A lonely wife of a workaholic husband on the magical Isle of Capri meets a charming and attractive young man. An exciting affair must end when word gets back to the husband and he becomes il... Read allA lonely wife of a workaholic husband on the magical Isle of Capri meets a charming and attractive young man. An exciting affair must end when word gets back to the husband and he becomes ill. Then the daughter enters the scene.A lonely wife of a workaholic husband on the magical Isle of Capri meets a charming and attractive young man. An exciting affair must end when word gets back to the husband and he becomes ill. Then the daughter enters the scene.
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In her only foreign film Myrna Loy stars as an unfaithful wife to barrister Roger Livesey. While he's working hard Loy has been carrying on with her husband's
partner Richard Greene. And then in an effort to keep Greene within her reach
she tries to set him up with her stepdaughter Peggy Cummins.
It's always been fascinating to me about how the British are so civilized about infidelity. The only time it gets real is during a party scene when all the secrets are spilled.
This quartet of players makes it all work somehow. That Dangerous Age will nevr make the top 20 of Myrna Loy's films.
It's always been fascinating to me about how the British are so civilized about infidelity. The only time it gets real is during a party scene when all the secrets are spilled.
This quartet of players makes it all work somehow. That Dangerous Age will nevr make the top 20 of Myrna Loy's films.
This film has not to my knowledge been shown in the UK since its release. This would imply that it is bad film,which it is not. An interesting quartet of stars act their hearts out. The American version that I saw has lost 26 minutes from the original version.
Roger Livesey is a renowned barrister who has gone blind. His doctor says that it could become permanent if he doesn't take a good, long vacation, so he, wife Myrna Loy, and his daughter from his firs marriage, Peggy Cummins, head off to Capri. Eventually Livesey's partner, Richard Greene, follows, and begins to court Miss Cummins, who is quite besotted with him. Miss Loy is the perfect wife and nurse to her husband, but gossip, unbeknownst to Livesey, is quite accurate in that she has been carrying on an affair with Greene which, she tells him, is now ended. But is the gossip?
It's a rare foreign film for Miss Loy, and she is, unsurprisingly, excellent in the role; director Gregory Ratoff gets fine performances from all the cast. He had wanted to film this in the 1930s at Fox, but undoubtedly had found it impossible to get through the Hays Office. What shows up on the screen attempts to handle the matter sensitively, but I found it a bit confused in its points, given that no one wished to be the villain in this piece. With Elizabeth Allan and a score that insists on quoting from Offenbach's Baccarole.
It's a rare foreign film for Miss Loy, and she is, unsurprisingly, excellent in the role; director Gregory Ratoff gets fine performances from all the cast. He had wanted to film this in the 1930s at Fox, but undoubtedly had found it impossible to get through the Hays Office. What shows up on the screen attempts to handle the matter sensitively, but I found it a bit confused in its points, given that no one wished to be the villain in this piece. With Elizabeth Allan and a score that insists on quoting from Offenbach's Baccarole.
Myrna Loy stars as Lady Brooke in this British drama about a woman who accompanies her sick husband to convalesce in Italy, leaving behind her lover (Richard Greene). After a poison pen letter arrives, warning the husband (Roger Livesey) about his wife, Loy has to think past and makes up a story that Greene is actually in love with their daughter (Peggy Cummins). But things take a turn for the worst when both the daughter and the lover arrive in Italy.
Loy encourages Greene to go along with the charade while he's in Italy, but she doesn't count on two things: 1 that Cummins is secretly in love with Greene, and 2 that the opal necklace he gives her will prove to be unlucky.
Loy swallows a bitter pill when Greene, after being pushed into Cummins' company, falls for her. Back in London after Livesey has recovered, a cocktail party is thrown where Livesey's bitter and drunk sister (Margaret Withers) spills the beans (but not her drink) about Loy's relationship with Greene and all hell breaks loose.
The four stars are quite good in this romantic drama, though the ending may be a bit of a stretch.
Loy encourages Greene to go along with the charade while he's in Italy, but she doesn't count on two things: 1 that Cummins is secretly in love with Greene, and 2 that the opal necklace he gives her will prove to be unlucky.
Loy swallows a bitter pill when Greene, after being pushed into Cummins' company, falls for her. Back in London after Livesey has recovered, a cocktail party is thrown where Livesey's bitter and drunk sister (Margaret Withers) spills the beans (but not her drink) about Loy's relationship with Greene and all hell breaks loose.
The four stars are quite good in this romantic drama, though the ending may be a bit of a stretch.
"If This Be Sin" (1949) stars Myrna Loy in a rôle definitely far removed from her image as the "half-caste" she played so often at the beginning of her career or the deliciously witty comedic wife of William Powell in the wonderful series of films, "The Thin Man" detective features. Here, along with Roger Livesey as her husband, Peggy Cummins as her step-daughter, and Richard Greene as her secret love (and lover), she plays a wife whose barrister husband lives for his work, at which he is a master, while she is relegated to the woman in his life, a showpiece, but not much else, though he doesn't even realize the fact. The entire plot is the sort of melodrama that could indeed play out in real life - - - until Greene actually falls for Loy's much younger step-daughter - - - who's already been infatuated with Greene... The ending comes out of nineteenth century novels and is ridiculous... HOWEVER, Loy and the rest of the crew are such professionals that it was a good watch. Can't say I'd recommend this necessarily, but it wasn't a chore. The rest of us can all suspend credulity every once in a while.
What's interesting about this film to me is that it was made up entirely of a British cast except Loy. Even Elizabeth Allan and Wilfrid Hyde-White show up. Directed, however, by Gregory Ratoff, interestingly enough. This was certainly a diversion for Loy. It gave her some meat in a rôle. Only the year before she'd been seen in "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House" and just prior to that "The Senator Was Indiscreet", but her parts were secondary to the male leads. Here she had a chance to mope and tear up and chew and, and, and... Good performance, but the script is - well, it's just...
What's interesting about this film to me is that it was made up entirely of a British cast except Loy. Even Elizabeth Allan and Wilfrid Hyde-White show up. Directed, however, by Gregory Ratoff, interestingly enough. This was certainly a diversion for Loy. It gave her some meat in a rôle. Only the year before she'd been seen in "Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House" and just prior to that "The Senator Was Indiscreet", but her parts were secondary to the male leads. Here she had a chance to mope and tear up and chew and, and, and... Good performance, but the script is - well, it's just...
Did you know
- Quotes
Sir Brian Brooke: We may not have much of anything else but we must have faith.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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