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Letty Lynton
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Oh boy, do I love a shipboard romance, between Love Affair, History is Made at Night, now this. Just think of it, it takes weeks to cross the Atlantic, and as Robert Montgomery soon proposes, all there’s to do is:
Breakfast, tennis, shuffleboard, soup, lunch, deck chairs, cocktails, dinner.
And Crawford points out:
That leaves only the night.
Ah, nothing better suited to Hollywood romance than three weeks out of time, away from life, falling in love with strangers, and spending days idly and nights actively. Well. Montgomery & Crawford meet, and it’s love at first sight, but an interesting courtship: two lonely hearts, both from money sure, but gun-shy and awkward, and it takes almost the whole trip for marriage to come up, which is sort of a long time for a movie like this. By the way, someone like Robert Montgomery could definitely win me with a line like this:
They tell me the female likes to be pursued by the male, so here I am.
So everything seems right in the world, but of course Renaul is waiting for poor Letty on the dock. From heady romance the film veers to real horror: everything the film wants one to feel, one feels palpably. Renaul doesn’t just grab her a little roughly to suggest his violence; he is actually menacing and does knock her around. Her desperation is clear and warranted, and although one always does feel sorry for Crawford characters, I found myself rooting out loud for what she must do and hoping like hell she’d get away with it. Of course, the resolution is probably something that could only happen to the fabulously wealthy, but my inclination toward social responsibility has not yet returned. Crawford’s great in this, and Montgomery’s a perfect stand-by-your-gal match. A really superlative film of its kind in every way.
So far I’ve done very little harm and absolutely no good.
Come on, we’ll dance until the sun comes up, and talk until it goes down again!
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1932 US Dir Clarence Brown Cast Joan Crawford, Robert Montgomery, Nils Asther








