Cynthia Warren, independently wealthy through her ability as an illustrator and poster artist, rebels against the premise that every woman is destined for matrimony and motherhood, and decides she has as much right as a man to play around sans benefit of marriage. So, leaving behind steady-but-dull Randolph Morgan (who seems to be the primary buyer of her 'art' and income,) she heads for Paris.


Is this for you? If you like your dramas with a side of 'what on earth are you doing?' then pull up a chair. If you need your protagonists to have a shred of common sense or a coherent moral compass, you might want to skip this one. It’s a bit of a relic, but it’s got a weird, frantic energy that kept me watching. Cyn...

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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Victor Schertzinger

Victor Schertzinger
Community
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"Is this for you? If you like your dramas with a side of 'what on earth are you doing?' then pull up a chair. If you need your protagonists to have a shred of common sense or a coherent moral compass, you might want to skip this one. It’s a bit of a relic, but it’s got a weird, frantic energy that kept me watching. Cynthia starts the movie by declaring she’s done with the whole marriage thing. It’s supposed to be empowering, I guess? But then she immediately hops on a boat and falls for the firs..."

Forrester Harvey
Gertrude Purcell, Richard Schayer, James Kevin McGuinness
United States

