Rich pianist Boris bets gold-digger Jean he can make her fall in love with him. She wins the bet, but he is intrigued by her friend Polaire's piano playing and proposes to be her instructor ... Read allRich pianist Boris bets gold-digger Jean he can make her fall in love with him. She wins the bet, but he is intrigued by her friend Polaire's piano playing and proposes to be her instructor and lover. Jealous Jean schemes to separate them.Rich pianist Boris bets gold-digger Jean he can make her fall in love with him. She wins the bet, but he is intrigued by her friend Polaire's piano playing and proposes to be her instructor and lover. Jealous Jean schemes to separate them.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
- Beautician
- (uncredited)
- Bellings - the Butler
- (uncredited)
- Taxi Driver
- (uncredited)
- Schatze's Cabby
- (uncredited)
- Speakeasy Patron
- (uncredited)
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
- Frenchman on Liner
- (uncredited)
- Men's Room Patron
- (uncredited)
- Nightclub Patron
- (uncredited)
- Wedding Guest
- (uncredited)
- Cop at Accident
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
I won't repeat what other reviewers have said about the plot. Although it is jumpy and confusing, one does have to give it credit for being fast-paced, original and surprising.
Joan Blondell and Ina Claire do a good job of providing the comedy. Madge Evans is really the straight woman here. She is quite beautiful and glamorous and manages to steal the picture.
Besides these three women actresses, the movie has a lot of witty lies and a nice air of frivolity to it. There are some nice, subtle innuendos here and you do have to pay attention to catch the cleverness of the script.
This is a solid woman's picture from 1932 and there really weren't that many made.
If you have to watch the Mill Creek print, turn up the volume a bit.
In this pre-code version, Ina Claire plays the grasping and back-stabbing blonde who will go to any length to get what she wants. Joan Blondell plays the sensible girl (stocks and bonds), and Madge Evans is the sensitive one. All three dish the dirt while they chase after rich David Manners, that is until Claire decides that his daddy is a better catch! Lowell Sherman directs and co-stars as the Russian pianist (from the Bronx) who also dallies with the 3 ladies (and possibly with Manners?).
Ina Claire is totally outrageous here but fun to watch as she chews the scenery. Blondell, Sherman, and Evans are also very good. Manners is rather bland (as usual).
Lowell Sherman ably directs and appears as Boris, a famous concert pianist who bets Jean money he can make her fall in love with him, but Boris falls for Polaire instead, allowing Jean an opportunity to wreck another couple. Jean's problem isn't that she's too clever for own good, it's that she needs excitement dull but respectable men can't provide. Once she has the money to send her away, and quiet down any scandal, Jean can do what she loves most: being in the company of Polaire and Schatzi. Adapted from Zoe Akins's play, the film is sprinkled with bon mots, and is a funny and sophisticated look at the complexity of female friendship.
The wisecracks fly fast and furious. Miss Claire, with her cigarette voice and scheming role steals the show every time she's on. It's a crackling Pre-Code, even though the lingerie shots are kept to a minimum
Did you know
- TriviaIn her December 1972 interview with Leonard Maltin in "Film Fan Monthly," Madge Evans gave the following testimony on the atmosphere on the set during filming: "That was a rather hectic picture, with him [Lowell Sherman] not taking the directing seriously, George Barnes falling madly in love with Joan [Joan Blondell] so he could hardly see anybody but [her]. Ina Claire was very much in love with John Gilbert (this was before they were married) and every time she got into a costume that she thought she looked well in, particularly the bridal costume at the end of the film, she disappeared from the lot, because she had driven off to Metro to show [John] how enchanting she looked. I went into that film very quickly, because Carole Lombard was supposed to do the part I played, but she became ill and I replaced her."
- Quotes
Jean Lawrence: A speakeasy that closes at two o'clock is practically a tea room!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Why Be Good? Sexuality & Censorship in Early Cinema (2007)
- How long is The Greeks Had a Word for Them?Powered by Alexa
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- The Greeks Had a Word for Them
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- Runtime1 hour 19 minutes
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- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1