Children of Divorce
United States
507 people rated A young flapper tricks her childhood sweetheart into marrying her. He really loves another woman, but didn't marry her for fear the marriage would end in divorce, like his parents'. Complications ensue.
Drama
Romance
Cast (18)
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User Reviews
Asmae Charifi
29/05/2023 13:53
source: Children of Divorce
Netra Timsina
23/05/2023 06:41
Early in the 20th century, divorced ex-pat Americans living in Paris dropped their unwanted children at the local convents and visited them only when their busy schedules permitted. Kitty and Jean were among these lonely children, and the pair quickly become friends. One day, a young boy, Edward, who was also a child of divorced parents, appears, and both girls are smitten with him. Years pass, and the three meet up again in the U.S., where a romantic triangle develops, which expands into a square, when a gold-digging prince enters the scene. "Children of Divorce," which was written by Adela Rogers St. Johns from a novel by Owen McMahon Johnson, is a sudsy melodrama, whose dated appeal lies, not in the story, but in the stars.
The "It" girl herself plays the adult Kitty; vivacious Clara Bow is wonderful as the sexually aggressive woman, who needs to marry well. Jean, Kitty's protector as a child and now described as the richest woman in America, has grown into lovely Esther Ralston. Ralston, who seems to have been largely forgotten, gives a naturalistic performance as a caring understanding woman, who is capable of self sacrifice. However, Jean's money is like catnip to the impoverished Prince Ludovico, played by Einar Hanson, and his uncle, Duke Henri, played by Norman Trevor. But the Prince and his uncle have to compete with tall lanky Gary Cooper of the piercing blue eyes, who captivates both Jean and Kitty. As the adult Edward, Cooper has it all: startling good looks, wealth, education, and lack of ambition. Besides the three stars, Hedda Hopper as Kitty's self-absorbed mother also makes an impression, although the rest of the cast has unfortunately fallen into obscurity.
Besides the melodramatic plot, a few aspects of this silent film may be off putting to general audiences. While the sets are convincing, they are so tall they disappear into the clouds, and the gargantuan doors dwarf the performers. Although a few flourishes of the grand style intrude, the acting is generally natural and underplayed. The film is short, even shorter if the inter-titles are taken into account, and director Frank Lloyd maintains a good pace. However, "Children of Divorce" will likely appeal primarily to silent-film buffs. Already attuned to both the limitations and the pleasures of pre-sound movies, aficionados of silent cinema can overlook the unconvincing drama and relish the luminous stars. Indeed, they had faces then, and Clara Bow, Gary Cooper, and Esther Ralston provide ample evidence herein.
Dzidzor
23/05/2023 06:41
'Children of Divorce' is about a love quadrangle: childhood friends Kitty (Clara Bow) and Jean (Esther Ralston) on the one side, Vico (Einar Hanson) and Ted (Gary Cooper) on the other. Kitty and Vico love each other, as do Jean and Ted, but what looks straightforward is a receipe for tragedy. This is because Kitty has been taught by her mother that a woman needs to marry wealth - at least when she marries for the first time - and unfortunately Vico is not wealthy. He is the scion of impoverished (that's a relative term) European nobility and expected to do his duty by his family and marry wealth himself. Ted is wealthy and is altogether a bit of a playboy. Tragedy strikes when Jean puts off marrying him until he has got a proper job. Kitty uses the time in order to organise a raucous party, and on the morning after Ted wakes up to discover that, in a drunken stupor, he has married her rather than his true love Jean.
The highlights of the picture are Clara Bow and Gary Cooper. Cooper playes his role evenhandedly. He is remarkable rather because of his later stardom than because his acting here is particularly outstanding. Bow, by contrast, is outstanding. She starts out as a careless flapper and ends as a desparately unhappy woman who sees suicide as her only way out, and every detail and moment of this transition is absolutely convincing. The plot is obviously pretty convoluted and heavy on morals. It does lay it on rather thick, I must say. The viewers are clearly expected to take away the message that divorce was to be avoided at all costs (Kitty's, Jean's and Ted's parents are all divorced, and it is Kitty's divorced mother whose idea of marriage is at the bottom of all the trouble). I am generally no fan of films that try to educate the audience in such a way, but in this case Clara Bow's performance makes up for the deficiencies, at least to a very large extent. All in all, the upsides of 'Children of Divorce' (meaning her and Cooper) outweigh the downsides by quite a bit. In sum: good film.
