His Woman (1931) Poster

(1931)

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5/10
Sentimental but effective melodrama
genet-118 June 2006
Veteran Sloman's long career was winding down in 1931, but he shows a steady hand in this cliché tale of a stern but naive young sea captain (Cooper) who falls for the "entertainer" (Colbert) who, desperate to escape from a South American port, bluffs her way on board as nurse for a foundling baby dumped in the ship's dinghy. Romance takes second place, however, to scenes stolen by the engagingly vivacious and good-natured baby (Richard Spiro), and by the ship's African-American servants, played in Amos and Andy-style cross-talk by Hamtree Harrington and Sidney Easton. (Journeyman director of photography William O. Steiner went on to light a number of films featuring African American entertainers.) HIS WOMAN is a respectable B movie, worth seeing for the almost exaggeratedly tall young Cooper and the detail of Colbert's tramp friends, who lounge around their shared apartment in pre-Production Code undress. Colbert's first appearance, arriving by boat at night in search of a nightclub job, and some byplay in the cantina between Cooper and dancer Raquel Davidovich, who tempts him by kissing a flower, both recall Marlene Dietrich and Cooper in the previous year's MOROCCO, suggesting Paramount may have hoped to trade on that film's success.
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5/10
The Baby Makes Three
bkoganbing3 March 2009
His Woman is a story of lonely tramp freighter captain Gary Cooper who while in port in Asia has a white baby abandoned on the rowboat he uses to get to and from his freighter with a note by a despondent mother. Gary takes to the little guy, but he knows full well he'll need a woman's touch in tending to him. And not just any woman.

His order to dive owner Douglass Dumbrille, send me over a woman, but a nice woman, not some of those who frequent your establishment. Claudette Colbert seems to fill the bill. But she's been around the track a few times though Cooper doesn't know it.

When first mate Averill Harris who's seen her in waterfront dives before makes advances on her, Cooper eventually finds out though.

His Woman is the kind of Victorian melodrama that might have been popular on the stage 35 years before. Studios were still digging up these old plots as vehicles for their films. Cooper comes across as stupidly naive. I mean this is a sailing man, a man of the world, who did he think he was going to find in the places he hangs out, Florence Nightingale.

And Colbert comes across too much as a lady. Someone like Joan Crawford would have been perfect for the part, but Colbert never quite convinces as a waterfront denizen.

The film was shot on the East Coast and in Paramount's Astoria Studio in New York after Cooper was on extended holiday in Europe and on safari in Africa. According to the Citadel film series book, The Films of Gary Cooper it hadn't been shown on television ever because of the two Amos and Andy like black characters who were ship stewards on Gary's freighter. This was back in the Sixties, because apparently it's been seen by a couple of people to write reviews about it.

The two stewards, played by a comedy team of Hamtree Harrington and Sidney Easton, were a bit much and they would indeed be found offensive by a lot of people today.

So with Hamtree and Sidney and the fact it's a dated melodrama from the Victorian age does not bode well for His Woman.
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5/10
He's tough but big hearted, and she's just another shady lady.
mark.waltz14 December 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Even the most lady like of early 1930s movie stars played dames or broads at one point in their careers, and at some point they end up on an ocean liner, exchanging sin to get back to America. The list of these actresses is basically a who's who of pre-code cinema and watching them is fascinating to see who can outdo the other as far as the shady lady image is concerned. while the bulk of her career is known for screwball comedy heroines or long-suffering mothers, Claudette Colbert played her share of females gone wrong trying to return to the right side of morality, and "His Woman" is the epitome of that storyline. The very same year at Paramount, Tallulah Bankhead played a bunch of similar parts, and she is quite believable just from looking at the poster. But for fans of Colbert, it takes a bit of suspended belief to accept her as he supposed Cabaret singer trying to get back to New York and basically becoming nanny to an abandoned baby aboard Navy officer Gary Cooper's ship. Cooper promises her that she will not be harassed by the crew, but that proves not to be the case and Cooper resort to violence in order to protect her. He is unaware of her past however, and when that is exposed during Cooper's trial for assault, he begins to see her in a new light. The course of true love is tested as Cooper tries to accept Colbert's past as her past, and Colbert after telling him off for his cruelty isn't able to easily forget him.

