Lady of Secrets (1936) Poster

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6/10
Ruth Chatterton's "comeback picture" after 2 years off the screen ...
sobaok3 July 2012
Early into the telling of Lady of Secrets we discover that Chatterton's character, Celia, has a troubled past that easily surfaces into emotional outbursts. A Fourth of July parade with marching soldiers outside Celia's window sets her off like a firecracker. "Put on your uniforms and beat your drums!" she cries. "Tell the world that war is glorious. Let's have another one!" When she calms down, and wistfully calls out, "Michael ... Michael ... I've got to learn to forget"--we assume that the man she speaks of is among the dear departed.

Celia's younger sister, Joan (Marian Marsh) punishes the young man she loves, by announcing her engagement to a middle-aged millionaire, David (Otto Kruger). Celia is up front with the fiancé and tells him, nicely, "I don't feel this marriage should take place. If I find I'm right, I shall declare war on it." The simpatico between the talented actors, Chatterton and Kruger, is tangible. So far, Lady of Secrets holds the interest.

Halfway into the film, Celia is left alone to reminisce. We have the misfortune of experiencing a flashback which hammers more nails than necessary into the cross she bears, as well as the film's coffin. Any subtlety that Lady of Secrets had quickly vanishes. Instead, we look aghast as Chatterton is asked to portray Celia as a sixteen-year-old. A younger shade of blonde, giddy innocence, and clever lighting cannot disguise the fact that Baby Jane Hudson (Chatterton was 43) is attempting a comeback. 17 minutes of drudging up things we already suspect, deflates any delicacy the film possessed.

Lady of Secrets attempts to regain the charm, tempo and poignancy it had, but it comes too late. The inflated flashback has become a burdensome anchor, dragging its weight and the film with it.

Even so, I recommend this film for the talents of Chatterton and Kruger. Marian Marsh does well as the naive, younger sister. She and Chatterton got along well during the production, sharing a mutual interest in horses, and taking morning rides together in Griffith Park.
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7/10
One Big Secret
boblipton10 July 2019
Ruth Chatterton has been agoraphobic for twenty years. However, when she meets Otto Kruger in the park, and he mistakes her for a wise woman of experience, he confesses that he's having second thoughts about his proposal to Marian Marsh. He loves her, he says, but she is so young, he's worried she's considering his proposal because she's dazzled. It's only the next day, when Miss Marsh introduces Kruger to her family, that he discovers Miss Chatterton's first secret. She's Miss Marsh's much older sister. Other secrets will follow.

After two years off the screen, Miss Chatterton was making a determined comeback in older roles, and she gives a typically sterling performance -- although a flashback scene to her own youth is played very well, she cannot erase twenty years from her age. Likewise, Mr. Kruger is at his most charming, a charm that he would later use effectively playing villains. Lionel Atwill, as the self-involved, heavy-handed father of the two women is despicable..... but that looks like what the role calls for.

It's the sort of idiot-plotted soap opera in which the conflict exists because no one ever says the truth to the person who needs to hear it. It's not as bad as most of them, because the reasons, for once, make sense in the society in which movie is set. Nonetheless, it would not greatly interest me, were it not for the superb performance of Ruth Chatterton.
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5/10
Chatterton Out-Shone by Marsh
JohnHowardReid13 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
An unsatisfactory mixture of genres brewed up by Paramount Pictures, the 1936 "Lady of Secrets" presents a dramatic film noir flashback (superbly lit by Ted Tetzlaff) within a ho-hum, contemporary, dime-store romance. Lionel Atwill handles the heavy with his usual air of no-nonsense menace, while Lloyd Nolan (of all people) comes across well as the hapless hero, inextricably caught in Atwill's web of deceit. Ruth Chatterton, alas, makes a boring fist of the title role. She, and everyone associated with the movie except the sparkling Marian Marsh and boorishly super-dull Robert Allen, seem super-keen that audiences should penetrate her "secrets" as soon as she makes her entrance. Marion Gering's direction is suitably uninspired.
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8/10
Let's Set the Record Straight................
carving-126 April 2015
This is a good movie. Ruth Chatterton fans would agree that she is brilliant for the part. The incomparable Marian Marsh plays her part as a supporting actress perfectly. We must also mention supporting actors Otto Kruger and Lionel Atwill that give their all. Couple the Four great actors with a memorable storyline and this gives you a movie that holds your attention from the outset. There are unexpected surprises in the script that keeps us off-guard. Expect a very good and natural ending to this movie. The movie was directed well with great dialogue and chemistry between Kruger and Chatterton. Expect a rewarding movie. Bring out the popcorn and enjoy.
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8/10
I'm surprised this isn't a Pre-Code film.
planktonrules25 January 2020
Warning: Spoilers
"Lady of Secrets" is a film that really surprised me. This is because its plot seems right out of the Pre-Code era. However, surprisingly, censors allowed the movie to be shown as is...even though the plot involves premarital sex and an illegitimate baby. Why is this surprising? Because after July, 1934 films were heavily sanitized with the new Production Code and things such as adultery, homosexuality, premarital sex and the like were supposedly taboo!

