I Met My Love Again

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I Met My Love Again
I MET MY LOVE AGAIN.jpg
Directed by Joshua Logan
Arthur Ripley
George Cukor (uncredited)
Produced by Walter Wanger
Screenplay by David Hertz
Based on Summer Lightning
1936 novel
by Allene Corliss
Starring Joan Bennett
Henry Fonda
Music by Heinz Roemheld (uncredited)
Cinematography Hal Mohr
Edited by Otho Lovering
Edward Mann
Production
company
Walter Wanger Productions
Distributed by United Artists
Release dates
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  • January 14, 1938 (1938-01-14)
Running time
77 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $428,800[1]
Box office $416,687[1]

I Met My Love Again (1938) is an American romantic drama film distributed by United Artists, directed by Joshua Logan, Arthur Ripley and George Cukor. The screenplay was written by David Hertz, based on the novel Summer Lightning by Allene Corliss. The film stars Joan Bennett and Henry Fonda.

Synopsis

The film begins with Julie (Joan Bennett) and Ives (Henry Fonda) are two teen sweethearts, on a walk together. They declare they love each other and want to get married as soon as Ives has earned enough money for them to live on.

The following Christmas Julie is out in town with her friend, buying provisions for a Christmas party the former is throwing. Although there is a blizzard, the girls wager on who can reach home first, Julie taking the mountain road. Julie gets lost in the storm, and her family and Ives begin to panic. She finds a small cottage, rented by pulp fiction writer Michael Shaw (Alan Marshal). He seduces her and the next morning they marry and elope to Paris.

Ten unhappy years pass, for Julie and Ives. When Michael is shot in a brawl, Julie returns to her hometown with her daughter Michael. Ives has become a college professor, and the two meet curtly. One of Ives students Brenda Lane (Louise Platt) has developed a massive crush on her teacher, and tells her she loves him. Brenda uses almost the exact words Ives used to Julie ten years previously when she describes her love for him, and suddenly he realizes he still loves Julie. He rejects Brenda and invites Julie to the school prom with him.

During the evening they find there has love re-blossomed, but it is ruined when Brenda makes a scene. Someone takes Brenda home, and Julie and Ives decide to leave, but they also decide to get married as soon as possible.

When they arrive home, a man arrives with Brenda claiming she tried to hang herself after the party. Ives declares he can't marry Julie if Brenda is prepared to die for love of him. Julie, distraught, rushes out to the car where Brenda is waiting and begins to drive it at high speeds, claiming she is going to kill them both as neither of them can have Ives. Brenda begs her not to do it, claiming she didn't really try to kill herself, and only pretended to do so to get Ives back for rejecting her.

Julie and Ives get married at long last.

Cast

Reception

The film didn't make a profit, but lost $64,104.[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Matthew Bernstein, Walter Wagner: Hollywood Independent, Minnesota Press, 2000 p438

External links


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