This is an interesting pre code romantic drama that focuses on the two stars and really offers little in the way of supporting characters to provide either comic relief or other stories surrounding the main plot line. Yes, there are two black male cooks working in the ship's kitchen, and they do provide some comedy, but in truth they are more like Cinderella's fairy godmother in their joy over Cooper finding the baby, deciding to raise it on his own, and later finding a potential mother for it when Cooper hires Colbert as the nanny after turning down a Spanish woman he considers too trashy. That establishes Coopers feeling towards women with past and thus his motivation for how he will feel when he discovers the truth about Colbert. the two stars give believable but tough performances, and Colbert proves that she can be more than dingy socialites, wisecracking office girls and struggling mothers that should became best known for in her lengthy career. Overall, this is average simply because it is one of many films with the same theme made during the Depression before the code took over, and thus is really nothing special.
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The 30 Year Old Gary Cooper
Single-Black-Male23 October 2003
No matter what film Gary Cooper is in, he always acts and looks the same. His tall, gangling figure makes him look clumsy and awkward, and his monotone voice has no variety, range or depth of emotion. But the one thing I definitely don't believe about him is that young women fall for him. This is totally down to biased scripting.
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6/10
Improbable story but enjoyable
russjones-8088727 April 2020
A ship's captain discovers an abandoned baby and hires a dance hall girl, posing as a missionary's daughter, to be the child's nanny on a voyage from the Caribbean to New York.

Pre-code film with good performances from Gary Cooper as the captain and Claudette Colbert as the girl. The story is somewhat improbable but that does not detract from enjoyment of the film.
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3/10
A Captain, His Woman, A Baby…and two racial stereotypes
perfectpawn25 January 2010
Well, this movie is certainly something. I'm just not sure what.

Gary Cooper plays the hardbitten captain of a merchant ship; while docked at a South American port someone leaves a caucasian baby in his boat. Cooper plans to take it with him to the US, he just needs someone to take care of it on the voyage. Enter Aloysius (Hamtree Harrington, what a great name) and Mark (Sidney Easton), his two African-American stewards – bumbling caricatures who speak in the phony "black American" patois acceptable in early Hollywood. IE, lots of "yassirs" and bug-eyed expressions of shock. Claudette appears as a seaport "entertainer" who wants to get back to NYC; she comes aboard as the baby's surrogate, employing skills she didn't realize she had. Along the way the baby instills in her the desire to "straighten up," and her and Cooper fall in love to boot. Only, Claudette has a shady past and it seems that every other mate on the ship has had her at one dingy seaport or another – all of them except for Cooper, that is, who despite being hardbitten is also a little too naïve. He buys Claudette's "my parents were missionaries who died and now I'm all alone" story and gets ruffled if anyone doubts her, ruffled to the point of fighting one of his men and knocking him overboard. It all comes to a head in NYC with a truly underwhelming courtroom scene.

Really, the whole movie is underwhelming. I mean, the film opens with a stock shot of a merchant vessel plying through the water, then a cut to the deck, and Gary Cooper ambles his way across it. THAT'S how the movie begins, no fanfare, no buildup, just another day at sea with Gary Cooper. Gary Cooper and his two racial stereotype crewmembers, that is; I have a theory that Malcolm X saw this film as a boy and it set him on his way. For truly this movie is offensive. I'm an open-minded guy and don't get offended easily, but this film goes out of its way to shoehorn every black stereotype into the characters of Aloysius and Mark. They are presented as incompetent nitwits who exist only to bulge their eyes and mutter banalities – in between loud prayers to "Gawd," that is.

And it's not just that. Whole chunks of this film are composed of nothing more than a baby crying. Minute after minute evaporates as the baby screams and bawls, with various characters attempting in vain to placate it. In addition the movie is very static, paced so leisurely that it appears to be out for a Sunday drive. Cooper can do little to save it; his character is a vapid sort, and it's obvious he had a hard time reckoning the polar characteristics with which he's been foisted: we're supposed to believe his character is a non-nonsense sea captain who commands respect in his grizzled men, yet at the same time he's so naïve as to buy whole-hog Claudette's obviously fake background story. As for Claudette – well, what can you expect: she's as good as ever. Her role offers her a bit more room and she does a good job portraying the whole "bad girl goes good" angle. This early in her career she still has that waiflike look – big Betty Boop eyes, fragile body. I swear this lady drank some sort of elixir – just compare how she looks in this film to say "Sign of The Cross," released the following year, or even "Cleopatra," from three years later. It's like she went through a second puberty.

Production-wise the movie's underwhelming as well. Don't expect the usual Paramount opulence here. Rather than a nice portrayal of a madhouse South American bar early in the film, the sets are mostly spartan-looking cabins within Cooper's ship, or the equally-austere deck. Once the ship gets back to New York we're only graced with a few stock shots of the city, and from there to a basic office room for the trial. The direction, too, offers little to appreciate; the whole thing, from beginning to end, is as basic as bread.

