That Brennan Girl (1946) Poster

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6/10
A sweet story about a young girl who, in spite of a bad start, changes her life.
lindaz6 September 2005
Raised by a flamboyant and irresponsible mother, Ziggy Brennan (played by Mona Freeman) gets involved in hustling men at a young age. She hangs around with a wild crowd and learns gets her "street smarts" first from her mother (who wants everyone to think they are sisters) then from an older man. He starts teaching her his tricks of the trade and she falls right in line with his crooked ways. Then one night she meets a tall, handsome, honest farmer boy who's a soldier and they fall in love. While he's away fighting the war, she discovers she's pregnant.

I won't say more so as not to spoil it. But I found the ethics that this film teaches to be something sorely missing in our films nowadays. Suffice it to say that even though she goes through some heartbreaking experiences, she reforms her ways and there is a happy ending.

Probably not a film that most young people would enjoy. Not any action and some parts drag a bit, but it's Frank Capra type of message left me with a good feeling. Baby-boomers will most likely love it.
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6/10
This is a strange but worthwhile film
planktonrules30 July 2011
Warning: Spoilers
When I say that this is a strange film, this is not an insult. It's just one of those rare films that you can't categorize and is like nothing else.

Mona Freeman plays 'Ziggy' Brennan--a young and very irresponsible young lady. The film then goes back in time and you see how she developed into the seemingly sociopathic lady she'd become when the film began. Her mother had absolutely no motherly feelings towards her and Ziggy grew up finding mostly for herself. At first she's a nice kid but given her upbringing she soon spirals into a good-time girl and thief. Rather inexplicably, she falls in love with a nice sailor during the war but he's soon killed--leaving her pregnant and almost completely incompetent when it comes to parenting. Can she make a go of it or are she and the baby doomed? Tune in and see.

The reason this is such an off film is that Freeman does not exactly play a sympathetic character and the story is, at least until late in the film, is unlike the usual Hollywood formulaic pieces. It does sink into sentimentality a tad at the end, but this worked as most really would not want to see a film with absolutely no sense of redemption or change. This is nice and the film is worth a look.
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6/10
Anything but sweet
bkoganbing7 July 2018
The title role in That Brennan Girl is played by Mona Freeman who learned early and hard to be a cynic. This was a loan out role for Freeman for this Republic production because at her home studio of Paramount she was normallyy playing sweet young ingenues.

Freeman has a great example set to her by her mother June Duprez who says land a man with a bank account and hang on tight. Still she's a romantic sort and does fall for sailor William Marshall.

It all ends tragically for her when Marshall is killed during the war. But he's left something behind and that forces an attitude readjustment.

Top billed however in That Brennan Girl is James Dunn who was a lead in the 30s with Fox but who gradually fell out of top tier parts and studios due to a drinking problem. But winning an Oscar for A Tree Grows In Brooklyn the previous year gave his career a temporary rebound.

He's an Irish-American gangster who's between Duprez's and Freeman's age sparks an interest in both. He too undergoes a change in life as only a stretch in the joint might affect some. In many ways this is similar to the part he played in A Tree Grows In Brooklyn.

Freeman is the real revelation here. You won't find her in too many roles like this one.
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Mother teaching daughter tricks-of-the-trade not usual Republic fare.
horn-525 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
The film begins on Mother's Day, 1938 when 14-year-old Ziggy Brennan (Mona Freeman) buys a gardenia for her mother. Ziggy's youthful exuberance disappears when she enters their apartment and finds her mother, Natalie (June Duprez), drinking with a strange man. Natalie introduces Ziggy as her "sister" and quietly cautions Ziggy against calling her "mother." Later, dispensing some motherly-advice, Natalie tells Ziggy that if she learns all the tricks, she'll never have to work for a living. Ziggy goes right out and applies parts of this advice by stealing a valuable lapel pin from a fellow high-school student, and is promptly expelled from school.

About five years later, Ziggy has made progress and meets Denny Reagan (James Dunn), who persuades her to go into his racket. Ziggy's role is to telephone people who are planning to move and make arrangements to provide a truck to move the furniture. The departing truck is the last that the owners see of their furniture as it is taken to a warehouse and sold by Denny and his gang.

