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Till We Meet Again Page Fletcher

1940 romance pic

'Til Nosotros Encounter Once again
Tilwemeetagain lobby.jpg

Antechamber bill of fare depicting Merle Oberon (left) and Geraldine Fitzgerald

Directed by Edmund Goulding
Anatole Litvak
Uncredited:
William Keighley
William Chiliad. Howard
Written by Robert Lord
Screenplay by Warren Duff
Produced past Hal B. Wallis (exec. prod.)
Starring Merle Oberon
George Brent
Pat O'Brien
Cinematography Tony Gaudio
Edited by Ralph Dawson
Music by Heinz Roemheld

Production
company

Warner Bros.

Distributed past Warner Bros.

Release engagement

April 20, 1940

Running time

99 minutes
Country Usa
Language English

' Til Nosotros Run into Again is a 1940 romance moving-motion picture show directed by Edmund Goulding and Anatole Litvak and starring Merle Oberon and George Brent every bit ii doomed, star-crossed lovers. It is a remake of the 1932 movie 1 Manner Passage and itself was remade into the 1954 Mexican 3-D movie El valor de vivir.

Plot [edit]

Full strangers Dan Hardesty and Joan Ames meet by chance in a crowded bar in Hong Kong when she admires the "Paradise cocktail" that Dan has just concocted. He asks for another drinking glass and pours half of his potable into it. After they drink, he breaks off the bowl of his glass and places the stem on the bar; she follows conform, and he helps her to identify the stem of her drinking glass beyond his. Dan leaves the bar and is promptly handcuffed past Lieutenant Steve Burke of the San Francisco law. Burke has spent a twelvemonth chasing Dan, a convicted murderer who jumped off a train on his mode to San Quentin to be hanged.

He takes Dan to an bounding main liner for the journeying to San Francisco. As they are boarding, Dan jumps into the water (with Steve even and then handcuffed to him). He takes the central to the handcuffs from Steve'south pocket and frees himself. He starts to swim away, but turns back to rescue non-swimmer Steve earlier making his getaway. Dan is recaptured and put aboard the ship.

"Rocky" Rockingham T. Rockingham (Frank McHugh, reprising his role in ane Style Passage) scrambles aboard at the last minute. Joan is also a passenger. When she collapses, the ship'due south dr. learns of her fatal heart condition, simply she plans to keep going "around the little world."

One time they are underway, Steve allows Dan the freedom of the transport. In the bar, Dan encounters Rocky, an former friend, and asks for his help. Joan enters the bar, shares some other Paradise with Dan, and their courting begins.

Likewise aboard is another of Dan'south one-fourth dimension friends, the "Comtesse de Bresac". The Comtesse is actually Liz, a con artistic person trained past Dan when she was young. She is still a niggling in love with him. When she learns of Dan'south predicament, she keeps a smitten Steve occupied and secretly empties his gun of bullets. A romance develops between the mismatched pair.

As they near Honolulu, Steve overhears Joan and Dan plan to spend the side by side day aground. He takes Dan to the brig. Dan picks up a canteen to knock him out, simply Steve shoots it (he had checked his gun and reloaded it). Liz slips Steve some sleeping pills and frees Dan. When he is spotted by Joan, he postpones his "concern business organisation" to go along their outing. After, on the mode back, Dan stops the rented motorcar before they attain the pier. However, when Joan collapses, Dan carries her back aboard. The ship'southward physician tells Dan virtually Joan's prognosis. Liz tells a stunned Dan that he however has fourth dimension to go away. From the doorway, Steve says, "No, he doesn't."

On the last night, everyone on shipboard is partying. Liz asks Burke why he has been avoiding her since Honolulu. He reveals that he got a cable about her. She tries to bribe him, to no avail. However, he is all the same attracted to her, saying at that place is less room between a cop and a countess than a cop and a con. In the bar, Dan and Joan bid each other goodbye, sharing one final Paradise cocktail and promising to encounter in Mexico Metropolis at the Palace Bar on New Yr'due southward Eve.

The side by side morning in San Francisco, the assistant purser tips a paper reporter that Dan spent a lot of fourth dimension with Joan. The reporter tricks his mode into Joan'southward stateroom and reveals Dan's fate to her. Frantic, she rushes out and finds Dan on deck. They bid each other adieu, each concealing what they know virtually the other.

In the Palace Bar in United mexican states Urban centre, the crowd is celebrating New Year'south. Two bartenders hear the sound of drinking glass breaking and plough to detect a pair of glasses with the stems crossed on the bar.

Product [edit]

The picture bear witness was based on the story past Robert Lord that was the basis for I Manner Passage. Lord won an Academy Award in 1933 in the category All-time Writing, Original Story for the earlier motion picture show.

The same basic musical theme is used in both films. Leo F. Forbstein, Music Managing director on this motion picture, was Vitaphone Orchestra Usher for One Way Passage.[1] [ii] Ray Heindorf did the orchestral arrangements.

Reception [edit]

Variety staff praised the film, observing that although it was a remake, it "nonetheless has enough of sock left" and that the 2 leads did "an excellent job. Oberon's sincere and center-filling performance equals that of her predecessor in the part, while Brent comes inside at least a shade of Powell's superb portrayal."[3]

The New York Times critic Benjamin Crisler disagreed, writing, "It may be that quite a number of people, touched by the synthetic tragedy of it, volition mistake ''Til We Come across Again' for art, but the fact remains that information technology is just a very sad remake of 'I Way Passage'".[4]

Cast [edit]

  • Merle Oberon equally Joan Ames
  • George Brent as Dan Hardesty
  • Pat O'Brien as Police Lieutenant Steve Burke
  • Geraldine Fitzgerald equally Bonny Coburn, a newlywed fellow passenger and friend of Joan'southward
  • Binnie Barnes every bit la Comtesse de Bresac
  • Frank McHugh equally Rockingham T. Rockingham
  • Eric Blore as Sir Harold Pinchard, a shipboard victim of the Comtesse and Rockingham
  • Henry O'Neill equally Dr. Cameron, the send'due south dr.
  • George Reeves as Jimmy Coburn, Bonny'southward husband
  • Frank Wilcox every bit Frank, Assistant Purser
  • Doris Lloyd every bit Louise, Joan'southward maid

References [edit]

  1. ^ "'Til We Come up across Again (1940) - Music - TCM.com". Turner Classic Movies . Retrieved 2019-12-08 .
  2. ^ "One Way Passage (1932) - Music - TCM.com". Turner Archetype Movies . Retrieved 2019-12-08 .
  3. ^ "'Til We Meet Over again". Diversity. January 1, 1940. Retrieved December viii, 2019.
  4. ^ B. R. Crisler (Apr twenty, 1940). "The Screen; Til Nosotros Encounter Again,' With Merle Oberon, O'Brien, Brent, Opens at Strand--3 New Foreign Films" . The New York Times.

External links [edit]

  • 'Til Nosotros Come across Over again at IMDb
  • 'Til We Run into Once again at the TCM Motion picture Database
  • 'Til Nosotros Come across Over again at AllMovie

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