Special note: This film contains one of the worst line readings I've ever had the pleasure to hear. I'm talking "Ed Wood production" bad. When Claudette's back with her high-living galpals in NYC, all of them sitting around in negligees with their legs dangling in pure Pre-Code lasciviousness, she gets ribbed by them for falling in love with Cooper. Try as they might, the girls can't get Claudette to revert to her old ways. One of the galpals, a pretty blonde, shakes her head and says, "Well, I just give up." It is, by far, one of the worst deliveries of a line EVER.
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5/10
A Good Cast Makes This A Watchable Pre-Code
boblipton23 November 2020
Merchant skipper Gary Cooper finds a baby parked on his ship. It's so cute he decides to keep it, but needs a woman to take care of it. Enter Claudette Colbert, a stranded demimondaine. To get the job, she claims to be the daughter of a recently deceased mercenary. Coop thinks she's a lady, so he gives orders to the crew to that effect, but Averell Harris knows better and plays rough.

It's a remake of 1928's SAL OF SINGAPORE, and by itself it looks pretty good, even if the speed of the ending makes it look like a programmer. Still, you've got those two in the leads, and further down the cast list, early roles for Barton McLane, Douglas Dumbrille, Preston Foster, and William Gargan. Certainly it's not a great movie, but it's always watchable with visual stylist Edward Sloman directing. It's a good one to check off your list.
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3/10
Spend the Time to Get to Know Your Potential Spouse
view_and_review3 September 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Once again a couple get married or engaged before knowing the truth about the other. It happened in "Waterloo Bridge," "The Lady Refuses," "The Common Law," and so many others. It was a popular theme. Too popular. It was as if that was the only way to infuse drama into a romance--let there be a secret about the other person. In this case, the secret was that Sally Clark (Claudette Colbert), Captain Sam Whalan's (Gary Cooper) love, used to be an entertainer in a nightclub type place (i.e. She wasn't wife material). She lied and said she was the daughter of a missionary and was herself a missionary. She lied just to hitch a ride on Sam's ship, not to trick him into loving her.

Sam was looking for a decent woman to tend to a baby he'd found so Sally put on that she was religious and "decent" in order to get the job which meant a free ride back to New York. In short order, because she's a woman in a 1930's film, the two fell in love. They were engaged before the ship even reached New York, and it was there that Sam found out the truth. He'd proposed to an entertainer of men. It was a revelation I knew was coming. The only thing I wasn't sure about was his reaction. Would he A.) break it off in a huff as she protested or B.) say "I don't care what you were, that's all in the past," or C.) break it off, then come to his senses and go back to her?

My choice was C all the way because he was the type of man who had to at least pretend he cared what kind of woman he married even if he went back to her. Furthermore it had to be C because there was too much time left in the movie AND there had to be a happy ending.

Gary Cooper went from "I Take This Woman" to "His Woman" and both movies were equally stale.

Free on YouTube.
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8/10
An interesting film about the old double-standard.
planktonrules5 July 2020
Shortly after the story begins, someone abandons a baby aboard a freighter with a note attached to him. It says that the baby belongs to someone aboard the ship and she was leaving it forever. The Captain (Gary Cooper) at first wants to drop the baby off ashore but soon decides to keep the cute little guy. But he cannot run the ship AND care for a baby at the same time, so he looks for a woman to help with raising the kid. Soon he finds Sally (Claudette Colbert) and she feeds him a line about being the daughter of a recently deceased missionary...when she actually is a bit of a tramp. Despite this, she turns out to be a good foster mother and things seem to be going just fine. However, a crew member recognizes Sally and thinks that because she's had a past that it entitles him to attack her! But the Captain hears the commotion and comes to Sally's defense. In the ensuing scuffle, the evil crew member is knocked off the ship and presumed lost. But this isn't the end to all this....and what happens next, well, you'll just have to see it for yourself.

I really enjoyed this film, though I am sure some might object to it being a bit schmaltzy. What I liked most is that the story attacked the old so-called 'double-standard'...where men are supposed to be 'experienced' and that women, if they have similar experiences, are tramps! I appreciated the message and enjoyed seeing where the film went. Very unusual and worth seeing.
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8/10
Good Pre-Code Movie
januszlvii26 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I saw His Woman years ago, and I finally saw it again thank you Youtube. It is a really good movie, with a very different kind of Claudette Colbert performance as Sally Clark. She is a very cheap woman who pretends to be the daughter of a missionary who dies in order to get on a ship from South America back to New York. Opposite her is Gary Cooper who plays Captain Sam Whalen who adopts an abandoned baby and uses Sally to take care of him. What I like is the character growth in both characters. Sally by learning there are decent people out there and Sam by learning about that people can change and the power of forgiveness. Spoilers ahead: The key to the movie is the baby. The baby brought them together and brought them together again because the baby got pneumonia and Sally ( after being abandoned by Sam) comes back and along with a doctor saves the baby and Sam sees what she is really about and agrees to marry her. One warning is this; You have people in blackface playing dumb characters so if you are sensitive do not watch. But if you like Cooper and ( or) especially Colbert ( most of her films except for It Happened One Night are not often shown), so do not miss it. 8/10 stars.
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