Damaged Lives: Difference between revisions

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==Plot summary==
==Plot summary==
The film involves an extramarital encounter that nearly leads the wife of the main character into killing herself and her husband.
The film involves an extramarital encounter that nearly leads the wife of the main character into killing herself and her husband.

A boss insists that a young executive, with an important job and a long term girlfriend, go out with him to a party and while out at the party he sleeps with a young wealthy woman, and contracts [[syphilis]] from her. The girlfriend is so upset that she commits suicide.


===Differences from play===
===Differences from play===

Revision as of 06:42, 10 December 2011

For the 1914 silent film based on the same play, see Damaged Goods (1914 film).
Damaged Lives
Directed byEdgar G. Ulmer
Written byEugène Brieux (play Les Avariés)
Donald Davis (screenplay)
Edgar G. Ulmer (adaptation)
Produced byJ. J. Allen (producer)
Maxwell Cohn (producer)
Nat Cohn (producer)
StarringSee below
CinematographyAllen G. Siegler
Edited byOtto Meyer
Release date
22 May 1933
Running time
61 minutes
CountriesCanada, USA
LanguageEnglish

Damaged Lives (1933) is a Canadian / American exploitation film produced by Columbia Pictures and directed by Edgar G. Ulmer. The film is based on the French play Les Avariés (1901) by Eugène Brieux, about a couple that contracts a venereal disease.

The film is also known as The Shocking Truth (American reissue title). IMDB says this was filmed at General Service Studios. The final The End title on the Internet Archive print says it was an Educational Film Exchanges, Inc. release.

Another film based on the Brieux play, titled Damaged Goods (1937) was directed by Phil Goldstone with a totally different cast, was released by Grand National Pictures, and was closer to an exploitation film about premarital sex without mentioning venereal disease.[1]

Plot summary

The film involves an extramarital encounter that nearly leads the wife of the main character into killing herself and her husband.

A boss insists that a young executive, with an important job and a long term girlfriend, go out with him to a party and while out at the party he sleeps with a young wealthy woman, and contracts syphilis from her. The girlfriend is so upset that she commits suicide.

Differences from play

Cast

Soundtrack

Production

Filmed in 1933, this cautionary tale was produced under the name Weldon Pictures, because Columbia did not want to be associated with the topic of the film.[citation needed] Along with the controversial subject matter, this is also noteworthy for containing one of the earliest filmed nude scenes in a sequence where a group of fun-loving women strip naked and go skinny dipping.

References

External links