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Week-End Marriage

  • 1932
  • Passed
  • 1h 5m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
395
YOUR RATING
Aline MacMahon and Loretta Young in Week-End Marriage (1932)
ComedyRomance

An out-of-work husband (Norman Foster) resents his wife (Loretta Young) being the breadwinner in the family.An out-of-work husband (Norman Foster) resents his wife (Loretta Young) being the breadwinner in the family.An out-of-work husband (Norman Foster) resents his wife (Loretta Young) being the breadwinner in the family.

  • Director
    • Thornton Freeland
  • Writers
    • Faith Baldwin
    • Sheridan Gibney
  • Stars
    • Loretta Young
    • Norman Foster
    • Aline MacMahon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    395
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Thornton Freeland
    • Writers
      • Faith Baldwin
      • Sheridan Gibney
    • Stars
      • Loretta Young
      • Norman Foster
      • Aline MacMahon
    • 19User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast26

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    Loretta Young
    Loretta Young
    • Lola Davis Hayes
    Norman Foster
    Norman Foster
    • Ken Hayes
    Aline MacMahon
    Aline MacMahon
    • Agnes Davis
    George Brent
    George Brent
    • Peter Acton
    Grant Mitchell
    Grant Mitchell
    • Doctor
    Vivienne Osborne
    Vivienne Osborne
    • Shirley
    Sheila Terry
    Sheila Terry
    • Connie
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    J. Farrell MacDonald
    • Mr. Davis
    Louise Carter
    Louise Carter
    • Mrs. Davis
    Roscoe Karns
    Roscoe Karns
    • Jim Davis
    Luis Alberni
    Luis Alberni
    • Louis - the Bootlegger
    • (uncredited)
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Grocery Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    Herman Bing
    Herman Bing
    • Mr. Mengel
    • (uncredited)
    Neal Dodd
    Neal Dodd
    • Wedding Minister
    • (uncredited)
    Bill Elliott
    Bill Elliott
    • Birthday Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Julia Griffith
    • Woman Behind Agnes and Jim at Concert
    • (uncredited)
    Chuck Hamilton
    Chuck Hamilton
    • Policeman in Police Station
    • (uncredited)
    Thomas E. Jackson
    Thomas E. Jackson
    • Police Property Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Thornton Freeland
    • Writers
      • Faith Baldwin
      • Sheridan Gibney
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews19

    5.8395
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Pre-Code Young

    Weekend Marriage (1932)

    ** (out of 4)

    After their marriage, Loretta Young and her husband find troubles when she starts making more money than him. He didn't want her to work at all and now he begins to feel like the wife. Here's another early moral tale that's pretty slow moving throughout, although the leads offer good performances. This story was pretty normal for the Pre-Code years at Warner and I often wondered if they just used the same screenplay from previous films and changed them up a bit. Young is as beautiful as ever but she's done better films.
    viveca-powell

    Message sucks, watch at your own risk.

    I love old movies, especially pre-code films. I also Love Loretta Young. Beauty aside, she has sincerity, wit and range that make her so watchable and relatable. I am also a thrice divorced, black, female, retired attorney. I can watch many an old movie and still consider it good or entertaining despite a lot of undesirable content. But I can NOT abide this one. I am a woman of many words and this movie has left me speechless. I guess, to quote another reviewer, all it takes is sacrifice. Compromise would have made for a more realistic movie. Healthier too. This movie's message was not emotionally healthy for women in 1932 during the depression or anytime since then. Kinda afraid to start the next recorded movie.
    7overseer-3

    A little more balance needed

    I'm no radical feminist, but Week-End Marriage did seem to push its point a little too severely that married women should never work outside the home.

    I couldn't help but wonder what audiences in 1932 thought of this film, most particularly, married women. Would they have nodded in silent agreement that Loretta Young made the right decision in the end, or would they have been outraged that she was pigeon-holed in a certain domestic mold? I think the truth would be somewhere in the middle. Women are never as inflexible and stereotypical as presented in any film, modern or vintage. Every woman is an individual and makes her own decisions which are best for her.

    Women in 1932, as today in 2006, know that not one decision is best for everyone. There are benefits to being a homemaker, a wife, and mother, and there are benefits to being a career girl. Women can combine both, but just in time factor alone certain things might very well be sacrificed, even inadvertently, and unfortunately one of the things that can be sacrificed is a marriage.

    Quantity time is important, along with quality time. If a husband is feeling neglected because his wife seems to prefer a career over him then the marriage is in trouble. If she makes him know clearly and firmly that she values him more than any job or a paycheck then that marriage will most likely survive. It's all in the balance of what you wish to achieve, your priorities. In that respect Week-end Marriage's ending isn't necessarily a cop-out, but simply a decision by the wife to save what she values more than anything else, her man. Sometimes that does take some - horrors! - SACRIFICE.

