IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Chorus girl Eadie is determined to marry a millionaire without sacrificing her virtue.Chorus girl Eadie is determined to marry a millionaire without sacrificing her virtue.Chorus girl Eadie is determined to marry a millionaire without sacrificing her virtue.
Lane Chandler
- Cop Arresting Eadie
- (scenes deleted)
Jack Cheatham
- Electrician
- (scenes deleted)
Russell Hopton
- Bert
- (scenes deleted)
Ernie Adams
- Minor Role
- (uncredited)
Norman Ainsley
- Paige's Butler
- (uncredited)
Ben Bard
- Frame-Up Gangster Hugging Eadie
- (uncredited)
Brooks Benedict
- Frame-Up Accomplice
- (uncredited)
Red Berger
- Carpenter
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJean Harlow, the star of the movie, was indeed "The Girl from Missouri", having been born in Kansas City, Missouri on March 3, 1911.
- GoofsWhen Eadie is looking over the house with T.R. and T.R. Jr., they enter a dark room with large windows. When T.R. goes to turn on the lights, the light coming in through the windows goes out a couple beats before the room lights come on.
- Quotes
Kitty Lennihan: Did somebody ask you to sniff a little white powder?
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Big Parade of Comedy (1964)
Featured review
Pretty weak showcase for the star who manages to shine brightly despite the ordinariness of the script. The story is cliché and has been told with more imagination elsewhere.
It helps that she is pitted against a top rank actor like Lionel Barrymore as her protagonist. Their flinty interchanges are some of the best scenes in this lackluster affair. The other standout in the cast is Patsy Kelly who makes a peach of a sidekick for the brassy Jean. Her easy virtue is used to counterpoint the heroine's chastity in a way that could get around the censors of the day.
The actor who is out of place, although he fulfills his role adequately, is Franchot Tone. A fine actor in the right pictures, dramas such as Five Graves to Cairo and the like, Metro for some reason used him mostly as a colorless effete mannequin for their leading ladies. Jean and he are oil and water, she was always more comfortable with an earthy man like Gable or Spencer Tracy.
One last thing, what a lousy title for any movie but for a Jean Harlow movie, ridiculous. For some reason the powers that be had a hard time coming up with an appropriate title. Shot under the title Eadie Was a Lady, then changed to 100% Pure then Born to Be Kissed and released in some areas under that title, while none of them is great any would have made more sense than the lemon they ended settling on.
It helps that she is pitted against a top rank actor like Lionel Barrymore as her protagonist. Their flinty interchanges are some of the best scenes in this lackluster affair. The other standout in the cast is Patsy Kelly who makes a peach of a sidekick for the brassy Jean. Her easy virtue is used to counterpoint the heroine's chastity in a way that could get around the censors of the day.
The actor who is out of place, although he fulfills his role adequately, is Franchot Tone. A fine actor in the right pictures, dramas such as Five Graves to Cairo and the like, Metro for some reason used him mostly as a colorless effete mannequin for their leading ladies. Jean and he are oil and water, she was always more comfortable with an earthy man like Gable or Spencer Tracy.
One last thing, what a lousy title for any movie but for a Jean Harlow movie, ridiculous. For some reason the powers that be had a hard time coming up with an appropriate title. Shot under the title Eadie Was a Lady, then changed to 100% Pure then Born to Be Kissed and released in some areas under that title, while none of them is great any would have made more sense than the lemon they ended settling on.
- How long is The Girl from Missouri?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $511,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 15 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Girl from Missouri (1934) officially released in India in English?
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