Jeffery Baffery
23/05/2023 06:41
The Frank Lloyd directed film, April 1927's "Children of Divorce," opens at a Catholic divorce colony where recently-single parents who can't afford to raise kids by themselves drop off their children on a temporary basis. The children actors playing the three leads form a close bond, with Ted (Cooper) promising to marry Jean (Ralston) when they grow up while Kitty (Bow) looks on. But as adults, flapper Jean gets Ted drunk at a party and marries him, much to the consternation of intended lover Jean.
Ralston claims being on the set with the 22-year-old Clara was both enjoyable and scandalous. She recalls Bow describing in detail where and how she and her actor boyfriend Cooper made love, causing cast members to experience a red glow on their faces listening to such escapades. Bow also saved Cooper's budding career by intervening on his behalf when Lloyd threatened to release the young actor for constantly not remembering his movements in a early scene. Cooper's visibility in "Children of Divorce" catapulted his screen presence, launching him towards Hollywood stardom.
As for Clara, "Children of Divorce" provided her with one of the most dramatic scenes in her growing portfolio. Near the film's ending, Bow's character swallows poison because she realizes she can't marry a prince. She lays in bed comforted by her childhood friend Jean, who forgives her for her past indiscretions. The dramatic sequence's atmosphere required more than director Lloyd provided. So Paramount brought in young director, Josef von Sternberg, who was gaining a reputation for his expert lighting, to reshoot Kitty's final moments. His genius was to provide the shadow of a curtain sweeping over her as the nun lowers the wondow drape, emphasizing the end of Kitty's tempestuous life.
✨Amal_Jnoox✨👑🇦🇪
23/05/2023 06:41
Children Of Divorce has an honored place among films of Hollywood's wildest
child of the Roaring 20s Clara Bow It's also her second film with Gary Cooper with whom
she was getting wild with at the time.
According to the Citadel Film series book on the Films Of Gary Cooper, Bow saw him and raved like the rest of the American public in his breakout role
in The Winning Of Barbara Worth. She got him a small role in her film coming
up which was It and personally saw he was cast as the male lead in Children Of
Divorce.
Two girls who met as kids and coming from divorced parents grow up to be
Clara Bow and Esther Ralston. Esther is a good girl with firmly fixed ideas on
morality and a man size crush on a boy who grows up to be Gary Cooper. Clara
is not so good and she has a fool proof way of getting a man. In fact after a
drunken orgiastic night they find themselves married.
Ralston who has a lot of bucks on her own gets nailed by an impoverished
prince who played by Einar Hansson on the rebound. Hansson wants to start
living like a prince for a change.
Bow is at her hedonistic best in Children Of Divorce. And as we all learned the
movie camera just loved Gary Cooper. He was fortunate indeed to have a voice that matched that look when talkies came in.
Children Of Divorce is the kind of old fashioned morality tale that is unlikely to
be remade today. One for fans of the stars.
Nana Gyasi☑️
23/05/2023 06:41
Children of Divorce (1927)
** 1/2 (out of 4)
As the film starts off we're told about special homes where children of divorced parents can go and stay. We then meet Kitty who is dropped off by her mother and can't make friends but soon Jean becomes an older sister to her. Jean meets Edward and the two make a childish joke that one day they will marry. Flash-forward and Kitty (Clara Bow) is a flapper and soon a drunken night leads to her marrying Edward (Gary Cooper), which of course breaks the heart of Jean (Esther Ralston).
CHILDREN OF DIVORCE is the greatest movie that its stars ever made. In fact, I honestly thought there were quite a few problems throughout the picture and it wasn't nearly as good as I was hoping for when I went into it. With that said, both Bow and Cooper are legends of the screen and them alone makes this worth sitting through.
The story itself is pretty melo-dramatic and downright predictable at times. For starters, the story never really makes any sense because as children the Bow character is pretty much a shy and timid girl. Then, when we see the adult version, there she is as this loud, over-the- top party girl. There's just nothing here that's very believable as the first portion just seems over-dramatic and the second portion is just your typical Bow character from this period.
