Summer Bachelors | |
Director: | Allan Dwan |
Producer: | William Fox |
Starring: | Madge Bellamy Matt Moore Allan Forrest Hale Hamilton |
Cinematography: | Joseph Ruttenberg |
Editing: | Frances Agnew |
Distributor: | Fox Film Corporation |
Runtime: | 70 minutes |
Country: | United States |
Language: | Silent (English intertitles) |
Summer Bachelors is a 1926 American silent romantic comedy film produced and directed by Allan Dwan. The film is based on the 1926 novel Summer Widowers by Warner Fabian and stars Madge Bellamy, Matt Moore, Allan Forrest, and Hale Hamilton.[1] [2]
After observing other peoples' bad romantic experiences, Derry Thomas no longer has any faith in men. Not believing in marriage, she organizes a club in which, in the summertime, married men can meet single women. A meeting of the club is also attended by Tony Landor, who, unlike the other male attendants, is still a bachelor. Derry falls in love with him, but hesitates to accept it. Put under hypnosis, she ends up confessing that she loves him. A judge, also a member of the club, makes himself available to the couple to perform a civil marriage.
Interiors shot were filmed at Fox's New York studio, while exteriors were shot on location in Lake Placid, New York.[2] [3]
The film was considered glamorous by an Indiana critic: "Fifth Avenue, Riverside Drive, Long Island Sound, country house parties, dances on fashionable hotel roofs and in Westchester roadhouses - these are a few of the setting for 'Summer Bachelors.'"[4]
Others were scandalized. American films in 1927 were subject to censorship under local and state law. The operator of the Royal Theatre in Sioux City, Iowa, was arrested and fined $25 for showing Summer Bachelors after a citizen filed a complaint for showing an "improper motion picture." A witness from the local woman's club testified in support of the complaint that the film had objectionable scenes, the first where a woman went for a swim apparently without a bathing suit, and in a hay mowing scene where a young couple were caught in a rainstorm, sought shelter for the night, and went to sleep unchaperoned. In another scene noted in testimony, a married man with a young woman on a yacht forcibly kissed her. After filing an appeal and a $200 bond, the theater owner cut two scenes from the film.[5]
A copy of Summer Bachelors is preserved at a film archive in Prague.[6]
. Michelle Vogel. Olive Borden: The Life and Films of Hollywood's Joy Girl. 2010. McFarland. 978-0-786-45836-3. 147.