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Synopsis

Hubby stopped loving Charlotte before her mental breakdown and still doesn’t love her, which takes her until the third act to discover despite it being so obvious from the opening scenes. Living in their spacious Massachusetts home is her stepmother Inez Winthrop and her stepsister. They are monsters who could drive anyone nuts, and were the cause of Charlotte’s initial breakdown. There’s also a new boarder, the gentle pipe-smoking Jake Diamond, a professor colleague of hubby’s. The new professor is a Jewish outsider in the inbred community. He’s the only Jew on the campus, and has received the cold shoulder from the faculty who fear his hiring will lead to more Jews on campus. Arnold takes Jake in to butter-up his department chairmen, who hired Jake. The chairman is retiring at the end of the year and Arnold hopes he’ll receive his recommendation for replacement department head by hiding his own underlying anti-Semitic feelings.

Trouble soon starts again, as the lady monsters know how to push the right buttons to make Charlotte lose it. Her only ally at home is Jake, a fellow outsider. It takes over two hours before a cracking-up Charlotte stops blaming herself and asks why hubby hasn’t gotten her professional help from a private psychiatrist. When Charlotte then forces hubby to answer if he loves her, he resoundingly tells her “No!” after she bites his hand. With the marriage now heading for a divorce and Jake taking a job in NYC, the put upon Charlotte flees to Boston with the gallant boarder coming along as her protector and lover. —Ozu’s World of Movie Reviews

Director

Original

Mervyn LeRoy

The great San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906 was a tragedy for Mervyn Leroy. While he and his father managed to survive, they lost everything they had. To make money, Leroy sold newspapers and entered talent contests as a singer. When he enter vaudeville, his act was LeRoy and Cooper – Two Kids and a Piano. After the act broke up, he contacted his cousin, Jesse L. Lasky, and went to work in Hollywood. He worked in costumes, the film lab and as a camera assistant before becoming a comedy gag writer and part-time actor in silent films. His next step was as a director, and he turned out his first effort, No Place to Go (1927), before scoring his first unqualified hit with Harold Teen (1928). Earning $1,000 per week by the end of that year, he was nicknamed “The Boy Wonder” of Warners, where his pictures were profitable lightweights. His motto, to paraphrase Shakespeare, was “Good stories make good movies.” LeRoy rounded out the decade assigned to more lightweights, such as Naughty… read more

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