Hanging out in a nightclub one evening, circa 1943, the still-underage Ziggy flirts with a young naval officer from Minnesota, Mart Neilson (William Marshall), who promptly falls in love with Ziggy and proposes marriage. Ziggy, to ensure that Mart knows her background, introduces him to Natalie (at her worst), but Mart doesn't change his mind and still insists on the marriage. Shortly after the wedding ceremony, Mart is shipped out to war-duty and is killed in action.

Ziggy learns that she is expecting a baby, while the law catches up to Denny and ships him out to prison. Ziggy is still living with her mother but Natalie, horrified at the prospect of being a grandmother, kicks her out and Ziggy moves into Mrs. Merryman's (Rosalind Ivan) boarding-house. Ziggy has the baby and some time passes, circa 1944-45, and Ziggy---still making her nightclub rounds---runs into the just-paroled Denny. This Denny is a new-and-thoughtful version, and he does not approve of Ziggy leaving her baby with a sitter while she makes her rounds. Denny shows great interest in the baby and sees more and more of Ziggy. Returing from a date, Ziggy finds the baby's crib vacant. In her absence the baby-sitter had gone out to her boyfriend's car for some heavy necking and, in her absence, the baby had almost choked to death before being discovered by Mrs. Merryman, who promptly called the police.

At the trial, the baby-sitter denies responsibility (negligence-of-duty)and Ziggy loses custody of her baby. The new-and-thoughtful Denny will have nothing to do with Ziggy, even though his mother (Dorothy Vaughn), knowing that Denny and Ziggy really love each other tries to bring them together. But...Ziggy has disappeared.

Ziggy, having moved to another boardinghouse, drops by a church and, plot-wise convenient, promptly finds an abandoned baby. Later, Denny finds her, while she and the baby are sunning in a park, and he is greatly impressed with new-and-thoughtful mother-instincts, and he is convinced that she has become a perfect mother.

With Denny's help, Ziggy appeals her case in order to regain custody of her own child and, when the judge learns that she has been caring for an abandoned baby, he is much impressed and returns her own infant to her. (Most judges would have inquired as to why she didn't drop off the abandoned-baby at the nearest abandoned-baby sub-station but that wouldn't have made for the happy ending with Ziggy and Denny and "their" two babies looking forward to a bight-and-happy future together.)

This May-December pairing of Dunn and Freeman came when Dunn was 45---and looking every day of it---and Freeman was twenty--and still looking fourteen. Dorothy Vaughn, who played Dunn's mother, was only eleven years older than Dunn. But this was before the days when actors could bombard the IMDb with requests-slash-demands to change their actual birth-dates, and in the days when real-good actors could play over-or-under their real age. The question wasn't how old are you, it was can you act? Evidently, some of the IMDb change-DOB demanders can't.

This film was also one of the rare instances when Republic gave a studio-contract employee a Producer credit rather than the studio's standard Associate Producer credit.
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6/10
A Good Picture That Didn't Quite Click With the Audience
boblipton7 July 2018
Mona Freeman was brought up by a tough, money-hungry, shady, single mother -- June Duprez in quite a change from her role in THE THIEF OF BAGDAD -- and soon falls in with grifting James Dunn. When she steals a watch from a drunk military man, Dunn shows some patriotism and tells her to give it back.... and she winds up married, a war widow and struggling to keep her baby in this movie directed by Alfred Santell.

Miss Freeman was 20 when she made this movie, but she always seemed younger than she was, a factor which hampered her screen career; in this, she looks quite convincing in the opening scene as a 14-year-old girl buying a flower for her mother. She gives a fine, layered performance, but the script, from a story by Adele Rogers St. John, tries to cover too many bases, half tough-girl drama, half weepy-mother-loses-baby soap, with a dose of judicial moralizing and a dash of miraculous intervention. As a result, her characterization, and that of James Dunn, fresh off an Academy Award win for A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN may seem not so much nuanced as inconsistent.

I think not. I think it's a good movie, although I find the first half more interesting. That, however, is largely because I don't care for weepy melodramas. Judging by the record, no one was particularly impressed by this picture at the time. Dunn's career resumed its slide, aided by alcoholism; Freeman worked in minor movies for another ten years, then in television until 1972; and Santell, whose directorial career had begun in 1916, and who lived until 1981, never directed another movie.
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7/10
Odd, but interesting.
twhiteson7 July 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Along with a few other reviewers, I caught this last night as part of TCM's spotlight on the restored films of the long defunct Republic Studios. Aside from its John Wayne vehicles, Republic was known as a 2nd tier studio with limited budgets and usually rented/free agent acting talent. "That Brennan Girl" is example of one its budgeted melodramas with a cast of talents on the downside of their careers.

