Three on a Match

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Three on a Match
Directed by Mervyn LeRoy
Produced by Samuel Bischoff
Raymond Griffith
Darryl F. Zanuck
Written by Story:
Kubec Glasmon
John Bright
Screenplay:
Lucien Hubbard
Starring Joan Blondell
Bette Davis
Ann Dvorak
Cinematography Sol Polito
Editing by Ray Cirtiss
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) October 29, 1932
Running time 63 min.
Country United States
Language English
IMDb profile

Three on a Match (1932) is a pre-Code Warner Bros. drama film directed by Mervyn LeRoy and starring Joan Blondell, Ann Dvorak and Bette Davis. The film also features Warren William, Lyle Talbot, Humphrey Bogart (in his first tough-guy role), Allen Jenkins and Edward Arnold.

[edit] Plot

Three friends from childhood, Mary (Joan Blondell), Ruth (Bette Davis), and Vivian (Ann Dvorak), meet again as young adults after some time apart. They each light a cigarette from the same match and discuss the superstition that this is unlucky and that Vivian, the last to light her cigarette, will soon die.

Mary is an entertainer who has established stability in her life after spending some time in a reform school, while Ruth works as a stenographer. Vivian is the best off of the three, married to successful lawyer Robert Kirkwood (Warren Williams) and with a young son, but she has grown dissatisfied with her life. On an ocean cruise, gambler Michael Loftus (Lyle Talbot) persuades Vivian to run away with him. She soon becomes addicted to cocaine (this is not explicitly spelled out, but a young Humphrey Bogart, playing a hood named Harve, mimes the dissolute woman's habit by brushing his hand under his nose in one scene, winkingly).

Concerned about Vivian's neglect of her son, Mary tells Robert where to find his boy. Robert retrieves his son and divorces Vivian. Mary and Robert become better acquainted and eventually marry.

Meanwhile, Vivian's money runs out and Michael owes $2000 to three sadistic gangsters, Harve, Dick (Allen Jenkins) and Ace (Edward Arnold), who tell him to pay up or else. Desperate, Michael tries to blackmail Robert by threatening to inform the press about Mary's criminal background. When that doesn't work, he kidnaps Robert's boy. However, in a selfless act of contrition and self-sacrifice, Vivian scrawls a message in lipstick on her nightgown and throws herself out the window of the fourth-floor apartment where she and her son are being held, alerting the authorities and saving her son's life at the cost of her own.

The harsh ending signals that this was a pre-Breen Code film, made before the middle of 1934.

[edit] Main cast and characters

Joan Blondell as Mary Keaton, also known as Mary Bernard. A tomboy as a child, Mary spent time in a reform school, before becoming an entertainer.
Ann Dvorak as Vivian Kirkwood, a beautiful woman from a background of wealth. She is married to Robert Kirkwood, and is the mother of their young son.
Bette Davis as Ruth Wescott. Serious and studious as a child, Ruth works as a stenographer.
Warren William as Robert Kirkwood, Vivian's husband, a successful attorney.


[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
This 1930s drama film-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages