Ann Marvin, who is thoroughly disillusioned about marital bliss because of the turbulence in her sister Clara's marriage, meets Robert Collings, a millionaire gold miner, while visiting her brother-in-law Bertrand's law office. Bertrand invites Collings to dinner, and before his arrival, Clara stages a battle royal over Bertrand's buying a dress for Alvarez Guerra, who is also invited to dinner, and the two women ultimately come to blows.

You should probably watch this if you like seeing how people in the 1920s tried to be modern and edgy about relationships. If you hate movies that feel like filmed stage plays where everyone talks at the same time, you will likely find this one pretty annoying. I wasn't expecting this to be so cynical about love, esp...

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

Paul L. Stein

Lloyd Ingraham
Community
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"You should probably watch this if you like seeing how people in the 1920s tried to be modern and edgy about relationships. If you hate movies that feel like filmed stage plays where everyone talks at the same time, you will likely find this one pretty annoying. I wasn't expecting this to be so cynical about love, especially for a movie from 1929. Constance Bennett plays Ann, and she is basically the original 'anti-marriage' heroine because she watches her sister Clara and her husband Bertrand..."

Edmund Lowe
Edwin J. Burke, Horace Jackson
United States


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