The plot: Set in 1930's-40's San Francisco when it was still known for its large Irish-American community, young teenager "Ziggy Brennan" (Mona Freeman) is raised by her jaded single mother, "Nat" (June Duprez), to use her good looks and feminine charms to take what she can get out of sap-hearted men. By the time she's in her late teens, Ziggy is a petty thief and con-artist who enjoys a good time drinking and clubbing. During one of her soirees, she runs into "Denny Reagan," (James Dunn) a middle-aged grifter, who quickly IDs her as a fellow con and employs her in his scams. Although presenting himself to the world as a hard-hearted cynic, Reagan is devoted to his kindly mother (Dorothy Vaughan) from whom he hides his actual profession. And it's his affection for his mother that leads him to cause Ziggy to make a life-changing decision when he urges her to return an item she stole off a sailor on shore-leave, "Mart Neilson" (William Marshall).

That leads to Ziggy and Mart marrying, but soon leaving her a war-widow with a baby. Although she loves her child, Ziggy is still a girl herself and has no clue how to be a good mother. She struggles with her desire to enjoy being young and pretty and her parental responsibilities. Along the way, Denny, who has received a harsh wake-up call as to his career decisions, tries to help steer her towards the straight and narrow, but can she depart the mold that her mother created for her?

This was an odd movie. It starts out as a fairly interesting character study of a girl being sent down a tough path by a misguided parent, but ends-up as a fairy-tale about broken people finding love, happiness, and babies. The disjointed and rather silly 3rd act hurts the film.

The casting is odd. June Duprez as Mother Brennan was definitely cast against type. Remembered mostly for playing aristocratic, well-mannered beauties in the British classics: "The Thief of Bagdad" (1940) and "The Four Feathers" (1939), here she is playing a cynical slattern who lies about her daughter being her sister and wants no part of being a grandmother. James Dunn trying to cash-in on his career performance in 1945's "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" got top billing and certainly plays well the role of an Irish-American charmer, but the huge age disparity between himself and Miss Freeman undermines their story arc.

Still, it held my interest mainly due the performance of Mona Freeman. Apparently, the 20 year old Freeman had been chomping at the bit to break-out of the teenage ingenue roles that had so far been her film career. So, she leaped at the chance to play the sadder-but-wiser Ziggy. Although Ziggy is still a very young woman, she's no child. She dresses and acts like an adult although one that still has a lot to learn. Freeman does a very nice job with the role and her performance is the best thing about the film. (Also, she's very nice to look at especially in those 1940's outfits!)

Sadly but understandably, "That Brennan Girl" didn't find an audience in 1946. So, it didn't help the struggling careers of Ms. Duprez or Mr. Dunn. And it certainly didn't help Miss Freeman escape playing wide-eyed teenagers. The movie she did immediately after this film, 1947's "Dear Ruth," saw her once again donning bobby-socks and saddle shoes and playing a 14-15 yr old child.
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7/10
Solid Cast and Interesting Story
Maliejandra7 March 2019
That Brennan Girl was restored as part of Martin Scorcese's project to restore worthy films. It is rare that a low-budget movie from Republic studios would get this treatment, and I was pleased to see it screened at the Wexner Center in February.

Part family drama, part crime film, part romance, the film begins in flashback with Mona Freeman as a young girl on Mother's Day disappointed that her own mother writes her off as her sister so she can project youth to snag a rich man. As she grows up, she learns her own tricks to survival as a woman and hardens into a free-wheeling gold digger. James Dunn, a con-man with a soft spot for his Irish mother, takes a shine to her and tries to win her over, but she keeps him at arm's length. Then she meets a soldier on leave, and while she starts off cold against him, his earnestness softens her.

