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Un mauvais garçon

Original title: No Man of Her Own
  • 1932
  • Approved
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Clark Gable and Carole Lombard in Un mauvais garçon (1932)
Screwball ComedyComedyDramaRomance

An on-the-lam New York card shark marries a small-town librarian who thinks he's a businessman.An on-the-lam New York card shark marries a small-town librarian who thinks he's a businessman.An on-the-lam New York card shark marries a small-town librarian who thinks he's a businessman.

  • Director
    • Wesley Ruggles
  • Writers
    • Maurine Dallas Watkins
    • Milton Herbert Gropper
    • Edmund Goulding
  • Stars
    • Clark Gable
    • Carole Lombard
    • Dorothy Mackaill
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wesley Ruggles
    • Writers
      • Maurine Dallas Watkins
      • Milton Herbert Gropper
      • Edmund Goulding
    • Stars
      • Clark Gable
      • Carole Lombard
      • Dorothy Mackaill
    • 43User reviews
    • 25Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos24

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    Top cast22

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    Clark Gable
    Clark Gable
    • Jerry 'Babe' Stewart
    Carole Lombard
    Carole Lombard
    • Connie Randall
    Dorothy Mackaill
    Dorothy Mackaill
    • Kay Everly
    Grant Mitchell
    Grant Mitchell
    • Charlie Vane
    Elizabeth Patterson
    Elizabeth Patterson
    • Mrs. Randall
    George Barbier
    George Barbier
    • Mr. Randall
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    • 'Dickie' Collins
    Tommy Conlon
    Tommy Conlon
    • Willie Randall
    Walter Walker
    • Mr. Morton
    Paul Ellis
    Paul Ellis
    • Vargas
    Charley Grapewin
    Charley Grapewin
    • Clerk
    Roberta Gregory
    Dixie Lee Hall
    • Girl in the Library
    Sammy Blum
    Sammy Blum
    • Door to Door Salesman
    • (uncredited)
    Mary Bracken
    • High School Girl
    • (uncredited)
    Wallis Clark
    Wallis Clark
    • Thomas Laidlaw
    • (uncredited)
    Lillian Harmer
    Lillian Harmer
    • Mattie
    • (uncredited)
    Margaret Marquis
    Margaret Marquis
    • Girl in the Library
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Wesley Ruggles
    • Writers
      • Maurine Dallas Watkins
      • Milton Herbert Gropper
      • Edmund Goulding
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    6.61.7K
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    Featured reviews

    10lora64

    Filmdom's early pairing of famous screen couple

    This is a pleasant kind of tale, easygoing and amusing. Clark Gable as the gambler Babe Stewart, meets quiet (i.e. repressed) librarian Connie Randall, played by Carole Lombard. At the library, when he corners her amongst the bookshelves, she asks, "Do you like Shakespeare?" and I like Gable's reply, "Oh Shakespeare's alright but sometimes you just don't feel like Shakespeare" says he gazing deep into her eyes. Just an amusing moment.

    After a hesitant start they inevitably fall in love and impulsively decide to wed, and thereafter the plot unfolds. Gable resumes his dishonest card sniping activities (i.e. racket), however this clashes with the wifey on the domestic front. In time he plans to reform his ways, "Things gotta be different from now on," he tells the police, but there are complications ahead.

    It's very interesting to see a younger Clark Gable who even at this stage was well established in his screen presence. And Carole Lombard couldn't be more beautiful! Great viewing for the fans of Gable and Lombard.
    7blanche-2

    Gable and Lombard before they were Gable and Lombard

    Clark Gable and his great love, Carole Lombard, only made one film together - this one, "No Man of Her Own" - and they weren't even a couple. At the time of "No Man of Her Own," Lombard was married to William Powell, and Gable to a socialite named Maria Franklin. When he fell for Lombard a few years after this movie was made, it was some time before Franklin would give him a divorce.

    A mustacheless Gable plays a cheating card shark who, while on the lam, meets a librarian (Lombard) and marries her. He's not planning that it be permanent; along the way, they fall in love.

    Both stars are very good and have great chemistry. She's beautiful, and he's just one sexy devil with that smile and the way he looked at a woman. Pretty devastating, with or without the mustache. A great screen presence.

    Someone commented that had Lombard not died, she would have signed with MGM and been paired with Gable in more films. It would be wonderful to have them together more than once. In 1937, in fact, when Jean Harlow died during the making of "Saratoga," Gable recommended that she be replaced with Lombard. Lest anyone think that was insensitive - the situation of a star dying in the middle of a film was new to everyone, no one knew how it would be handled, and poor Gable thought he was helping. People back then didn't think in terms of leaving a legacy and last films.

    So we're stuck with the pre-code "No Man of Her Own." Not bad, not great, of interest because of its two stars.
    7km_dickson

    Decent film with some good performances

    Good little film. Clark Gable once again plays the likable scoundrel role he does so well. This time he is Babe Stewart, a card shark who meets a small town girl (Carole Lombard), marries her on the flip of a coin, then realizes he'll have to change his ways if he wants to keep her. The script is well written, avoiding the melodramatic speeches and sappy dialogue that could have so easily been thrown into this kind of film. It also helps that the actors were able to play the characters naturally without hamming it up. Emotion is so much more believable when it's realistic. The supporting cast gives good performance as well, adding a bit of flavor to the film. A good script, good cast, and interesting enough storyline make this one worth watching.
    5Patriotlad@aol.com

    See You In Church As Lombard's Mantra

    Recently my favorite video store acquired this movie on DVD, and I was very hopeful in renting it. As I am a huge fan of William Powell and Carole Lombard in "My Man Godfrey," I was astonished to hear the line "See you in church," dropped casually by Lombard in the middle of this film. That line, of course, appears early on in "My Man Godfrey."

