Laughing Sinners

Laughing Sinners

1931 "America's Dancing Daughter in a Salvation Army Uniform-the dramatic triumph of her career."
Laughing Sinners
Laughing Sinners

Laughing Sinners

5.6 | 1h12m | NR | en | Drama

Ivy Stevens is a cafe entertainer in love with a shifty salesman who deserts her. In attempting to commit suicide, she is saved by Carl, a Salvation Army officer. Encouraged by Carl, Ivy joins the Salvation Army. When her old flame re-enters her life, Ivy finds she is still attracted and begins another affair with him.

View More
Rent / Buy
amazon
Buy from $19.99 Rent from $4.99
AD

WATCH FREEFOR 30 DAYS

All Prime Video
Cancel anytime

Watch Now
5.6 | 1h12m | NR | en | Drama , Romance | More Info
Released: May. 30,1931 | Released Producted By: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

Ivy Stevens is a cafe entertainer in love with a shifty salesman who deserts her. In attempting to commit suicide, she is saved by Carl, a Salvation Army officer. Encouraged by Carl, Ivy joins the Salvation Army. When her old flame re-enters her life, Ivy finds she is still attracted and begins another affair with him.

...... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Cast

Joan Crawford , Neil Hamilton , Clark Gable

Director

Cedric Gibbons

Producted By

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer ,

AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.

Watch Now

Trailers & Images

Reviews

lugonian LAUGHING SINNERS (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1931), directed by Harry Beaumont, is a dramatic story that may contain some sinners in the cast, but in the most part, are not laughing, except for a scene involving a drunken party. The movie in question happens to be a new title to a Broadway play "Torch Song" by Kenyon Nicholson, starring Joan Crawford in her mission of mercy. Not as well known as one would expect, it's more notable for being Crawford's rematch under the direction of Harry Beaumont from DANCE, FOOLS, DANCE (1931), along with actor on the rise by the name of Clark Gable, elevated in the cast from seventh in the previous film to third in this latest edition. While Gable played mean tough guys in such 1931 releases as THE PAINTED DESERT (Pathe), NIGH NURSE (Warner Brothers), THE FINGER POINTS (First National), and reaching the peak of his career treating Norma Shearer rough in A FREE SOUL, LAUGHING SINNERS offers Gable an opportunity playing a nice guy as he did earlier in THE EASIEST WAY (1931), an image he would soon endure through much of his career from this point forward.The story opens as a Pembroke train station on a rainy night where Ivy Stevens (Joan Crawford) runs to and on board the passing train where she meets with Howard Palmer (Neil Hamilton), a traveling salesman whom she has known for two years. This time she joins him and his fellow salesmen, Fred Geer (Roscoe Karns), "the sardine king," and Mike (Cliff Edwards), the ukulele singer, to their next stop. Spending time with Howard, Ivy acquires a cabaret job singing and dancing for its patrons, where she has become close friends with an older showgirl, Ruby (Marjorie Rambeau). During a performance where Ivy dedicates a song to the man she loves, Howard, it is Howard who then writes her a farewell note as he is about to run off and marry Estelle, the bosses daughter. Totally distressed and betrayed, Ivy takes a walk to jump off a bridge. Her chances of suicide are stopped by the passing Carl Loomis (Clark Gable), a Salvation Army man, who talks her out of destroying her precious gift of life. During the course of a year, Ivy, now a member of the Salvation Army, and winning new friends, meets up with Howard again. Although still married, he wants to win her back and return to her life of sin. Others in the cast include: Guy Kibbee (Cass Wheeler, a mortician salesman of "underground novelty" a role Kibbee reprised from the stage); Gertrude Short (Edna); George Cooper (Joe); George Marion (Humpty, the cabaret manager);, Clara Blandick, and the dark haired, thin faced Mary Ann Jackson from those early "Our Gang" comedies for Hal Roach as the little girl in the picnic scene at Lincoln Park.As in DANCE, FOOLS, DANCE, Crawford displays her singing and dancing ability with her night club singing, first with her "Red Hot Dance" dressed up like a bearded hillbilly in overalls and false nose; and a solo torch song spotlight singing "What Can I Do? I Love That Man" by Martin Brones and Arthur Freed.A major change in Gable's recent villainous performances to a wider range of his newfound character. Still minus his famous mustache, Gable again gathers much attention in his second of eight collaborations opposite Crawford that would last until another religious themed/prison story, STRANGE CARGO (1940). Neil Hamilton, resumes his second lead performance as he did in other MGM productions, and Cliff Edwards, who had a sizable role in DANCE, FOOLS, DANCE, has little to do this time around. Other than her dancing and her character part of the Salvation Army crew, the big surprise here is finding the dark-haired brunette Crawford becoming a dark-haired blonde.LAUGHING SINNERS succeeds mostly through its casting and little on its direction, but overall, a passable 72 minutes of betrayal and redemption story from a woman's point of view. Available on home video and DVD as well as broadcasts on Turner Classic Movies, especially during either Crawford or Gable tributes and festivals. (**1/2)
mark.waltz If you want to see Joan Crawford in fake nose and beard dancing up a storm, then banging a drum to collect sinners a la Sarah Brown in "Guys and Dolls", then this is your movie. She goes from nightclub performer involved with "Batman's" Neil Hamilton to the very religious Clark Gable for no apparent reason other than the fact that he is a hunk. Hamilton dumps her to become respectable then comes back when she apparently finds salvation. Who would you choose? Of Crawford and Gables' many pairings together, this is the poorest of the lot. Marjorie Rambeau is somewhat amusing as a hardboiled pal of Crawfords, and Cliff Edwards and Guy Kibbee offer alright performances in underdeveloped roles, but the whole story (what there is) is simply no laughing matter.
tavm Laughing Sinners marks the first time Clark Gable appeared in a movie starring Joan Crawford. Crawford is the only name above the title and Gable is listed third in the cast list after Neil Hamilton (who would be better known as Commissioner Gordon in the "Batman" TV series). Crawford is a singer/dancer who falls for the traveling salesman Hamilton. He abandons her while she sings a love song for him. Gable plays a Salvation Army man who saves Joan from jumping off a bridge and convinces her to join. While she performs on a street corner, Hamilton sees Crawford and convinces her to stay in his hotel room. I'll stop right there and mention who else is in this movie: Guy Kibbee, Roscoe Karns, Cliff Edwards before he became the voice of Jiminy Cricket in Pinocchio, and, in a nice picnic scene with Gable and Crawford, Our Ganger Mary Ann Jackson, hair bob and all. There are some entertaining musical numbers danced by Crawford including an amusing sequence of Joan dressing as a farmer with funny nose and beard. Other than that and the picnic scenes, this is a pretty talky picture that reveals its stage origins too clearly toward the end so you may feel bored after a while. Still, an interesting curio for fans of all the above players.
ccthemovieman-1 Like a lot of early '30s film, I found this a pretty interesting short (72 minutes) story. This one is about a chorus girl-type who gets jilted, hooks up with a Salvation Army man, then is enticed back to the old sinful ways for a night with the man who jilted her and finally realizes she is better off with the good guy and the good morals.This is an early look at Joan Crawford, who is blonde here with huge eyes. Clark Gable is sans mustache and really looks young. Neil Hamilton, the third lead, is the same man who went on to play Commissioner Gordon in the Batman TV series three decades later. In here, he's the pagan bad guy.This film goes a long way in portraying traveling salesmen as morally bankrupt people. Now why would they do that?!!