Русские видео

Сейчас в тренде

Иностранные видео


Скачать с ютуб Robert Taylor, Loretta Young & Basil Rathbone in "Private Number" (1936) - feat. Paul Harvey в хорошем качестве

Robert Taylor, Loretta Young & Basil Rathbone in "Private Number" (1936) - feat. Paul Harvey 2 месяца назад


Если кнопки скачивания не загрузились НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса savevideohd.ru



Robert Taylor, Loretta Young & Basil Rathbone in "Private Number" (1936) - feat. Paul Harvey

17-year-old Ellen Neal (Loretta Young) is looking for a job as a servant. At the wealthy Winfield family home she meets servant Gracie (Patsy Kelly), and the family's butler, Thomas Wroxton (Basil Rathbone). Wroxton rules the household staff like a tyrant, demanding a large cut of their weekly wages as his "commission". Wroxton agrees to give Ellen a month's trial and tells her to report to him only. Ellen then meets Mrs. Winfield (Marjorie Gateson) and charms her so much that she is asked to become her personal maid. The Winfield's son, Richard (Robert Taylor) returns home from college and meets Ellen at a party, having no clue she's a servant. Later, Gracie and her boyfriend, Smiley Watson (Joe E. Lewis), take Ellen on a double date, setting her up with a blind date. A riot breaks out. Ellen flees and meets a man willing to give her a ride home, Coakley (Monroe Owsley). But both are arrested. Wroxton bails her out of jail. On a family trip to Maine, Ellen finds out that Richard is set to marry another woman. Despite this, Richard tells her that she is his only romantic interest and that he doesn't care that she is a servant. He suggests they marry, but she thinks it would be a mistake. Later, Wroxton asks Ellen to marry him. She rejects him. A fellow servant tells him that she knows Ellen is pregnant and has secretly married Richard. Mr. Winfield wants to terminate her employment, but Mrs. Winfield expresses how much she likes Ellen. Gracie arrives and blurts out that Ellen and Richard are married. Frustrated and pregnant, Ellen storms out without taking any money the family offered. Richard searches for her. Ellen has her baby alone and lives on a farm now. Gracie and Smiley come to visit her, but two men show up and hand her a letter detailing how Richard wants to annul their marriage on grounds of fraud. Smiley calls over his attorney, Stapp (John Miljan). Richard has no clue the letter exists since it was sent by his family without his knowledge. Mr. Winfield shows Richard that Ellen is paying for an apartment and is spending large sums of money in his name as Mrs. Winfield, furthering their suspicion that she is a gold digger. The whole scandal is sensationalized in the local newspaper. Richard finds Ellen and he signs the annulment papers after realizing that she had in fact been arrested before. Stapp prepares Coakley as their witness. Ellen testifies that she is not a gold digger and that she just loves Richard and wants to protect their baby. Coakley is called by the prosecutor as a witness. He lies about what happened. Stapp calls for him to be arrested. Panicked, Coakley and the prosecution team meet and it is revealed that Wroxton paid him to switch sides and to lie for his testimony. Richard punches Wroxton and asks the court to throw out the case. He then gives a speech about how much he loves Ellen and that he believed she was innocent the entire time. The couple are finally reconciled. A 1936 American Black & White drama film (a/k/a "Secret Interlude") directed by Roy Del Ruth, associate producer Raymond Griffith, written by William M. Conselman and Gene Markey, based on Cleves Kinkead's play "Common Clay" (1915), cinematography by J. Peverell Marley, starring Loretta Young, Robert Taylor, Basil Rathbone, Patsy Kelly, Joe E. Lewis, Marjorie Gateson, Paul Harvey, Jane Darwell, Paul Stanton, John Miljan, Monroe Owsley, Billy Bevan, George Irving, and May Beatty. Early in the picture, Loretta Young is discussing a blind date with Patsy Kelly. Patsy says that a corporal "was as handsome as Gable, and Gable ain't bad!" Loretta replies, "Oh I'll say not!" When filming "The Call of the Wild" the year before this film was released, Loretta had an affair with Clark Gable, leading to the birth of their daughter, Judy Lewis. Audiences at the time didn't realize the irony since this secret affair wasn't made public until years later. Cleves Kinkead's play originally was copyrighted as "Hush Money" in 1914. It opened January 1915 in Boston, Massachusetts, on 26 August 1915 moved to Broadway in New York City and closed in May 1916 after 316 performances. The cast included Mabel Colcord, Jane Cowl and Robert McWade. It had previously been made into a film of the same name in 1930. Following the more rigorous enforcement of the Motion Picture Production Code after 1934, many of the more salacious elements of the earlier film were left out. The Hollywood Reporter deemed it "a love story that hits romantic high for the year, bringing together as a modern Cinderella and her prince, Loretta Young and Robert Taylor... The combination spells box office returns in the smash category. Its appeal is especially to women, who will give it unlimited word-of-mouth boosting, but it is candy entertainment for any man with a spark of romance in his make-up". This is entertaining as a vehicle for the ascendant Robert Taylor and lovely Loretta Young, and Variety called it "solid entertainment for the masses"

Comments