Engineering a $20,000 robbery, Mary and Joe draw up a pact to spend all the money foolishly and then commit suicide.Engineering a $20,000 robbery, Mary and Joe draw up a pact to spend all the money foolishly and then commit suicide.Engineering a $20,000 robbery, Mary and Joe draw up a pact to spend all the money foolishly and then commit suicide.
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- Child on Beach
- (as Eddie Ryan)
- Mr. Cornell
- (uncredited)
- Musical Quartette
- (uncredited)
- Musical Ensemble
- (uncredited)
- Mrs. Cornell
- (uncredited)
- Undetermined Minor Role
- (uncredited)
- Detective
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
He asks Mary to go with him, and that's when it falls flat. It loses its grittiness when they start to live it up at a Palm Springs resort. Something went wrong with the story about 2 down and outers who grab their chance of happiness regardless of the price.
The establishing shot of the resort is great - firstly showing the orchestra and lastly the dance floor, where Mary (with a beautiful new look) and Joe are dancing. Nancy Carroll is absolutely gorgeous whether as a down on her luck dancer or among the idle rich. She has a few really good scenes - when she is trying to convince the police Joe is just a customer, when she is reminiscing about her life, telling Joe what she wants out of life and the sequence where she gambles her last $1,000, thinking it is her last night on earth.
Even though with 3 films together ("The Devil's Holiday", "Stolen Heaven" and "The Man I Killed") they were a team (sort of) Holmes didn't seem very comfortable in their scenes together. Nancy came up trumps but Holmes struggled and made the dialogue ("they'll never take me alive") sound trite which it was. May be he was out of his depth. Frederic March would have made a much more believable Joe. Nancy and Phillips certainly win the award as the most beautiful couple in the movies. Louis Calhern does well as the cad that comes good.
Recommended.
There, love complicates matters
"Stolen Heaven" scores points for re-teaming Carroll and Holmes, so promising in "The Devil's Holiday (1930), and a good opening. But, it's downhill from there. As the madcap couple frolic in Florida, you begin to see some serious strains in the script. Co-stars Carroll and Holmes often appear directionless and/or under-rehearsed but blocked. The script, obviously not written for its stars, needed a revision. And, don't expect any reason on Earth for its main characters to be named "Mary" and "Joseph".
***** Stolen Heaven (2/21/31) George Abbott ~ Nancy Carroll, Phillips Holmes, Louis Calhern, Edward Keane
Nancy Carroll plays a hooker who gets followed by a young man through an ugly and shadowy city. She thinks he's drunk (Phillips Holmes) but is turns out he's been wounded in a robbery of a radio factory where he used to work. As the police swarm into the seedy tenement, she decides to help him and the two forms an uneasy alliance culminating in a suicide pact.
He's gotten $20,000 and they decide to go out on a high note, blowing all the money and then killing themselves. Both have been beaten down by life. They escape to Palm Springs where we catch up with them in a great shot that starts with a marimba band and slowly pulls back to reveal the lush resort filled with fashionable people. Then we spot the young couple on the dance floor, immaculately dressed and rubbing elbows with the rich. Louis Calhern plays a rich lech who's after Carroll.
But the cops track them down as they are about out of money. They must decide on their agreed-to suicides or to keep running or go back and pay for their "crimes." Calhern gets involved in the conclusion.
Carroll and Holmes are quite good even when they're overacting, just because the story is so surreal. The moral of the story seems to be that life is good as long as there is plenty of money. But is it?
Did you know
- TriviaOne of over 700 Paramount Productions, filmed between 1929 and 1949, which were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution, and have been owned and controlled by Universal ever since.
- Quotes
Joe Bartlett: I made a bargain with myself, see? I got twenty thousand dollars.
Mary: Twenty thousand dollars?
Joe Bartlett: Yeah, and I'm going to have one grand splurge. All the things I've wanted, all my life, and couldn't have because I didn't have the money. And then... finish.
Mary: What do you mean?
Joe Bartlett: [he pats his pocket] This.
Mary: Kill yourself?
Joe Bartlett: Yeah, don't you understand? I suppose you think that's horrible? If you could only know how I felt - kinda, crazy, desperate. If you could only understand...
Mary: I do understand! I know how you felt. You wanted just one, one chance at the life, the way other people have it.
Joe Bartlett: Yeah! Yeah, that's it. That's all I want. And then, call it quits.
Mary: It wasn't money you stole; it was music, lights and friends, and good things to eat.
Joe Bartlett: [holding up the bundle of notes] Yeah, and I got it too. Here it is. Here it is - see?
Mary: 'Not make so much noise.
Joe Bartlett: No, I suppose not.
Joe Bartlett: Tell me something, will ya?
Mary: What?
Joe Bartlett: What would you do, if you had this? What would be your idea of having a good time? Being happy?
Mary: Me?
Joe Bartlett: Yeah.
Mary: Oh, I don't know.
Joe Bartlett: Oh, go on. Tell me.
Mary: What does every girl want?
Joe Bartlett: Well, I don't know much about girls. Tell me.
Mary: What's the use?
Joe Bartlett: Well, I mean, just supposing.
Mary: Well, I suppose it's silly but if I were going to die, and I could choose just what I wanted, I think I'd pick a real, swell honeymoon.
Joe Bartlett: Honeymoon?
Mary: Sure. That's what every girl wants, isn't it? That is, if she tells the truth about it. And a young man to love her. Someone rich and handsome, who'd love her enough to take her away somewhere, where there'd be music and bright lights and the moon and people laughing. And they'd go to parties and she'd wear beautiful clothes and beautiful and... beautiful.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 16 minutes
- Color