A man secretly married to two women feels the pressure of his deceit.A man secretly married to two women feels the pressure of his deceit.A man secretly married to two women feels the pressure of his deceit.
Walter Bacon
- Attorney
- (uncredited)
Ralph Brooks
- Courtroom Spectator
- (uncredited)
John Brown
- Dr. Wallace
- (uncredited)
Jack Chefe
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
Matt Dennis
- Matt Dennis
- (uncredited)
Kem Dibbs
- Tour Bus Driver
- (uncredited)
Ken Drake
- Court Clerk
- (uncredited)
Bess Flowers
- Bus Passenger
- (uncredited)
Lilian Fontaine
- Miss Higgins
- (uncredited)
Jerry Hausner
- Roy Esterly
- (uncredited)
Donald Kerr
- Hollywood Tour Bus Pitchman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
Ida Lupino sparkles as the director and star of this deeply moving romantic drama. The subject of bigamy is unusual for a Hollywood movie of that era and is handled in an intelligent, compassionate way.
Edmond O'Brien convincingly portrays a traveling salesman in love with two women -- his cute, barren, career-minded pre-feminist wife (Joan Fontaine) and a lonely, stunningly beautiful waitress (Lupino) -- neither of whom know of the other's existence.
The direction is excellent and elicits beautifully nuanced performances from the entire cast. O'Brien is portrayed as a decent human being who becomes entangled in a romantic triangle and tries to find a viable solution for everyone. Unfortunately, his well-intentioned plan to be a loving husband to both women comes unstuck when a nit-picking adoption investigator (Edmund Gwenn) probes too deeply.
Although not classic film noir, there is some sharp, insightful dialog. For example, the courtroom scene effectively challenges traditional American values when the judge sympathetically remarks: "If you had simply taken her as your mistress instead of marrying her, you would not be here now."
This is a well-crafted and provocative movie that showcases Lupino's considerable talent as an actress, director, and student of human nature. Ida Lupino was an extraordinary woman, years ahead of her time. Enjoy.
Edmond O'Brien convincingly portrays a traveling salesman in love with two women -- his cute, barren, career-minded pre-feminist wife (Joan Fontaine) and a lonely, stunningly beautiful waitress (Lupino) -- neither of whom know of the other's existence.
The direction is excellent and elicits beautifully nuanced performances from the entire cast. O'Brien is portrayed as a decent human being who becomes entangled in a romantic triangle and tries to find a viable solution for everyone. Unfortunately, his well-intentioned plan to be a loving husband to both women comes unstuck when a nit-picking adoption investigator (Edmund Gwenn) probes too deeply.
Although not classic film noir, there is some sharp, insightful dialog. For example, the courtroom scene effectively challenges traditional American values when the judge sympathetically remarks: "If you had simply taken her as your mistress instead of marrying her, you would not be here now."
This is a well-crafted and provocative movie that showcases Lupino's considerable talent as an actress, director, and student of human nature. Ida Lupino was an extraordinary woman, years ahead of her time. Enjoy.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaNot the first instance of a female star directing herself; earlier examples include Grace Cunard and Mabel Normand. It is, however, believed to be the first sound film directed by its female star.
- GoofsThe movie is about a couple in San Francisco with establishing shots at 1:13 (city landscape) and 1:22 (a city street with a characteristic steep hill). Mr Jordan (Edmund Gwenn) has to travel to LA to do a background check on Harry Graham (Edmond O'Brien). But when he arrives in LA to visit business offices there, the buildings are all on SF style steep streets (see 10:40 and 11:22). They apparently used SF locations for LA locations, and to those who know both cities, it sticks out quite noticeably.
- Quotes
Tour Bus Driver: Behind that big hedge over there, there's a little man who was Santa Claus to the whole world: Edmund Gwenn.
- Crazy creditsThe opening includes the following over two cards, the first presenting the actor name leading into the second, the opening title card: "Edmond O'Brien as The Bigamist"
- ConnectionsFeatured in IMDb Originals: A Salute to Women Directors (2020)
- SoundtracksIt Wasn't the Stars That Thrilled Me
Written by Matt Dennis and Dave Gillam
Performed by Matt Dennis (uncredited)
- How long is The Bigamist?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Der Mann mit zwei Frauen
- Filming locations
- MacArthur Park, Los Angeles, California, USA(meeting place)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $175,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Color
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