Female (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Female

VHS cover
Directed by Michael Curtiz
William Dieterle (uncredited)
William A. Wellman (uncredited) (17 scenes)
Produced by Robert Presnell Sr.
Written by Donald Henderson Clarke (story)
Gene Markey
Kathryn Scola
Starring Ruth Chatterton
George Brent
Distributed by Warner Bros. (as First National Pictures Inc.)
Release date(s) November 11, 1933
Running time 60 minutes
Country United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Female is a 1933 film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Ruth Chatterton and George Brent. It was produced by Warner Bros..

Contents

[edit] Plot

Alison Drake (Ruth Chatterton) is a hard-driving, no-nonsense, wealthy owner and head of a large automobile company. Her work has caused her to lose her youthful romanticism, and she has casual affairs with men, not excluding her own employees.

Alison hosts a party at her mansion, but becomes fed up with the men out to either sell her things or marry her for her money. She changes her clothes and goes to an amusement park, where she picks up a man at a shooting gallery. They have fun together, but he refuses her offer to go home with him.

The next day, they meet again at her factory. To her astonishment, he turns out to be Jim Thorne (George Brent), a gifted engineer she has ordered her underlings to hire away from her competition. Saying that she has no time now, Alison has him come to her mansion that night, supposedly to discuss his plans in detail. She attempts to seduce him, but he rejects her as anything other than his employer.

Annoyed, she turns to her assistant, Pettigew (Ferdinand Gottschalk), for advice. He tells her that men want women who are softer and less independent, so she adjusts her tactics. She tricks Jim into a picnic and wears him down. In the end, he succumbs to her charms.

The next day, he shows up at her office with a marriage license, but she informs him that she is likes their relationship just the way it is. Outraged, he quits.

Alison has another problem on her hands. Her company needs more financing to survive, but another firm is intent on taking advantage of the situation to take over and has gotten the local banks to turn her down. She sets up an appointment to meet with bankers in New York City, but then breaks down when she realizes that she cannot live without Jim.

She has the police track down which way he went and drives off after him. She eventually finds him (at another shooting gallery) and tells him that she is willing to get married. Then, he realizes that they can fly to New York in time to save her company. Even so, she tells him that he will run the firm, while she has nine children.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Production

Three directors worked on this film. William Dieterle began the film, and William Wellman took over to complete it when Dieterle became ill. When Warner's production head, Jack Warner, decided he didn't like an actor in the film (either Lyle Talbot or George Blackwood, depending on the source), Wellman wasn't available because he had starting shooting College Coach, so Michael Curtiz was brought in to re-shoot with Johnny Mack Brown as the replacement actor. Curtiz ended up with the sole screen credit.[1][2][3]

The film, which cost between $260,000 and $286,000 to make, and brought in $451,000 worldwide, was made at Warners' Burbank studios, with exterior shots of Chatterton's house filmed at Frank Lloyd Wright's Ennis House in the Hollywood Hills.[2][4]

[edit] Notes

[edit] External links