Actuakers
One of my all time favorites.
CrawlerChunky
In truth, there is barely enough story here to make a film.
Catherina
If you're interested in the topic at hand, you should just watch it and judge yourself because the reviews have gone very biased by people that didn't even watch it and just hate (or love) the creator. I liked it, it was well written, narrated, and directed and it was about a topic that interests me.
Cassandra
Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.
kidboots
While Joan Bennett may have played the title role (Richard Watts Jr. called her a "pretty if unexciting heroine") there were so many stars determined to have their moment in the sun that Joan was almost left behind - but not quite!! You know it's a pre-code with wisecracks like - "I thought my sugar daddy was going to take me to Paris - well he did want to show me where he was wounded in the war and no it wasn't there!!"Apart from the establishing shot of hot shot lawyer John Sullivan eagerly running from the ship to renew his friendship with the beautiful Vivienne only to find she is engaged to seedy ladies man Damon Fenwick (Jameson Thomas), this fast paced movie takes place in the court room. Court room dramas were still a staple of the early 1930s and both Alan Dinehart and Don Cook were given the roles of a lifetime. Dinehart was the prosecutor who made mincemeat of the witnesses with his penetrating questions, and if you've only seen Cook as a moody love interest, he proves he has energy and personality as he outdoes Perry Mason with his "I object on the grounds that it is incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial"!!etc. And where would a movie trial be without snappy radio commentary - Skeets Gallagher delivers the sensation while Zasu Pitts offers a woman's angle, describing Vivienne's hats, gowns and make-up - in fact Pitts gets an exclusive interview with the condemned girl but she doesn't give Vivienne a chance to talk - it's all about Gladys (Pitts) and her Virginian childhood!! She does come up trumps when describing Vivienne's fetching ensemble!! The film really belongs to Lilian Bond and she sparkles as Dolores Devine, the other woman!! She is sassy, sexy and hysterical by turns. Dolores was the woman Damon couldn't give up, the one (in a very pre-code scene) whom Vivienne found lounging in a pair of barely there pajamas, at Damon's apartment early one morning!!Suddenly there is a sensational development - Skeets comments on "a woman scorned" and stand by for the reading of a sensational love letter!! It's almost as though Fox scoured Hollywood in it's effort to find so many wonderful character actors and then given them each a role they would be proud to have on their resumes!! Apart from those mentioned, there is Herbert Mundin, Maude Eburne, Noel Madison, Edwin Maxwell, Ethel Wales and Dale Fuller!!Highly Recommended!!
mark.waltz
Veteran actress Joan Bennett had more looks than Lon Chaney, going from cute blonde to brunette femme fatale and finally to gracious matriarch. This early film of her long career is her best of the blonde bombshell era, a tight and fast moving pre-code courtroom drama where Joan is on trial for her life, having been accused of murdering a slick playboy. Another ex, Donald Cook, defends her, as her trial is covered on the radio by fast talking Skeets Gallagher and manipulative sob sister Zasu Pitts. With the deck stashed against her, it doesn't look good, creating a tense drama that flies by in under an hour. This is a must for pre-code aficionados and never lets up. Bennett was nothing special in her early films, but this one is an exception. Pitts gives an award worthy supporting performance, quite different than many of her other films.
calvinnme
Fox really has some gems rotting away in its vaults and this is one of them. Vivienne Ware clocks in at just under an hour but is full of thrills. The movie starts out like one of the Thin Man movies would - you have a really bad guy that has no shortage of enemies. In this case the bad guy is slimy Damon Fenwick who believably has attracted the fascination and not so believably the love of wealthy socialite Vivienne Ware (Joan Bennett), to whom he has become engaged. Everybody has a reason to hate this guy - there's attorney John Sutherland (Donald Cook) who is a good guy in love with Vivienne, there's Damon's chorus girl ex-mistress Delores Devine (Lillian Bond) that he threw over for Vivienne, there's club owner Angelo Peroni who keeps shooting Delores and Damon mysterious dirty looks, and finally Vivienne herself when she finds Damon at breakfast with Delores and thus finds out Delores is not such an ex after all.It's no surprise therefore when Damon turns up dead. The police come knocking at the door of Vivienne in the middle of the night who seems to be packing everything she owns for a long journey - not good if you're a suspect in a murder, which she is. She has a remarkable lack of explanations and alibis, and so she is put on trial for her life with ever loyal John as her attorney. Perennial bad guy over at Warner Bros. Alan Dinehart plays the enthusiastic prosecuting attorney. For comic relief there is Skeets Gallagher as dramatic crime report Graham McNally making radio broadcasts as the trial is in session and he is a real hoot reporting alongside Zasu Pitts as gossip reporter Gladys Fairweather. Graham is charming before the audience, but always has an insult for the long-suffering Gladys every time she takes over the microphone. Full of twists and turns, precode situations and one-liners, I heartily recommend this one.
boblipton
William K. Howard was given the task of turning a popular radio serial into a movie, and succeeded. A carefully-written script that actually paid attention to the way cases are tried was the first step. Some great support, particularly Skeets Gallegher and the always fascinating Zasu Pitts helps. A restless camera helps keep up speed, and some interesting sets -- particularly the nightclub set -- make this a fine movie, even if the leads, who became lovers more than twenty years later, had no memory of working together on this one.I wish to call your attention, if you ever have the chance to see this movie -- it is very rare and the one print I saw was a 16 mm. print, blurry as you would expect -- to the swish cuts. A swish cut is when the camera starts to pan away, then the illusion of high speed movement starts and when the camera slows down it is panning into a new shot -- maybe a quarter second elapses. It adds tremendous excitement to a sequence and Howard uses a lot of them here.Unhappily, a lot of editing techniques for shot changes were on their ways out. By about 1935, Hollywood had settled on the now-standard techniques, except for a few movies which attempt to evoke the older movies. A loss to film grammar, but what can we do about it now, except to enjoy these techniques when we see them?May 20 2010: I just noticed a modern use of the swish cut: any Doctor Who fan out there should take a look at Season 5 Episode 4 for the use of one, four minutes into the proceedings.