I'm certainly not going to ruin what happens as the movie goes along but there's no question that it's rather unbelievable and I'd argue that the ending is laughably bad and predictable. It's certainly a morality tale but to me it was just a bit overdone for its own good. Director Frank Lloyd (with apparent re-shoots by Josef von Sternberg) does a decent job at keeping the film moving but visually there's not too much here.
I thought Bow was good in the film, delivering the type of performance that you'd expect from her. This certainly wasn't her best role but there's no question that it's hard to take your eyes off of her. Cooper was also good in the part, although it's clear he was still learning his way on the screen. I didn't care too much for Ralston's performance as she was certainly the weak link.
It seems I'm really coming down hard on CHILDREN OF DIVORCE but perhaps it's mainly due to how disappointed I was in it. It's a decent movie and certainly worth watching if you're a fan of the stars but there's no question that they did much better work.
Diarra
23/05/2023 06:41
It didn't seem to matter if the story was flimsy - Gary Cooper was
already a heart-throb around the Paramount studio and being teamed
with Clara Bow, his female equivalent, was viewed with anticipation.
But it didn't go to plan - Cooper who had been mainly in out door epics,
was like a fish out of water in this sophisticated drama. After a few days
Cooper was sacked and replaced by Douglas Gilmore a more experienced
actor but Clara had campaigned behind the scenes on Cooper's behalf
and he was reinstated.
The movie started out as a daring, topical drama but not even Clara could
save it. Most cinema goers found Esther Ralston mechanical and Gary
Cooper unconvincing. I thought it was a case of Paramount trying to
widen Clara's appeal but it didn't really work - apart from her initial
scenes there was just too much pathos and until the end her character
was unsympathetic.
Jean and Kitty meet in a French convent, both products of the divorce
rage with parents eager to get back into the single swing and not
wanting a child cramping their style (Joyce Coad makes a very appealing
Kitty).
Years later they are both young debs - Kitty (Clara Bow) is the life of any
party, yet as a child she lacked confidence. Maybe explained by her
mercenary mother (Hedda Hopper, who else?) that because of their
financial position she must marry money!! That's too bad for Prince Vico
(Einar Hansen) an impoverished aristocrat who really loves Kitty who in
turn returns his love. Jean (Ralston) on the other hand is supposed to be
the richest girl in America - she catches the eye of Ted Larabee (Cooper),
the wild boy of the group who remembers a childhood promise of marriage
they both made to each other. Jean will not agree to the marriage - Ted
is now one of the idle rich where once he had ambition to be an
engineer and she wants him to find his self respect again. Kitty is determined
that the only bridges he will be connected with are the ones he burns!!
She takes him out for a night of revelry and he wakes up married - to
Kitty who has tricked him into it!! Two years later, Jean has vowed never
to marry even though receiving a proposal from Vico who truthfully
confesses he can't give her his love!!
You can see it's a pretty doleful movie, no one is really happy and when
Kitty finally tries to make amends by asking for a divorce when she
realises that Vico still carries a torch for her, she finds no joy there either
as his family will not allow him to marry a divorced woman. Clara has
some emotive moments but Gary Cooper was the only actor to receive
any glory - for his first leading role he is a stand out, you can't take your
eyes from him!! And the restoration just illuminates Travis Banton's
(although uncredited) luminous gowns, they are breath taking.
A bit of back stage gossip - none of the big wigs liked the movie but
they couldn't shelve such an expensive A grade movie so they got in
Josef Von Sternberg as a "movie doctor" to fix up many of the scenes.
Since all the stars had already started their next movie filming was done
at night and the non stop schedule was brutal!!
GIDEON KWABENA APPIAH (GKA)🦍
23/05/2023 06:41
Marriages, divorces,..mariages,divorce, ... ok, ok, , you want enjoy Life, but what about the children Hearts ?
This movie is a divorce trial and of wedding trial. To Avoid divorce try to succeed your marriage, it's seems evident but haw many people really think of that ?
Traumatised by abandon Kitty & Jean wanted 2 things, first never divorce, so make a good marriage.
It's such a moving Clara, who make you cry for sure, apparently she's seems happy, but inside juste broken and desperate, she always made the wrong things, thinking of course they was the best things to do,...
