Divorce | |
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Directed by | William Nigh |
Written by | Sidney Sutherland (story and screenplay) Harvey Gates (screenplay) |
Produced by | Jeffrey Bernerd Kay Francis Trem Carr |
Starring | Kay Francis Bruce Cabot Helen Mack |
Cinematography | Harry Neumann |
Edited by | Richard C. Currier |
Music by | Edward J. Kay |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Monogram Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 71 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Divorce is a 1945 American drama film directed by William Nigh and starring Kay Francis, Bruce Cabot, and Helen Mack. Produced and distributed by Monogram Pictures, it is about a much-divorced woman who sets her sights on her married childhood friend.
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (January 2014) |
A woman who has been married and divorced five times comes back to her small hometown, where she proceeds to complicate, and potentially destroy, the marriage of her childhood boyfriend.
One New York State paper found it a “motion picture of unusual excellence, judged from any standpoint,” and continued: “Miss Francis, as the much-married divorcee of the story, is a poised, ruthless woman of the world and displays all the seductive artistry which long ago established her as a star of the first rank. Bruce Cabot is equally fine as a happily married man, a returned officer of the present war, who succumbs to the wiles of the predatory Miss Francis, and leaves his family for her. Helen Mack is outstanding as the deserted wife who fights for her rights, and others in the cast who do especially good work are Jerome Cowan, Craig Reynolds, Ruth Lee, Jean Fenwick, Mary Gordon, Jonathan Hale and Addison Richards, as well as two precocious child actors, Larry Olsen and Johnny Calkins.”[1]