Hilda Crane Film in English HD 1956 Jean Simmons, Guy Madison
Пікірлер: 186
@11REIGN11Ай бұрын
This is what love looks like❤ Forgiving ones faults and sticking to the script of love.
@katiedeluise2345Ай бұрын
Loved how they dressed back then .
@RAMROD4708Ай бұрын
Agreed. I grew up in that era, we always tried to look our best.
@ritaroadАй бұрын
Sometimes I’ll watch a movie just for the fashion. Movies like, Desk Set.
@monjiaitalyАй бұрын
Yes you can tell the men from the women.
@annemccarron2281Ай бұрын
@@ritaroadAnd there were few overweight people. Women with waists are so attractive.
@akrenwinkleАй бұрын
@@annemccarron2281 The few overweight ones, except for Orson Welles, were almost always goofy oddballs in comedies or comic relief in dramas.
@bizzybee852Ай бұрын
Great old Hollywood movie, made at the tail end of the 'Golden Age' of Hollywood. Jean Simmons was such a great actress.
@elaineproffitt103220 күн бұрын
I loved her in The Big Country. Such a wonderful story. They don't make em like they used to.
@mikebennett38128 күн бұрын
Of course she was a great actress - English, well spoken, educated and literate in the English Language which includes not only correct use of grammar and punctuation, but also correct spelling; thus demonstrating the recognised correct use of the letter S as opposed to the incorrect use of the letter Z! 🤣
@ginamitembe8935Ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant acting 👍 thanks for sharing classy no violence,bad language movie,👏👏🤩❤️❤️❤️
@willaknotts1298Ай бұрын
One of the great movies and best actors. Those were the days! ❤
@lakewalker11Ай бұрын
Jean Simmons was a wonderful actress and movie star❤
@dtaylor93926 күн бұрын
She narrated the series "Mysteries of The Bible" on A&E.
@harmoniabalanza18 күн бұрын
never annoying or phony or crude in the role.
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
@@harmoniabalanza Why on earth are you people so obsessed by anything "unpure"? Sheesh!
@dorothyedge2747Ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this great movie for us. 🍿
@MARIAAPARECIDA-wk1bwАй бұрын
Obrigada por postar esse filme maravilhoso, ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😢😂🎉
@brianowens439Ай бұрын
Nice find. Enjoyed Jean Simmons and this drama. Thank you kindly.
@user-dt4jt2ys2l25 күн бұрын
I loved her voice. I always wondered if she sang. She is so beautiful. I loved her in Spartacus.
@springsogourne22 күн бұрын
I always found the opposite, I find it irritating. But she is beautiful and a good actress.
@catherinekeller423029 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for this incredible film the lack of love in ones life leads to all sorts of confusion, sadness and heartbreak he stuck with her even though he had his own "mommy" problems he gained wisdom in the end lovely happy ending.🇦🇽💥💥💥
@MagdalenaRajnohova28 күн бұрын
We all need a man like Russell❤
@worldupsidedown117 күн бұрын
So true! I was married and divorced twice, also, but my Russell never showed up.
@juliacoburn745514 күн бұрын
Fairytales for naive.
@isabs8616Ай бұрын
This blue grey period in Hollywood 1950 films... Very beautiful
@ellishall204Ай бұрын
yes, an outstanding example is 'Mother Is A Freshman' with Loretta Young 1949
@bsr8255Ай бұрын
The fear of loosing and the greed to have everything,lands up people into various problems. It finally leads to anger frustration envy etc.... .
@libra42ful19 күн бұрын
I hope I can find my Russell...that loves me in spite of my flaws, who loves me, just because I need to be loved ❤️
@juliacoburn745514 күн бұрын
Yes .... very nice fairytales...
@colleenwhalen6981Ай бұрын
The actress who plays Mrs Burns does an excellent job portraying the kind of woman who is "The Woman You Love to Hate" - and her voice sounds exactly like a blend between Bette Davis and Mae West - quite uncanny. I love her "rough around the edges" voice and how she has that massive chip on her shoulder from when she "ran a hamburger stand and supported her little boy" all the while she is dripping in diamonds. Very good portrayal of Meddling Mother-In-Law-Battleaxe! In the 1950s being divorced - especially twice divorced would have made Hilda Crane, scandlous a "Scarlett Woman" and her social standing in a small, hick town would have been the lowest of the low. In the 1950's being divorced was considered a HUGE scandal - only for socialites and movie stars. It really would have been utterly unheard of for the "best catch" rich, handsome available bachelor in that little hick small town, to wind up married to a twice divorced woman - but heck, this is the movies so let us allow "Suspension of Disbelief". In the very beginning of the film, Hilda Crane talks about wanting to be embracing an independent life - but immediately realizes that is impossible - the best she could do in Winona is a job as a low paid typist, or shop clerk.....she is down on her luck with a gorgeous fur coat - that has torn, shabby lining - so she does the practical solution and winds up getting married to a rich man - the conventional expectation for the 1950s. She has a college degree - but probably something useless - if a woman went to college in the 1950's it was for the sole purpose of finding a HUSBAND, preferably a guy who would be graduating with a medical or law degree. I bet Hilda Crane's college degree was either "Home Economics" or English major - that was a "nice well bred girl" type college degree while you were just finagling your way to find a rich husband who was going to be a college grad in a high paying profession. If you like movies of this style and era, I highly recommend "Peyton Place" with Lana Turner and Jeff Chandler - it is more glamorous and glossier than this film, but the style of the era is identical BTW - I could never figure out why Jean Pierre Aumont was considered romantic leading man hunk sex symbol - his acting was wooden and really he was absolutely average looking. I was born in 1954 and remember seeing his films back in the day, but never could "get it" what his appeal was. Jean Simmons as always was lovely - and such a talented actress. In 1992 I attended an American Film Institute event in Washington, D.C. that screened the fully restored film of "Spartacus" - Jean Simmons and Tony Curtis attended and it was wonderful, if only for a minute, to chat with her in person. I don't have any interest in autograph collecting - but really appreciated being able to chat with her for a few minutes and let her know how much I admired her films. She was around 65 but still gorgeous! A very gracious and great lady.
@retha187527 күн бұрын
An English degree and a Home Ec degree are not useless, by any means.
@springsogourne22 күн бұрын
I agree with you about Aumont, and his accent was ridiculous 😂
@harmoniabalanza18 күн бұрын
@@retha1875 my dear mother said when I refused to major in government and chose English, "well, you can still be a lawyer with an English degree." I'm sorry Mom.
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
@@retha1875 They were then.
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
@@springsogourne VERY few of the leading men back then were at all attractive! Cary Grant and Dirk Bogarde were the exceptions. I still find most leading men unattractive, with that ugly super short hair, but at least they do a far better job now than they used to in choosing male stars.
@franciscodepaulagomes8893Ай бұрын
Jean Simmons foi uma ótima atriz e uma pessoa encantadora, o sorriso mais bonito do cinema
@berthaduah9581Ай бұрын
Thanks for posting, great movie with good moral lessons. Love is the greatest gift of all. Their dressing was decent.
21 күн бұрын
When ladies were lady-like and cared to be fashionable over trampy. Can you believe what passes for a lady these days? A tattooed tramp, in jeans so tight, she's nearly busting out! If it weren't so sad, it would be funny.
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
And of course nothing tops decency for importance, right? Heaven forbid we might see a belly button!
@berthaduah958117 күн бұрын
@@cattymajiv you are absolutely right
@worldupsidedown117 күн бұрын
@@cattymajiv Decency is a mark of refinement and self-respect. I'll take all I can get. Modern movies are gross.
@FreedomSpirit7Ай бұрын
Another wonderful Jean Simmons movie.
@lindavalentin5582Ай бұрын
Poignant meaningful and inspiring ❤❤❤
@maryfeehan7896Ай бұрын
Thank you very much
@jdr174723 күн бұрын
another great classic. Jean was so beautiful
@TronandFlynn8222 күн бұрын
Agreed. To me, she always looked like Liz Taylor and Audrey Hepburn combined. Stunning.
@robertd.carver624029 күн бұрын
Jean makes the most of this pre-feminist romantic melodrama, ably supported by the rest of the cast, who play it as sincerely as the material demands.
@TronandFlynn8222 күн бұрын
So true. It's like some of the other actors (especially the actor who played her husband) were made out of wood.
@sandrafledglingmixologista22218 күн бұрын
@@TronandFlynn82 True, but good looking wood though
@ElizabethCisneros-se6ieАй бұрын
Oooh !! Good!!!! Movie !!! Love Jean Simmons makes want to be a Brunette. Love Jean Pierre AUMONT & GUY MADISON❤ THE COLOR is just perfect. Thx for this movie. 😊❤
@angelavonhalle5144Ай бұрын
Many scenes are pure Jane Austen, sometimes literally. Pride and Prejudice.
@judywilkerson8682Ай бұрын
Loved this movie 👍
@longbranch11207Ай бұрын
Thanks for posting, great movie
@antonietadeoliveira4900Ай бұрын
... And so is drinking.... But it is accepted largely in society!!!
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
@@antonietadeoliveira4900 I agree, even though it is totally irrelevant.
@user-ul3xy4bd4eАй бұрын
Thank goddess 4ussel just for understanding and forgiveness from the real man
@helendurham7156Күн бұрын
I loved this film! Romantic and thoughtful.
@milourose2973Ай бұрын
Always love a David Raksin score.
@thinhpham2188Ай бұрын
Good movie 👍
@RideoutMrАй бұрын
I guess grey was the "IT"color for interior design back in those days.
@retha187527 күн бұрын
It was actually more of a blue.
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
It was actually beige and brown. The 2 worst colors ever. I see Megan Markle wearing so much solid dark brown and I want to scream at her! "No wonder nobody likes you! Wear some light colors and patterns, especially pink and blue flowers. There are a million choices, and you are wearing BROWN?!"
@retha187517 күн бұрын
@@cattymajiv you commented under the wrong post. This is about the movie Hilda Crane with Jean Simmons from the 1950s.
@CVenza28 күн бұрын
Lovely movie.
@bsr8255Ай бұрын
Very meaningful movie.
@michellevolkmann5675Ай бұрын
Thanks
@patriciacurcio945513 күн бұрын
Thank you for all these wonderful movies I think you are wonderful for showing them to me many blessings to you all thank you 🙏
@charfinch635827 күн бұрын
Great movie
@frederickcombs866128 күн бұрын
Guy Madison Till the End of Time
@sylviaibarra829329 күн бұрын
It's in color great movie I thought it was a Black and white movie 🍿🍿🎥🎥😊
@luminouslink77712 күн бұрын
A very beautiful and meaningful movie.
@apphiaobengandoh4624Ай бұрын
True love ❤️
@fufu88928 күн бұрын
It's Eloise from Female on the Beach. Love her distinctive voice.
@annebellette201Ай бұрын
Good movie
@catdogbirds7110Ай бұрын
And I thought Guy Madison was just a cowboy. He was great in this part, so were Aumont and Simmons. She was lovely. I also liked that old Victorian house they lived in, it was like my grandparents'.
@annemccarron2281Ай бұрын
I love victorian as well.
@monjiaitalyАй бұрын
Nice.
@thecressoflearning1996Ай бұрын
I think Russell made Hilda confident to get to her previous self, that should be needed as far as responsible husband is concerned👍
@harmoniabalanza18 күн бұрын
and what makes him even handsomer than Paul Newman is that he's not Paul Newman. :)
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
@@harmoniabalanza I never liked Paul Newman. He's way too arrogant!
21 күн бұрын
This was a good movie. I'm glad Hilda found true love & happiness at the end. Her mother was awful, as so many often are. What a shame too. She seemed to have such potential, if only she had applied herself more appropriately.
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
That is a great big spoiler! I have seen worse, but it's still giving away the whole ending! Why do you people have such a compulsion to wreck the whole thing for the rest of us? Next time at least use a SPOILER ALERT!
@AscendedMaster27423 күн бұрын
Good for Hilda! She really married the right guy. He knew that love would heal her.
@libra42ful19 күн бұрын
I enjoyed how He loved her, because she needed to be loved...and that He needed to love someone, and he just happened to be the one that had loved her for so long...Takes a lot to realize your loveable, when You've been made to feel you weren't by even just a few others...Everyone deserves to have a Russell
@juliacoburn745514 күн бұрын
And they live happily ever after. Don't talk about Domestic Violence
@mariamassey546813 күн бұрын
WHAT A MOVIE❤❤❤
@yhwhtlc9217Ай бұрын
Plot- Serial divorcée Hilda Crane (Jean Simmons) returns to the town where she went to college and begins a new romance with her old flame Russell Burns (Guy Madison), much to the chagrin of his abusive mother, Mrs. Burns (Evelyn Varden). When Mrs. Burns dies of a heart attack, her death casts a long shadow over their relationship. Soon Hilda embarks on an affair with her beloved former professor, Jacques De Lisle (Jean-Pierre Aumont), that threatens to destroy her latest attempt at marriage.
@MARIAAPARECIDA-wk1bwАй бұрын
Lindo filme todos os atores são ótimos!❤❤❤❤❤😂😢😂❤
@alicedossantos3062Ай бұрын
A Fine Film ❤
@zoyablake9538Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@Lauren-vd4qeАй бұрын
thnx I appreciate a summary plot of any movie i plan to watch.
@akrenwinkleАй бұрын
Evelyn Varden chews up the scenery here as she did in "The Bad Seed." Not that I'm complaining... I'm not!
@inesborstel5592Ай бұрын
❤
@rootsrockers10917 күн бұрын
I do love a happy ending ❤
@toosiyabrandt8676Ай бұрын
Hi Really good script! Shines a very sobering light on so called ‘women’s freedom’ and its consequences, and often nowhere near such a nice outcome as this!
@user-sf3fe4bh2q15 күн бұрын
Absolutely right!
@david-joeklotz955814 күн бұрын
Winona, Minn - hometown of actress Winona Ryder
@KawakebAstraКүн бұрын
almost inaudible on iPhone maxed volume
@kathylynch9732Ай бұрын
A sad movie.
@mirellajaber7704Ай бұрын
But with a happy ending
@alysononoahu870213 күн бұрын
The Grass is Greener❤❤❤❤
@stmarilyn928616 күн бұрын
What a brilliant movie. Love. Isn't it what we all need? And what we all need to give to others? John 13.34-35 and Matthew 6.14-15.
@juliacoburn745514 күн бұрын
Only in bible it say: if you love me obey my commandments. True love never commands anything .... It is freely given without asking anything in return. That's why I don't like bible quotes or versus
@MarvinaBigbyАй бұрын
I am.impaired visually somewhat.whst did the mother see on the coat label
@REALcatmomАй бұрын
The lining on the inside of the mink coat was worn, frayed, and pulling away from the collar. She saw that the fur wasn’t in good shape, because the lining was in disrepair.
@MarvinaBigbyАй бұрын
@@REALcatmom Ty so much for giving me the answer
@REALcatmomАй бұрын
@@MarvinaBigby you are most welcome. Wasn’t this a good movie?
@Tim_KentАй бұрын
7:55 ❤️
@MarvinaBigbyАй бұрын
@@REALcatmom yes it was a good movie any others you would suggest
@alysononoahu870213 күн бұрын
GUYS & DOLLS❤❤❤
@RD-mj4qu18 күн бұрын
Great movie once you get used to the ads every 4 minutes ..uploader easy dose it in the Ads..it's notcyou tube it's you
@stephanierodriguez382813 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@user-sj7xv1er1u17 күн бұрын
used to be the custom: women only wore a mink coat if her husband gave it to her for her 40th Birthday OR She Divorced Very Well, & got a bundle of alimony. just saying.
@danielaprosperita2392Ай бұрын
😍😍😍🥰🥰🥰
@alysononoahu870213 күн бұрын
Paul Newman FROM THE TERRACE❤❤
@glojac89228 күн бұрын
HD a crush on Guy.Madison.
@springsogourne22 күн бұрын
Grandmama from the Addams Family!
@sarahboardman133721 күн бұрын
fabulous film almost ruined by 12 miserable adverts, almost one every five minutes or so. what a greedy poster to ruin such a work of art.
@jansimmons8914Ай бұрын
I wish I looked like her but I almost have her name......
@TheFiownАй бұрын
Smoking is a most heinous habit.
@v.r.2834Ай бұрын
Agree - I was suffering from my heavy smoker parents- I never tried to smoke , it is disgusting
@REALcatmomАй бұрын
Jean Simmons died in 1980 from lung cancer. She was 80 years old.
@user-ul3xy4bd4eАй бұрын
All these people who use these strange words for addictions I really don’t think 💭 they understand what they’re saying would it be the same for drug addictions , alcoholic, food feeders or many other types of people who have been put in such situations my daughter was a precious little teen normal size 10 met lad who l had no. Idea was smoking waky baky and would buy her carrier bags off cola crisps sweets and cakes so they would say oh mum going to our room to watch movies or play on computer games I thought all innocent and then found out he as smoking @bought her these things because she didn’t want to smoke or drink but love we called treats but if in abundance it’s not a treat , in. Fact he was what as known as a feeder and I didn’t know of such things and now she’s addictions are food at 20 st and it’s very said is that (heinous or the ather words used for all these people as. Now my DRS SAY WHAT THE HOSPITAL SPECIALIST HAS HAD ME ON THESE MEDS TO KEEP ME. FROM LOSING THE USE OF MY RT ARM AND HAND ..? So I’m bed ridden and unable to use my hand @ arm and being meds to keep myself busy all the while I ve been treated as a drug addict but not helped to find any treatment that would get back my independence so I’m a disgusting disgraceful addict and I enjoy a smoke it helps me to calm down somewhat and if I were you I wouldn’t WALK OUTSIDE WITHOUT BREATH GEAR FACTORY CARS CANDLES GARDEN PIT FIRES ALCOHOL E .T C . SORRY BUT THE WRONG HAS BEEN GOING ON SINCE THE FIRST MAN ……
@jimcrawford3185Ай бұрын
But it s so cool
@TheFiownАй бұрын
@@jimcrawford3185 Many people who died young also thought that it was 'cool'. Rock Hudson used to say that he loved smoking so much that he wished that it could be a cure for many illnesses. Talk about blindness. My father said as he was dying that he had 'wished that he had KNOWN how bad it was', when he had already lost many of his friends from it. He was 55.
@irenejohnston6802Ай бұрын
Brought up by a cold, duty conscious mother.
@katella7 күн бұрын
In a society that allowed them very few options.
@suzysuzy4799Ай бұрын
🤔💚🤔💚🙏😇🙏💚
@jessicavandenekart146121 күн бұрын
😊I would have married the foreigner to escape the future mother in law
@ria163619 күн бұрын
Jacques wasn't offering marriage, that was the point and besides he was a creep! :)
@harmoniabalanza18 күн бұрын
"don't forget winona...kingman barstow san berdoo. " The mom is a bit of a creep, but I'm sure that will change. Still, only une Americaine would be worried about her "having lived" showing in her face. Sheesh. And the menacing mothers...if it weren't for them...
@lornastewart1583 күн бұрын
😅😅😅
@dsjk20927 күн бұрын
As they once said, yeehaw.
@alysononoahu870213 күн бұрын
Hilda Crane is a "hot mess".😢
@cattymajiv17 күн бұрын
I wish they hadn't used such ugly names for such beautiful women in these movies. Agnes, Hildegard, Hilda, Gertrude, Gerty. Hedwig sounds exactly like an insect, same as an earwig. And so many more awful sounding things. They also knew the value of pretty women, but never gave women some eye candy until finally Cary Grant and Dirk Bogarde came along, but even then, by far the most of the leading men were either plain or downright ugly. It's still a matter of opinion, but now they seem to at least make some effort to give us sexy guys. It's a weak effort, but better than before.
@annemccarron2281Ай бұрын
Jean Simmons is as pretty as Elizabeth Taylor - maybe prettier.
@E-Kat23 күн бұрын
She and Elizabeth needed to have their faces painted on! Poor men have to be born handsome whist any woman can look like a different person each time she paints her face.
@TronandFlynn8222 күн бұрын
@annemccarron2281 I commented earlier how I always thought she looked a bit like Liz Taylor and Audrey Hepburn combined. Solid beauty.
@ria163619 күн бұрын
@@E-Kat Yep, you are a green Kat!
@springsogourne22 күн бұрын
All those years as a professor in the US and he still has a horrible accent 😅
@debedwards1717Ай бұрын
Hilda is nasty.
@ria163619 күн бұрын
Don't be dumb!
@chris-8092Ай бұрын
melodramatic garbage
@carlbri3637Ай бұрын
You do like to profit from commercials, don’t you?
@Asterion67Ай бұрын
It’s KZfaq doing it, not the person who owns this channel. Subscribe to KZfaq, as I did, and you will not see any commercial😊
@123picklesАй бұрын
@@Asterion67 Thanks for the info. Never knew that. How much does it cost to subscribe to KZfaq?
@springsogourne22 күн бұрын
@@123picklesabout 14.00 month. It’s wonderful, no ads
@mariemaloney8043Ай бұрын
Boring spoilt woman
@ThePiratemachineАй бұрын
And don't you just love her!
@susanfaulkner2304Ай бұрын
She was a mess!
@soniavadnjal7553Ай бұрын
Alcoholic poisoning, probably. Oh no, she took pills.
@alicedossantos3062Ай бұрын
Simmons acting isn't very good !
@akrenwinkleАй бұрын
This role didn't call for subtlety, I think.
@nancyruggiano7603Ай бұрын
Simmons is an exceptional actress in every role she plays!
@edwinawareing2395Ай бұрын
Hahaha 🤣 jean Simmons was a great actress .
@irenejohnston6802Ай бұрын
Shakespeare's Ophelia and Estella in Great Expectations pre Hollywood. Blue Lagoon, Guys n Dolls, lovely in The Big Country, Varinia, Spartacus.