A movie who is still topical , even if actually divorced children are no longer abandonned.
Eternal questions:
What is the way to succeed a marriage ?
If it fails, divorce is a solution but how doing it softly for kids ?
etc...
Marwan Younis
23/05/2023 06:41
"Children of Divorce" (1927) is a melodramatic love triangle directed by Frank Lloyd, and starring Clara Bow, Esther Ralston and Gary Cooper. In 1927, the Cooper stock was on the rise. Gary had met Clara Bow in a party just after she had finished her signature film "It" (1927). They quickly became "special friends", and Bow insisted that Coop must be inserted into her new film, even though it was finished and all but one of the sets had been destroyed. But the studio was forced to agree with their star, and Josef von Sternberg filmed a quick scene with Cooper as a reporter, and it was added to the film. This is all told very well in Larry Swindell's book "The Last Hero: A Biography of Gary Cooper" (1981).
By their next onscreen encounter, Cooper was elevated to be the male lead, albeit in a very female centric melodrama. "Children of Divorce" is a morality tale that asks, whether children of divorced couples are more likely to become divorcees themselves. Thus, its attempt is to glorify the sacred nature of marriage by casting shame on divorced couples. It's not a subtle film. Like many a silent film, it begins with the characters as children. All three, Jean (Ralston), Kitty (Bow) and Ted (Cooper) were raised in a children's home run by nuns, because their rich, divorced parents couldn't bother to take care of the kids themselves. As they grow up, Jean and Ted are in love and want to marry, but Kitty also has an eye for Ted.
The contrast between Jean and Kitty is shown to be night and day. Jean is respectful, "wife material" so to say, while Kitty is a carefree flapper who likes to have fun. During a night when he gets drunk, Kitty tricks Ted into marrying him, and when it's announced that they are going to have a child, Jean won't allow Ted to divorce Kitty, because then world would have one more child of divorce. If you can't guess the outcome, you probably haven't watched too many silent melodramas.
I have mixed feelings about this film. The core merit it has going on, is the presence of Bow and Cooper, who are both very charismatic. The film is worth watching solely because of them. I dislike films that give such a black and white separation of good girls and bad girls. From my perspective, probably from today's perspective, Ralston appears boring and lifeless, while Clara Bow's charm has not been damaged by the years. I for one would love to wake up and discover myself married to a girl like Kitty. The film is heavy-handed with its marital themes, and it feels like it tries to brainwash the female audience into obedient housewives and dutiful mothers. Clara Bow is another alternative for a female role model, and therefore must be destroyed. "It" presented Bow's sex appeal in a lively way, and allowed it to exist. This film looks down on her, even if she is the star.
I also have never liked the American notion of "childhood sweethearts must marry as adults" in films. This is nonsense. It is very unlikely, that the first person of the opposite sex that you meet, is going to be the most suitable marital candidate you will ever meet. Therefore films like this, that tell the audience how Ted and Jean must be re-united, because they loved each other a long time ago, don't really hit home for me. There is even a creepy scene, where Ted stares at Jean, who is comforting his child, and imagines Jean as a little girl. It played the wrong way in this context, sorry.
So all in all, as a narrative, this doesn't hold up even a bit. But it does show how Cooper can act and led to better parts for him. Clara Bow may be the bad woman here, but she is easily the most memorable thing in the film.
Jeni Tenardier💋
23/05/2023 06:41
This tragic silent movie completely lives up to its title. The beginning of the movie shows a school for children whose parents are busy getting a European divorce. One mother drops her daughter off without a care in the world, and the lonely child quickly gets taken under the wing of a more experienced girl, whose mother is on her fourth divorce. The girls become very close, but a boy comes between them.
The older girl sees a boy at the "orphanage" and vows to marry him when she's older. She grows up into Esther Ralston, and the younger girl grows up to become Clara Bow. The boy is Gary Cooper, and while he and Esther have feelings for one another, Esther isn't as pushy as the beautiful flapper. Clara is impulsive and doesn't let a little thing like friendship stand in her way. After all, how can a child of divorce really respect and value marriage?
You've been warned: this is a heavy movie, and you'll probably shed a tear by the time it's all over. But if you love watching Clara Bow movies or want to see Gary Cooper in a silent movie, you can give it a chance.