Celia (Ruth Chatterton) and Joan (Marian Marsh) are supposedly sisters. However, later in the film there is a lengthy flashback where you learn that Celia is in fact Joan's mother! It seems that Celia was in love with a nice young man (Lloyd Nolan) but her manipulative father destroyed the relationship. And, because the father was such an awful man with political ambitions, he forced Celia to raise the baby as her sister...and kept the illegitimacy to herself.

The other plot involves Joan and her becoming engaged with a man (Otto Kruger) after having a falling out with her boyfriend. The problem is that she doesn't love her fiance and Celia knows she must step in to try to stop this wedding. The problem is that in order to keep the family secret that Joan is NOT Celia's sister, the nasty family patriarch (Lionel Atwill) has Celia committed!! Can she possibly escape to stop the wedding?!

This plot is right out of a soap opera...and this really isn't a complaint. This is because while it could all come off as silly and cliched, it was handled so well that it works. The acting is lovely (particularly by Chatterton, Lionel Atwill and Kruger) and the film looks really lovely--with exceptional cinematography and direction. My only complaint is that in hindsight I think the film should have made the flashback a bit longer and the first portion a bit shorter, as it was not nearly as interesting. Still, it's well worth seeing and is very well made.
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Lady with problems
jarrodmcdonald-131 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Ruth Chatterton had finished her contract with Warner Brothers in 1934. She had also divorced former costar George Brent. And after a period of down-time, she was ready to return to the movies. At 43, she was the perfect age for her role in this Columbia melodrama. Playing a society woman plagued by problems would be a cinch for her, since she'd specialized in these types of roles at Paramount early in her film career.

This time, she was playing a woman of mental incapacity, or so her scheming father (Lionel Atwill) would have others believe. The truth is that her character had fallen in love with a man of a lower class (Lloyd Nolan), daddy dearest objected, and after the boyfriend died, that was meant to be the end of it. But unfortunately for Atwill and his wife (Elisabeth Risdon), there was a baby on the way.

The scenes where we see in extended flashback a younger looking Chatterton being romanced by Nolan are a bit of a stretch. Yet this sequence does explain how Chatterton's character might have had a happy life, if not for her father's interference and some very bad luck. It may not be quite believable seeing the actress play a 20 year old version of herself in the past, but she does pull off the necessary emotional aspects of the situation.

Out of the flashback, we learn that now in her early 40s. Chatterton has spent the last two decades pretending to be her young daughter's older sister. This is because after Nolan's death, Atwill and Risdon took responsibility for raising their granddaughter as their own child. Risdon is no longer around, so Atwill has been making all the decisions. Chatterton has never been allowed to live her own life freely or do do what's best for her sister/daughter.

Any opportunity of going off on her own, and Atwill threatens to put Chatterton in a mental institution. In fact, he does end up doing so, when Chatterton decides it's time to tell her "kid sister" (Marian Marsh) the truth about how they're really related. Atwill doesn't want a scandal so he takes preemptive measures to have Chatterton committed, as if that wouldn't cause more tongues to wag in their tight knit community. In a way, the relationship between Atwill and Chatterton in this film reminds me of the one between Charles Laughton and Norma Shearer in THE BARRETTS OF WIMPOLE STREET, though without any incestuous vibes.

Much of the melodrama that plays out is Chatterton breaking free of her father's obsessive control. Also, she avails herself to ensure Marsh has a real future, which includes Marsh marrying a man (Robert Allen) for love not money. Helping Chatterton liberate herself is a kind gentleman (Otto Kruger) about the same age as her, who had previously become engaged to Marsh. Yes, this is a soap opera!

The various story threads resolve as one would expect, with Atwill eventually put in his place. Both Chatterton and Marsh find happiness. However, the writers do not give the two gals conventional closure. Chatterton recants on her earlier statement about being Marsh's mom, since she realizes the young girl cannot handle the truth. So she goes back to playing big sis and walks Marsh down the aisle to her waiting fiancé.
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