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Perfect Understanding (1933)

6.1 | Jan 15, 1933 (US) | Romance, Comedy, Drama | 01:20

A young couple decide to marry under the condition that they agree never to disagree. That agreement is soon put to the test when the husband finds himself attracted to a beautiful young woman.

Featured Crew

Director
Screenplay
Producer
Dialogue, Story
Dialogue
Director of Photography
Production Manager
Music Director

Cast

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Gloria Swanson
Judy Rogers
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Laurence Olivier
Nicholas Randall
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John Halliday
Ivan Ronnson
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Nigel Playfair
Lord Portleigh
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Michael Farmer
George Drayton
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Genevieve Tobin
Kitty Drayton
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Nora Swinburne
Lady Stephanie Fitzmaurice
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O.B. Clarence
Dr. Graham
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Mary Jerrold
Mrs. Graham
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Charles Collum
Sir John Fitzmaurice

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
6 | Jun 13, 2022
I can't help thinking that Cyril Gardner may have done better with this had it been a silent film. There are some stunning photographic scenes and at times, it verges on the travelogue as Gloria Swanson ("Judy") and a very dashing Laurence Olivier ("Nick") meet, fall in love and engage in an early thirties version of a "open marriage". They travel the length and breadth of Europe before he ends up in Cannes visiting a friend whilst she decants home to prepare their flat in London. In Cannes, "Nick" gets a bit sozzled and hooks up with old flame Nora Swinburne ("Lady Fitzmaurice") after getting injured in a high speed (and quite entertaining) power boat race... Riddled with guilt, he goes home and tells his wife. Ostensibly she forgives him, but does she? Does she, really - or is the green eyed monster about to rear it's ugly head? It's got it's fair share of schemers and plenty of rather childish tit-for-tat antics to keep the plot moving - sometimes quite amusingly, and there is definitely a chemistry between the two stars, but the dialogue just clutters things up and the whole thing is just a bit lightweight. Nothing wrong in that, I suppose, but I really wanted more from this pairing...