) takes all her money. Frankie is described as a "good girl," which may mean she has not completely lost her innocence yet, but it is clear that that day is not too far in the future. One day a young sailor (Phillips Holmes) and his friends come to the bar and his youthful optimism makes Frankie see that he could help her escape her depressing life.

    Twelvetrees is undeniably beautiful, and her acting is fine although slightly dramatic. Holmes truly shines in this role. He is boyish and charming and much less wooden than in some of his rich guy roles. With his hair down and his shirt torn he seems to truly breathe. Franklin Pangborn makes an appearance as a well-dressed drunk sans his trademark effeminate delivery, and he gets laughs anyway.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film now exists in a 4k digital restoration, shown at London's National Film Theatre in February 2017; it's in superb condition, sharp, well graded and not a mark on it. It really does look as if it was shot yesterday. The sound is extremely good for the period; the stunning opening tracking show has some complex mixing as the camera tracks past various bars and different bands are heard playing (rather like the restored opening to La Soif du mal (1958)).
    • Quotes

      Annie: Say, can't a dame go no place nowadays without bein' insulted?

      Detective Mac: The only place you're goin', baby, is right back where you came from.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits are etched into the sand of a beach alcove, paging continually with each new incoming wave.
    • Connections
      Featured in Rumba d'amour (1931)

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    FAQ16

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 21, 1930 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Son homme
    • Filming locations
      • Havana, Cuba(atmosphere shots)
    • Production company
      • Pathé Exchange
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $400,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.20 : 1

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