A solid film that keeps us entertained an engaged in spite of its many twists and turns, That Brennan Girl features a solid cast and competent direction by Alfred Santell, who was disillusioned by the producers and retired after this film.
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6/10
That Brennan Girl
CinemaSerf8 January 2023
Hmmm. This film takes a pretty long time to depict the tribulations of the eponymous, pretty and shallow girl "Ziggy" (Mona Freeman) who lives with her floozy mother "Natalie" (June Duprez). This sets the scenario for the film: she's a bit of a chancer who lives her life fleecing gents and committing petty larceny. When she alights on "Denny" (James Dunn), they up their game and start to illicitly divert the furniture of people moving house - quite a lucrative trade, as it turns out. There is a little hope for the girl, though - she falls in love with a naval officer who is content to let her put her past behind her. Sadly, though, he heads off to war and is killed leaving her, quite literally, holding the baby. Nope, we are not yet done with the calamities the befall the girl. Now, she rather thoughtlessly goes on a date, leaving her newborn baby alone in her lodgings; the bairn falls from her cot, is rescued by a neighbour and the ensuing tribunal removes the child from the care of "Ziggy". What can she do? On a very wet night, she finds herself outside a church. In she goes, hoping to find some spiritual comfort and instead finds a baby abandoned on a pew - this is her Damascan moment, and you can easily guess the rest. There is an element of salvation, eventually, but otherwise this is really quite a dreary tale of a self-destructive character that engenders very little sympathy over a long 95 minutes. Freeman tries hard with the part, but she doesn't really click for me - a sort of poor man's Jean Simmons. Frank Jinks is quite engaging as the cabbie "Joe", perhaps the only one in the whole film with any semblance of decency, otherwise it's just an unremarkable melodrama.
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10/10
Underrated movie.
ashkakaylee25 January 2013
I saw this film last night on Youtube and it's remarkably good. Mona Freeman gives a stunning performance as Ziggy, the young and troubled heroine of the movie.

This is the kind of part that somebody like Jean Simmons or even Audrey Hepburn might have fitted well into. And Mona Freeman's acting here stands up to anything they might have done in the part. The rest of the cast are equally fine. Had this movie been made by one of the bigger studios of the day it would,I think, have been better none. It certainly deserves to be better none as it's definitely more than a B picture.
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5/10
Does a neglected daughter become a neglecting mother?
mark.waltz26 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I can see why this movie gets mixed reviews, some okay and some above-average. It is indeed an interesting character study of an innocent girl who, by witnessing her party going mother (June Duprez) live a life void of responsibility begins to live that life as well. She literally comes home to find her mother in a rather indelicate position, and as the next few years go by, she is involved in a racket to help an acquaintance of her mother's (James Dunn) steel furniture. But that racket is short-lived for her as she marries a soldier (William Marshall) who is quickly killed in action, leaving her with a child to raise on her own. Her mother wants no part of it, and a nasty land lady (Rosalind Ivan), sensing that Marshall is neglecting the child, turns the baby over to the authorities causing Marshall to try desperately to win it back any way she can.

One thing I'll say about this soapy melodrama is that Marshall's character has a nice transformation from good to bad to back again, never the innocent young girl again but certainly wiser and more open to leaving a better life. The problem with the film is that it goes from streetwise and brash to sappy and cloying. The cast is consistently excellent, showing a judgmental society that often surprises Marshall with its infrequent kindness. Yet, I couldn't fully believe all of the situations that were happening here, and with its present-day opening (starting mother's Day 1946, and flashing back to mother's Day 1938), it becomes a time travel movie where time stops cold when it begins to change its personality.
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8/10
Ziggy Learns Too Well!!
kidboots14 August 2014
Warning: Spoilers
When Mona Freeman was given a chance to expand her range on "That Brennan Girl" she jumped at the chance. In the Adela Rogers St. John story she was required to age from 11 to 25 but critics weren't impressed and felt her performance didn't rise to the weighty story. The truth was she looked too young and that seemed to be why her career never got off the ground. Her first part was going to be as Barbara Stanwyck's step daughter in "Double Indemnity" but she was replaced as she photographed like a young teen, another part that was taken from her was as Elizabeth Taylor's older sister in "National Velvet", she was thought to look younger than Taylor so Angela Lansbury replaced her.

If Freeman looked too young - she makes poor James Dunn look ancient!! With his weather beaten face (courtesy of too much alcohol) he looked just too old and careworn to be playing a hot shot con man full of big ideas! He didn't win an Academy Award for nothing (although it did nothing to boost his career) and he really comes into his own and gives out some Irish charm in the scenes with his mother.

