A man's heavy drinking drives away his family and threatens to destroy his relationship with his little daughter.A man's heavy drinking drives away his family and threatens to destroy his relationship with his little daughter.A man's heavy drinking drives away his family and threatens to destroy his relationship with his little daughter.
Sheila Bromley
- June Manners
- (as Sheila Manners)
Frank Ellis
- Card Player
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis film is sometimes confused with D. W. Griffith's 1931 talkie "The Struggle." In 1940, a distributor named B. A. Mills of B&M Pictures considered re-releasing the Griffith film under the new title. He dropped the idea when informed of the heavy Code cuts that would be required. (Source: March 7, 1940 letter from F. S. Harmon in the MPPDA/MPAA files at the motion picture Academy).
- ConnectionsReferenced in Traveling Saleslady (1935)
Featured review
1st watched 2/18/2007 - 6 out of 10(Dir-William O'Connor): Honest portrayal of alcoholism and it's effects in this rarely seen film. The title character, a family man named Joe Morgan, has a daughter who is very sick and visit's the new doctor in town at the local hotel and bar. The only problem is he steps his foot into the bar and orders a drink(his family history is such that one drink will start a cycle that he won't be able to stop). Up to this point, he is seen as a hard-working, family-loving man but things get worse as he frequents the bars day after day. After a few months, he is to the point where he needs the doctor worse than his daughter as she is getting better under his care. He loses his job and all his money in a card game and soon he is spending more time at the bar than at home. There are a couple un-forgettable scenes where his daughter visits him in the bar asking him to come home because she misses him so much that is heart-breaking(although the 2nd scene makes it a little over-done). This movie started as a portrait of a sick girl and became a portrait of a sick man who is only temporarily won over by the love of his daughter. The movie doesn't try to explain away the problem, it just presents it. He still loves his daughter and his family but he is taken away from it by his alcoholism. It also doesn't try to candy-coat things with a Hollywood-type ending, it just ends(actually on a pretty negative note). The only real negative to the movie is it's attempt to throw in minor scenes of comedy and a very slight portrayal of the effect on the family but these things really don't diminish from the overall impact of the movie.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 12 minutes
- Color
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Top Gap
By what name was Ten Nights in a Bar-Room (1931) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer