Appointment for Love

What a lovely Bride! She even gave him the key to her apartment...Then never came home!

5.4
19411h 29m

Production

Logo for Universal Pictures

Charming Andre Cassil woos physician Jane Alexander and the two impulsively get married. The honeymoon ends very quickly when Jane voices her progressive views on marriage which include the two having separate apartments. Andre then tries to make his wife jealous in order to lure her into his bedroom.

Cast

Photo of Charles Boyer

Charles Boyer

Andre Cassil

Photo of Margaret Sullavan

Margaret Sullavan

Jane Alexander

Photo of Rita Johnson

Rita Johnson

Nancy Benson

Photo of Eugene Pallette

Eugene Pallette

George Hastings

Photo of Ruth Terry

Ruth Terry

Edith Meredith

Photo of Reginald Denny

Reginald Denny

Michael Dailey

Photo of Roman Bohnen

Roman Bohnen

Dr. Gunther

Photo of Aileen Pringle

Aileen Pringle

Nurse Gibbons (uncredited)

Photo of Anne Nagel

Anne Nagel

Jennifer (uncredited)

Photo of Charles Lane

Charles Lane

Smith (uncredited)

Photo of Erskine Sanford

Erskine Sanford

Hastings' Butler (uncredited)

Photo of Romaine Callender

Romaine Callender

Mr. Waterbury (uncredited)

Photo of Winifred Harris

Winifred Harris

Miss Tragler (uncredited)

Photo of James Bush

James Bush

Dr. Wade (uncredited)

Photo of Doris Lloyd

Doris Lloyd

Woman Spectator (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

“Jane” (Margaret Sullavan) falls asleep during one of the plays of “André” (Charles Boyer) and in the kerfuffle that ensued, he assumes she is ill, discovers that she is a doctor and engages in a whirlwind romance that ends up with them married. They are both busy people, though, so it takes some time before they are able to get together for the first time as a married couple and then to his horror, he realises that she is very much an independent spirit. She takes an apartment on the twenty-second floor of his building, and with him on the seventeenth she proposes - much to the bemusement of the elevator boy - to visit him, or he her, from time to time. He’s having none of this but hasn’t really a clue how to rectify matters. Both are egged on by their friends and after a while they wonder just what ever possessed them to wed in the first place. Is it all doomed to failure, or might there be room for an accommodation - perhaps on the 20th floor?  It’s the supporting efforts from Eugene Pallette and Reginald Denny that raise the odd smile here, but I didn’t find there to be very much chemistry between Boyer and Sullavan and the original joke starts to wear thin too quickly. Thereafter the scenarios are all just a bit repetitive and barring the odd quip there is a great deal of dialogue that doesn’t really advance the plot very much. It’s not so much a battle of the sexes, more a slight skirmish that passes the time effortlessly enough, but is unlikely to ever merit a second visit.

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