The Divorcée

The Divorcée

By Robert Z. Leonard

  • Genre: Romance
  • Release Date: 2008-03-04
  • Advisory Rating: NR
  • Runtime: 1h 22min
  • Director: Robert Z. Leonard
  • Production Company: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • Production Country: United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 9.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 3.99
6.2/10
6.2
From 47 Ratings

Description

Norma Shearer earned an Academy Award for playing the not so gay divorcée in this pre-Code offering based, loosely, on Ex-Wife, a 1929 Ursula Parrott novel. Shearer is Jerry, a socialite who marries handsome Ted (Chester Morris) after a whirlwind courtship. But Ted is not exactly the faithful type and after three years of what she in her naïveté considered marital bliss, Jerry learns of his affair with Janice (Mary Doran). "It meant nothing," Ted assures her but Jerry is devastated and decides to investigate adultery for herself by sleeping with Ted's best friend, Don (Robert Montgomery). When she discovers that the old double-standard still applies, Jerry announces that henceforth Ted, and only Ted, is no longer welcome in her bed. After a string of lovers who mean little or nothing to her, Jerry falls for an old flame, Paul (Conrad Nagel), but when she understands the effect their affair has on Paul's poor disfigured wife, Dorothy (Helen Johnson, aka Judith Wood), Jerry returns to Ted, who still loves her despite it all.

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Reviews

  • A modern woman in the 30s

    5
    By M_Burkhardt
    Norma Shearer was a liberated woman decades before feminism was conceived. Cast aside the dated aspects of the film to revel in the power actresses displayed in Hollywood before the Hayes Code crackdown.
  • The Divorcee

    4
    By ruthiej
    All's well that ends well! Being a Norma Shearer fan, it's one of my favorites. I love that even that long ago, they bring up the old double standard. But most of all, I love the clothes, the art deco apartment even down to the dishes. Besides, even though the subject is marital discord, there is civility in it that is refreshing in the world we live in. Must be why we like old movies.

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