Showing posts with label Sinners in the Sun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sinners in the Sun. Show all posts

Saturday, May 13, 2023

Sinners In The Sun (1932)

     "How fortunate we are who, in this era of science, are enabled by the talkie invention to hear, as well as see, the smacks which maidenly indignation administers to the cheek of importunate millionaires!"


Sinners In The Sun - Review is taken from 'The Films of Cary Grant' by Donald Deschner (1973):

"Sinners In The Sun is, in effect, a display of luxury, and the tale of a man and a girl who temporarily despise love in a cottage, but virtuously return to it at last as being of more importance than the limousines, the Long Island parties, the fashion-parades, and the underclothes that enrich their unregenerate interlude.  These things have now become so much a formula that Hollywood has learned not to take them too seriously, with the result that they are less tedious than they might otherwise be.  Miss Carole Lombard and Mr. Chester Morris discharge their sentimental duties with easy accomplishment, while Miss Adrienne Ames, though afflicted with dialogue of the utmost crudity, gives a genuine touch of character to the rich young woman whom our hero erroneously marries.  But the film's chief merit is the sickness of its luxurious accompaniment.  The dresses are good, the flow from scene to scene is smooth and glittering, and our heroine is eternally unruffled even when she has plunged into a moonlit sea, clambered upon a raft and been forcibly kissed by an amateur wrestler who applies his art to persuade her.  How fortunate we are who, in this era of science, are enabled by the talkie invention to hear, as well as see, the smacks which maidenly indignation administers to the cheek of importunate millionaires!"

- The Times (London)


New Artwork by Rebekah Hawley at Studio36 -
Number 2 - Sinners In The Sun (Lobby Card Style)

Part Of



For more, see also:

On This Day 13 May 2020

On This Day 13 May 2021

Quote From Today 13 May 2022

 

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

On this day...Sinners in the Sun (1932)

This was Cary Grant's second full length feature film, released on May 13th, 1932.


The main stars were Carole Lombard and Chester Morris, in a story of love and riches and the affect one has on the other.

"Sinners in the Sun is, in effect, a display of luxury, and the tale of a man and a girl who temporarily despise love in a cottage, but virtuously return to it at last as being of more importance than the limousines, the Long Island parties, the fashion-parades, and the underclothes that enrich their unregenerate interlude" - The Times (London)

Cary Grant played the role of Ridgeway.

Cary Grant with Carole Lombard.


Cary Grant as Ridgeway, with Carole Lombard(Doris) and Pierre De Ramey(Louis)

Lobby Card

With Rita La Roy(Lil), Carole Lombard(Doris), Walter Bryon(Eric Nelson).

Directed by Alexander Hall.
Running time: 70 minutes.
Produced and Distributed by Paramount Publix.

From a story "Beach-Comber" by Mildred Cram.