    Performances here are all excellent. I agree that Aline simply steals this movie away from Loretta. Aline was in so many films with Loretta, yet always managed to steal the limelight away from Loretta, despite Aline's lack of physical beauty. Just goes to show that acting talent is separate and apart from physical looks. There is a much more substantial and profound foundation behind real acting talent, as opposed to just relying on a pretty face and figure.
    7AlsExGal

    Modern problems and a really muddled message

    The film opens on a young couple (Loretta Young as Lola and Norman Foster as Ken) standing in line at the movies. The movie is, of course, a Warner Brothers film of the time - "Blessed Event". Jack Warner always got his money's worth out of any opportunity for self promotion. At any rate Ken is the old-fashioned type who won't marry unless he earns enough that his wife can stay at home. He's made it clear he wants to marry Lola, and also made it clear that he doesn't make enough to support the two. Then comes the news - Ken has a real opportunity at his job but he'll have to go for an extended trip to South America. Lola is heartbroken as regardless of what Ken says she feels this will be the end for the two of them. Along comes helpful sister-in-law Agnes played by the delightful Aline McMahon who writes out in short-hand some lines that will get Ken to propose - that along with a ruse that there is another suitor for Lola's hand and Lola saying that she may marry him if Ken goes away. The trick works. Ken doesn't go on the assignment, stays at his old job, and the two marry. But then the working man's version of "A Star is Born" syndrome sets in. Ken first gets a pay cut and then fired when he is absent from work due to being in jail on a bender. Meanwhile Lola gets promoted with a pay raise and then an opportunity to go with the boss to St. Louis and be his executive assistant - her current position is being eliminated so she is out of work if she does not go.

    Lola has to go through the humiliation of bailing her husband out of the drunk tank - along with his blonde female companion - only to be told by Ken that this whole thing is her fault and she needs to quit her job to save their marriage. Now remember, Ken doesn't have a job anymore, this is the Great Depression, how practical is this request or should I say ultimatum? Lola goes to St. Louis anyways. I'll let you watch and see how and if everything pans out.

    This film is interesting because of a couple of scenes. One is considered precode because of the fact that it shows a married couple in bed - not twin beds - starting to get frisky when their moment is interrupted by the tyranny of the alarm clock. The second scene is completely out of whack with the rest of the picture but very powerful. Lola has a friend whose brother is going to force her into an arranged marriage with a bootlegger years older than she. The friend asks her to come to her house to tell her brother that the friend does not have to marry the bootlegger and can do what she likes - this is America. The brutish brother begs to disagree, knocks his sister to the floor, makes you think he is about to do the same to Lola, and forces the frightened sister into the arms of the repulsive fiancé when he arrives. Lola looks away in frightened disgust.

    Now this scene with the friend might make you think that maybe the film is trying to say that even in modern times a girl can't get a break from men who are unhappy and take it out on their women if there isn't enough money, and do the same if there is enough money because the woman pitches in with a job but then their socks aren't darned or the dishes need washing. However, later in the film there is a speech similar to that made by the brutish brother of Lola's friend except this time more articulate and by a respected member of the community - a doctor. Again, everything is all Lola's fault and the fault of all working women.

    I'd recommend this one because of the unique precode look at marriage, because of the good performances, and because, regardless of what the message of this film is supposed to be, it is a window into another time when a girl often really couldn't get a break.
    8morrisonhimself

    Excellent cast in infuriating story

    Yes, it's very well done, by some superb actors, but the premise that women exist primarily to serve their men, first, is infuriating and, second, was out of date for rational people even in 1932.

    One of the most infuriating speeches I have ever heard was spoken by the doctor, and is quoted at length on the main page here at IMDb.

    Far too many people, yes, even today, take Ephesians 5 to an extreme and interpret it to mean "women, lie down and be a doormat."

    A Greek scholar I once worked for said the King James phrasing, "Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands ..." is not a very accurate translation, that the word translated as "submit" does not convey the original Greek. He said a better understanding is not that women are supposed to be subordinate, but that women -- and men -- get united into a couple.

    So, not to give away the ending, I walked away from the TCM presentation directly to the computer to review this angrily.

    Yes, I admired the production and the acting and everything else except the terrible message. And, yes, I hope everyone who likes classic movies will watch because it is, truly, a classic movie, illustrating its time and showcasing some remarkably talented people, including the beautiful Loretta Young.

    We all need to remember the context, that "Week-End Marriage" was made in 1932, and to think about what people said and did and believed then, and make sure we don't make the same mistakes today, 2015.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Debut of Sheila Terry.
    • Goofs
      Lola calls to tell Ken she won't be home for dinner. He leaves the apartment, throwing his apron out in the hallway. When Lola comes home, she finds the apron on the living room floor, and the light in the kitchen turned off, but Ken apparently didn't come home again before she did, and couldn't have done either.
    • Quotes

      Doctor: Haven't you brought enough unhappiness to your husband without jeopardizing his life?

      Lola Davis Hayes: I...?

      Doctor: Let me give you a little advice. One way or another, a man will find a woman to look out for him not only when he's sick but when he's well. That's something you so-called "modern girls" never seem to count on. You talk about freedom, because you think it's something men have and cherish. But they don't. They hate it. They get along best when they're *not* free. It's human nature, that's all. They need old-fashioned women looking after their health, nagging them into caution, feeding them properly, and giving them families to live for. A great many of these women are just as well-fitted for business as you are, but they don't want it. They put their talents to work instead in what people today think of as a narrow sphere. Well, I don't think it's narrow. I think it's the most important sphere of all. Not much recognition in it, perhaps--no spectacular publicity--but it's built up nations before now, and it *will* build them again.

      Mrs. Davis: You hear that, Lola?

    • Connections
      References Blessed Event (1932)
    • Soundtracks
      Sextette
      (1835) (uncredited)

      From "Lucia di Lammermoor"

      Music by Gaetano Donizetti

      Played at the outdoor concert

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Week-End Marriage?Powered by Alexa
    • Was this movie remade as "Saturday's Children" (1940)?

    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 18, 1932 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Working Wives
    • Filming locations
      • Warner Brothers Burbank Studios - 4000 Warner Boulevard, Burbank, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • First National Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $149,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 5m(65 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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