One More River

She was condemned by a world that could not understand!

4.7
19341h 28m

Production

Logo for Universal Pictures

A young lady leaves her brutal husband and meets another man on board a ship.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Victorian stage star Mrs Patrick Campbell in scenes from" One More River" (film) 1934

Victorian stage star Mrs Patrick Campbell in scenes from" One More River" (film) 1934

Cast

Photo of Diana Wynyard

Diana Wynyard

Claire Corven

Photo of Frank Lawton

Frank Lawton

Tony Croom

Photo of Jane Wyatt

Jane Wyatt

Dinny Cherrell

Photo of Colin Clive

Colin Clive

Sir Gerald Corven

Photo of Reginald Denny

Reginald Denny

David Dornford

Photo of C. Aubrey Smith

C. Aubrey Smith

General Charwell

Photo of Henry Stephenson

Henry Stephenson

Sir Laurence Mont

Photo of Alan Mowbray

Alan Mowbray

Forsythe

Photo of Kathleen Howard

Kathleen Howard

Lady Charwell

Photo of Tempe Pigott

Tempe Pigott

Mrs. Purdy

Photo of J. C. Fowler

J. C. Fowler

Sir John (Uncredited)

Photo of Gino Corrado

Gino Corrado

Wine Steward (Uncredited)

Photo of Billy Bevan

Billy Bevan

Cloakroom Attendant

Photo of Robert Bolder

Robert Bolder

Juryman (Uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

7/10

"Claire" (Diana Winyard) is married to aspiring politician "Sir Gerald" (Colin Clive) but he's a bit of a brute. It's an incident with a riding crop that finally sends his wife on a cruise where she encounters "Croom" (Frank Lawton). Unfortunately, her husband cannot be seen to not have his wife at his side and so when she flatly refuses a reconciliation, he sets in motion a public divorce that will call the integrity of not just her, but of her new companion into question. Of course, though still entirely platonic, we know that the relationship between the two has burgeoned somewhat - but this isn't really a film about a romance. It's a rather sad indictment of a judicial system that still looked upon a woman as the property of her husband. Not in a feudal sense, but that she might accuse such a prominent and respectable man of ill-treating her was a charge that was always going to fall on deaf ears. It's the ensuing court hearing that brings this to life a bit, with some sparky sparring from lawyers "Brough" (Lionel Atwill), "Forsythe" (Alan Mowbray) and the inquisitive judge (Gilbert Emery) quite cleverly showcasing the one-sidedness of the whole affair. The film also befits from a great cast of supporting favourites who feature sparingly but add depth to a story of state-supported prejudice that Winyard holds together quite well.

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