    I had always thought that this was a comic device, used for that particular film, but apparently it was something of comic parlance in the 1930s. After all, there is a four year spread between this film and "My Man Godfrey". If it still has resonance now, it must have been doubly meaningful to audiences then.

    The plot itself is really thin, with Gable's character "Babe" deciding to marry Lombard's "Connie" on the flip of a coin. I don't know whether that was supposed to be THE COMIC DEVICE of the film or whether it was a throw-away notion coming from the screenwriters. It really doesn't matter much because it ruined the whole notion of the film, which is that Gable's "Babe" doesn't want any attachments of any kind to interfere with his life as a card sharp and cheat.

    In the social history context, it is very interesting to see a film which shows men of wealth and status in New York City -- in the third year of the great Depression ( counting 1930, '31, and '32 as the epicenter of that disastrous time ) -- casually gambling away sums of money that would easily have sustained a family of four over an entire year !!

    Lombard is an intriguing personality in the history of the American cinema and every one of her performances in the '30s speaks volumes about the genius she had contained within herself. She is so wistfully beautiful and her comic timing is usually impeccable. In this film she plays a woman who thinks she is wasting away in her small town, bored with her "unsteady" boyfriend and bored with her job as a librarian. The point is, however, that she was a young woman with a job in the depths of a depression that savaged the whole of the U.S. economy.

    For audiences of that era, her character's decision to toss that safety and security for an "instant marriage" to the rogue "Babe" would have been both scandalous and highly romantic. The fact that Gable's very nefarious alternative lifestyle -- as a card sharp and con man -- nets him a plush apartment and plenty of ready money, doubles the scandalous nature of the plot. The fact that he and his confederates fleece the social class known as "New York Swells" accounts for some of the film's popularity in that time and in that era.

    But Gable's "Babe" is not some Robin Hood type in a tuxedo. He and his partners cheat the rich and keep the money for themselves.

    They are not progressives, they are not "reformers," they are crooks.

    This enjoyable film earns a 5 from me for the supporting cast of actors and from Lombard's extraordinary ease of performance. The plot itself is so near to being utter nonsense that only her luminous and magnetic beauty saves the day for the entire ensemble. Clark Gable was the "good guy" with heartburn in "It Happened One Night," which is a far, far superior film. Here, he is just flat out all criminal with heartburn and no better than the bankers of that day, who foreclosed on homes and farms with nary a thought to the long-term consequences to their customers, to society, or to the health of the country which made them so prosperous to begin with. Seventy-five years later, these nuances are probably lost on people who don't know a lot about our true American history. The formulaic "happy ending" tells me that the producers ran out of story before the actors ran out of charisma or talent.
    6bkoganbing

    If The Hollywood Moguls Had Only Known

    No Man of Her Own is a pleasant film, nothing terribly bad or terribly good about it. It is remembered today as the only pairing of that star-crossed couple Clark Gable and Carole Lombard. At the time this was made Gable and Lombard were not an item. They became one about four or five years after No Man of Her Own was filmed. It's not on the top 10 list of either star.

    Gable is a gambler/con artist who's forced by circumstance to beat it out of New York and he flees for a small suburb where he meets librarian Carole Lombard and marries her. That's as far as I'm going with the telling of the plot.

    Lombard was with Paramount at the time this was made and Gable was on loan out from MGM. There's none of the Lombard we knew and loved in such classics as Twentieth Century or My Man Godfrey here. She's a pleasant enough screen heroine though. Gable does well in his part, but doesn't set the world on fire.

    If someone had only predicted that Gable and Lombard and their marriage would be come legendary. I'm sure they would have been given a much better film property. I always felt that if Lombard had not been killed in that plane crash in 1942 she would have eventually signed with MGM and L.B. Mayer would have paired her with Gable in the way Katharine Hepburn signed with MGM after the success of Woman of the Year with Spencer Tracy. You might have had a few films to remember Gable and Lombard by.

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    Related interests

    Barbra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal in On s'fait la valise, docteur? (1972)
    Screwball Comedy
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although Carole Lombard and Clark Gable later became one of Hollywood's most famous couples, they were completely indifferent to one another during the making of this film. It was not until several years later that they met again and fell in love and got married. This was Gable and Lombard's only film together.
    • Goofs
      Early in the movie, Babe takes a taxi; there is a very clear view of the front hood of the cab, with the telephone number of the cab company. Later in the movie, Babe calls his wife with his new office phone number. He looks at the dial of his new phone and gives her the telephone number of the cab company.
    • Quotes

      Babe Stewart: Do your eyes bother you?

      Connie: No. Why?

      Babe Stewart: They bother me!

    • Crazy credits
      The cast is shown on a hand of poker cards, with the leads' faces shown as the various cards.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Love Goddesses (1965)

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    FAQ15

    • How long is No Man of Her Own?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 11, 1933 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • No Man of Her Own
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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