IMDb RATING
7.0/10
3.8K
YOUR RATING
After a wealthy man finds out his wife is a gold digger, he meets and falls for a widowed mother, and complications ensue.After a wealthy man finds out his wife is a gold digger, he meets and falls for a widowed mother, and complications ensue.After a wealthy man finds out his wife is a gold digger, he meets and falls for a widowed mother, and complications ensue.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Maurice Moscovitch
- Dr. Muller
- (as Maurice Moscovich)
James Adamson
- Black Waiter on Train
- (uncredited)
Arthur Aylesworth
- Farmer on Truck
- (uncredited)
James Carlisle
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Jack Chapin
- Bellhop #1
- (uncredited)
Charles Coleman
- Archie Duross
- (uncredited)
Oliver Cross
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is the perfect movie to curl up to on a winter day and get lost in a soap opera. The performances are very good and Lombard is just gorgeous. I think the best reason to see it is to see Kay Francis in a comeback performance. She had been relegated to the undesirable list by the studios at this point in her career. Her portrayal of Maida, Cary Grant's uncompromising wife, is great fun to watch. The movie is a little cornball in parts but overall it works. Lombard fans really won't be disappointed.
Boy meets girl. Boy is married. Girl is widowed with a child. They fall in love, but his wife won't let him have his freedom. She will do anything to hold onto him. That is In Name Only in a nutshell...and what a masterpiece it is. With so many major films released in 1939, it is understandable how a film about 3 people in a grueling triangle can be overlooked. It seems that today, thanks to TCM, so many wonderful moments of screen history may once again be viewed and shared. I can remember as a child seeing this moving film on television. It was wonderful then, and even better now. The years have not left a mark on it. The evil portrayed by Kay Francis, subtle at times, flagrant at others keeps the viewer from feeling this is a sappy soap opera. As good as both Carole Lombard and Cary Grant are in this film, Kay outshines them. It's about time the world once again discovers the merits of Kay Francis. In this movie, she not only steals each scene she is in, but proves herself to have been thoroughly underrated as an actress. She was so much more than just a great beauty or a clotheshorse for the most stunning wardrobes in Hollywood. Try to catch each and every film she made and visit http://www.kayfrancisfilms.com/
Take an interesting story about two more or less doomed lovers, add a much-deserved happy-ending and cast all three leads against type. Than hand it over to a competent director, spend some money for plush production values, demand some snappy lines, hire a top-notch supporting cast and take care of a lush camera work. What do you get? One of the great love stories of all time.
The main reason is the cast!
Carole Lombard, beautiful and radiant, is much more subdued than usual.
Cary Grant, still on his way up to the echelon of stardom. 'Suave' aptly describes his performance.
And, best of all, Kay Francis. After being cast in a slew of low-budget programmers (WB even billed her below the title in 'Women in the Wind') her old pal Lombard (always the generous one) helped her out of oblivion with this once-in-a-lifetime role. Francis is cast a domestic monster but she underplays admirably and her scenes with Lombard sparkle.
The pic holds up very, very well. But be warned: tissued will be needed by the boxful at each viewing.
The main reason is the cast!
Carole Lombard, beautiful and radiant, is much more subdued than usual.
Cary Grant, still on his way up to the echelon of stardom. 'Suave' aptly describes his performance.
And, best of all, Kay Francis. After being cast in a slew of low-budget programmers (WB even billed her below the title in 'Women in the Wind') her old pal Lombard (always the generous one) helped her out of oblivion with this once-in-a-lifetime role. Francis is cast a domestic monster but she underplays admirably and her scenes with Lombard sparkle.
The pic holds up very, very well. But be warned: tissued will be needed by the boxful at each viewing.
I watched `In Name Only' the other night after about 20 odd years since the last time I watched it. I didn't realise how lovely this film actually was
..maybe age has matured me to such delights, who knows!!! Carole Lombard and Cary Grant star together and their pairing does work. Though the performance from Kay Francis was extremely convincing, she showed a cold calculated woman determined to keep Grant's character in a loveless marriage, parading a pretense to family and friends she was the hard-done-by wife.
Lombard's character Julie Eden was of course the opposite of Kay Francis's character two different women in the extreme. Both women are vying for the same man, but with definite distinctions between them to what their reasons are..... one for love and the other for wealth and power. Amongst all this is Grant's character Alec Walker .he knows to well of his wife's ambition, to the point of utterly loathing her (I actually think he does in the film).
The cinematography was sharp, editing and sound was to a high standard. The dialogue was clear and the plot was satisfactory I say this because watching this film today really has no relevance to our society anymore. Couples just live with each other, there's no stigma attached or judgements made against them. The era of the film depicts a very different society code and morals.
`In Name Only' certainly has a place in my film collection. 8/10
Lombard's character Julie Eden was of course the opposite of Kay Francis's character two different women in the extreme. Both women are vying for the same man, but with definite distinctions between them to what their reasons are..... one for love and the other for wealth and power. Amongst all this is Grant's character Alec Walker .he knows to well of his wife's ambition, to the point of utterly loathing her (I actually think he does in the film).
The cinematography was sharp, editing and sound was to a high standard. The dialogue was clear and the plot was satisfactory I say this because watching this film today really has no relevance to our society anymore. Couples just live with each other, there's no stigma attached or judgements made against them. The era of the film depicts a very different society code and morals.
`In Name Only' certainly has a place in my film collection. 8/10
The presence of Grant and Lombard drew me to this one on American Movie Classics, though I thought the script might a bit of a handkerchief-wringer. To my surprise the story was thoroughly absorbing and involving, as well as being a great study of the manners and mores of the era. And of course, Cary Grant and Carole Lombard carry the whole thing through with their wonderful performances. Well worth a see.
Did you know
- TriviaCarole Lombard insisted her friend Kay Francis get the role of Maida, as her career was waning and she had been dropped by Warner Bros. the previous year, where she had worked for most of the decade.
- GoofsWhen Alec checks into a hotel near the end, he opens a room with the key to #1522. Then the next morning when the hotel staff find him still in the room, they enter room #1524 . Alex enters room 1522 and then the bellman opens the door to the adjoining room where the bed is. The bellman exits through the door to 1524. Later, the ambulance staff take Alex out of the door to 1524 and Julie goes into the adjoining room and exits through that room's door. There are two doors and two adjoining rooms with an interior pass through door.
- Quotes
Alec Walker: [after being asked who was on the phone] I haven't the remotest notion. She calls me up every now and then and we talk. I call her my telephone dream girl. It's practically weird.
- Alternate versionsAlso shown in a computer colorized version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Kisses (1991)
- SoundtracksAdeste Fidelis (O Come All Ye Faithful)
(uncredited)
Music attributed to John Reading (17th century)
Words translated from the Latin by Frederick Oakeley (1841)
Played as background music on Christmas Eve
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Engaño nupcial
- Filming locations
- Ridgefield, Connecticut, USA(Main Street Opening shot)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $722,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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