This film is a showcase for Mona and from the time she is introduced as her mother's sister she becomes an eager pupil for her mother's creed - which is "don't let your looks go to waste, take men for everything you can get and you can never start too young"!!! After being expelled from school she is plunged into Natalie's world and catches the eye of fast talking Denny (Dunn) who gives her a job convincing customers (usually older, well heeled ones) that when moving house they simply must use "Denny's Removalists" - and that is usually the last people see of their precious possessions!!

When Ziggy meets naval officer, Martin Neilson, she falls for his obvious sincerity but when she finds herself a war widow with a baby it is all too easy to slip back into club life. This movie has more plots than a "soapie" and you just know things are not going to be good when the young high school girl (Shirley Mills) that Ziggy has hired is keener to go riding with the boys than stay put looking after the baby. The juvenile authorities are alerted and suddenly Ziggy is up before a judge on a suspended sentence and the baby is in care!!

It was a big stretch to have beautiful June Duprez (for whom Technicolor seemed to be made ie "The Four Feathers", "The Thief of Bagdad" etc) and who was only 8 years older than Mona Freeman having to play her mother!! She pulled it off though, looking like a big sister in the first scenes but later looking much older as her playgirl lifestyle catches up with her. She was British but quickly went to Hollywood to cash in on her fame and as the British equivalent to Maria Montez but unfortunately her agent asked for too high a salary and she found herself almost unemployable.
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5/10
Beyond capabilities
ddcamera8 July 2023
This is an odd film, coming as it does from Republic Pictures, a studio not noted for taking chances on serious psychological subjects. The film is inhibited by the censorship of the time and lack of real courage by Republic. The studio washed over the troubled upbringing and its obvious repercussions on the character of a young woman brought up by a slatternly mother. Mona Freeman, young as she was, is the best actor here. She is quite believable (most of time) despite the erratic and often improbable plotting. Great effort is made throughout the film to make the seedy characters who inhabit such a world likable and sympathetic. James Dunne, for example, is first introduced as a cunning crooked gangster, but, as he loves his corn beef and cabbage mom, he turns out okay. After being sent to prison for crimes we never learn about, he suddenly sets out to redeem himself. Why? Many of the characters are badly written, or badly acted. English actress, June Duprez has no idea what her tough lady dialogue means and is totally miscast. William Marshall, Mona's husband, is dreadful and not particularly attractive. He, too, seems to be reading lines he doesn't understand. Director Alfred Santell does a workman like job of staging an enormity of scenes with the usual Republic shooting schedule and budget, but the complexity of the relationships is beyond his modest talents. There was the possibility of a great movie here. Look at MILDRED PIERCE in the hands of Michael Curtiz, and imagine what a better director and superior cast might have done with this interesting human story.
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8/10
Diary of a Lost Girl
richardchatten30 March 2020
The director Alfred Santell remains rather mysterious; his output ranging from moody black & white adaptations of Maxwell Anderson and Eugene O'Neill to Technicolor nonsense with Dorothy Lamour. A lot of people who consider themselves knowledgable about films have never heard of him. In 1946 he was considered important enough to include in the appendix at the back of Roger Manvell's 'Film', but twenty years later, despite still being alive, both he and this film (his last after breaking with Republic over a contract dispute in 1947) had fallen through the cracks in film history sufficiently to be omitted from both Andrew Sarris's 'American Cinema' and Maltin's 'TV Movies'.

Despite the twee title, it deserves consideration alongside other shoestring Republic 'art' movies like Orson Welles' 'Macbeth' and Frank Borzage's 'Moonrise', stylishly shot by Jack Marta (for whom it must have been a stimulating change from westerns), with an eccentric score by George Antheil and attractive lead performances by Mona Freeman and James Dunn (whose last lead this was, fifteen years after being launched by Borzage in the latter's Oscar-winning 'Bad Girl').
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10/10
One film that got me weeping & blubbering
KayMack2318 December 2019
Oh what a fine film. Girl with the WORST mother in history- a trashy, deceptive narcissist who almost ruins her daughter by selfishly assuming she'd continue in her mother's footsteps. She teaches her teen daughter how to apply lipstick- to be used as a tool to capture innocent men to scam them out of their money- at least that's how the "mother" sees it. Her daughter, Ziggy, manages to find and marry a perfect man who is killed in action, leaving her a widow with an enchanting baby: "Button-nose". Ziggy is cheated out of her child by lying, evil persons - the juvenile authorities granting Ziggy one way window visits with that adorable pumpkin, watching her child's "first steps" from afar had me blubbering, not many films cause me to shed tears like that. Every character in this movie is their own character- every personality developed, you feel for them, cheer for them, hate them and love them. SO worth watching!! The babies alone- oh man, what fabulous direction!!! How did they get that baby to follow directions? It was great. And- GOOD ending. A great movie for anyone who loves miracles, Irish mothers, babies, and who has experienced deception. What lies can do to a woman!
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Melodrama for Mother's Day
jarrodmcdonald-111 May 2023
Warning: Spoilers
Republic Pictures turned out this touching tearjerker that begins on Mother's Day 1946 (the film was released later in the same year, around Christmastime). We start with a young woman, played by Mona Freeman, who has now become a mother herself. Things haven't gone smoothly for her, and that's an understatement.

Stopping outside a florist's shop, she looks through the window at an arrangement of flowers. Then she flashes back to another Mother's Day eight years earlier in 1938, when she took a flower home to her own mother (June Duprez). We quickly see that the girl's selfless act of showing appreciation for her mother was a wasted effort.

In order to escape the poverty in their rundown tenement apartment building, Duprez basically prostitutes herself and passes her then-12 year old daughter off as a kid sister. So when Freeman brings a rose to her to commemorate Mother's Day, it nearly spoils the ruse of them being sisters.

It's an interesting way to start the movie, because we already have learned some home truths about the girl Freeman is portraying; important things like what type of background she's from, what a poor role model her own mother is, and how this will undoubtedly affect Freeman's ability to be a decent mom herself.

Adele Rogers St. Johns' story adds in some fascinating peripheral characters, nearly all of them with their own sort of con in motion. Freeman aids Duprez in various schemes to fleece stupid men, so they can get ahead. It's a bit alarming to see a young preteen girl smoking and drinking in some of the early scenes. Supposedly, the production code office had many objections to the script and forced a few rewrites, so one can only imagine what the initial drafts contained.

Into the mix we meet the main con artist, played by recent Oscar winner James Dunn. He picks up on the phony "sister" act, deducing that Duprez and Freeman are really mother and daughter. But he's not going to get in the way of their grifting. In fact, he is running his own racket involving stolen furniture, and he offers Freeman a side job helping him and his gang with those endeavors.

Most of the casting, in terms of the actors' real life ages, is perfect for this story. Mona Freeman was 20 when the film was made, and she gets to age from 12 to 20. During those early scenes she does look extremely young. It's somewhat jarring to see her do such bad things while "12" and yet when her character grows up in the subsequent sequences, the slight changes in makeup and hairstyle plus her own subtle performance in suggesting the maturing of the character, well it is all rather convincing.

June Duprez was only 28, but she passes for mid-30s. She doesn't exactly conceal her British accent, and there is no dialogue to indicate she's playing a British American woman, but that's a minor quibble. As for Jimmy Dunn, he was actually 44 during production, and he does look 44. But his wise-to-the-world approach works for the character, plus Dunn is of Irish heritage, and he works beautifully with Dorothy Vaughan, who plays his kind-hearted Catholic Irish ma.

The other main performer I should mention is William Marshall, a singer who became an film actor at Warner Brothers and Republic. Like Miss Duprez, he is also 28, but unlike Duprez, he looks younger. So it is believable for him to be paired with Freeman, playing a military man on temporary leave. His role is that of a handsome and wholesome contrast to Dunn, and it makes sense that Freeman's character gravitates to him. Mostly because she needs some goodness in her life. They quickly marry, but then he is killed overseas in the war. She soon discovers she's pregnant.

I won't spoil all the plot, but suffice it to say that the middle section of the picture has Freeman adjusting to widowhood and single parenthood. She strives to be better at raising a child than her own mother was, and it's a huge struggle for her. Meanwhile, Dunn has been apprehended for his crimes and spends time in prison. When he gets out and looks up Freeman, he is surprised to learn all that's happened to her while he was incarcerated.

The narrative stops short of having Dunn and Freeman end up together, though it is heavily implied in the final scene. I think it is to the filmmakers' credit that we don't get a predictable ending. The story's resolution is more concerned with showing how Freeman has evolved, and that she has survived the hard knocks. She will now enjoy a stable life.
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