Divorce in the Family


1h 20m 1932
Divorce in the Family

Brief Synopsis

A young boy gets caught in an emotional tug of war between his divorcing parents.

Film Details

Also Known As
After Divorce, Father and Sons, Father's Son
Genre
Drama
Release Date
Aug 27, 1932
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Distribution Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Distributing Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Mojave, California, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 20m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
9 reels

Synopsis

Ethnologist John Parker loves his two boys, Al and Terry, and misses them terribly when they have to leave his archaeological dig at the end of the summer. While Al goes to school, Terry returns home to their mother Grace, from whom John is divorced. Once home, Terry learns that Grace has married Dr. Phil Shumaker, a stable man who can provide the home that Grace never had with John. When John gets a note from Terry saying that Grace has married and he wishes he were dead, John decides to give up his work and go to his sons. He visits Al at military school first and asks his assistance in helping Terry to accept Phil as his new father. Though the terms of the divorce prevent John from seeing Terry at home, he takes a place near them and asks Al to keep in touch with him about Terry's progress. Though Phil tries to be a good father, he does not understand Terry and makes rules that are impossible for the child to follow. When Al comes home, he tries to convince Terry that Phil deserves a chance, then talks to Phil about being more of a pal to the boy. One night, after the family has gone to the movies, Al and Terry go for a soda and Al slugs an older boy who says something snide about Grace. Al then develops a crush on Lucille Smith, their next door neighbor, and walks her home instead of Terry. The next day, Phil can't go on a promised rowing trip because of a patient, so Al and Terry go alone. At the lake they meet Lucille, whom Terry insists on taking along, much to Al's disgust. While Terry is playing, he suddenly hears John whistle for him and is overjoyed to see his father. John makes Terry promise not to tell anyone about their brief meeting, however. Terry becomes jealous of Al's attentions to Lucille and causes the boat to tip over, after which Al and Lucille chase him away. When Terry returns home without the others, he and Phil have a serious argument that results in Phil giving Terry a whipping. When Al takes Lucille home, her father orders him off their property, because Terry has implied that something improper happened between Lucille and Al. Angered that Terry has caused him to get on the wrong side of Lucille's father, Al refuses to side with Terry in his argument with Phil. Feeling alone, Terry then runs away, taking the dog that Phil had given him as a companion. They go on the river in a rickety old boat, but are shortly thereafter followed by Al, who remorsefully goes to look for him, after an argument with Phil. At John's cabin, Terry gives their whistle signal, attracting John's attention. When Terry gives a slightly distorted version of his whipping story, John decides to go to Phil for a confrontation. As Al looks for Terry on the river, he is hit by an oncoming boat. Meanwhile, as Grace is about to leave Phil over the whipping, they are informed of Al's accident. Because Al's lung is punctured, when Phil arrives he has to operate immediately. When Grace returns for Phil's nurse and supplies, she tells John, who has just arrrived. Back at the cabin, Phil comforts a miserable Terry and promises to save Al. When Al needs a transfusion, both Phil and John volunteer to be donors, but only Phil's blood is in the right group. When Al recovers, John prepares to sneak Terry away with him to South America, but Terry has now come to like and respect a considerably softened Phil and John decides at the last moment to let Terry stay with his mother and stepfather.

Film Details

Also Known As
After Divorce, Father and Sons, Father's Son
Genre
Drama
Release Date
Aug 27, 1932
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Corp.
Distribution Company
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Distributing Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Mojave, California, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 20m
Sound
Mono (Western Electric Sound System)
Color
Black and White
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1
Film Length
9 reels

Articles

Divorce in the Family -


Separate from his enormously popular buddy pictures with Wallace Beery, MGM's talented child star Jackie Cooper starred in other, smaller comedies and family dramas. 1932's Divorce in the Family sees Jackie once again winning over audiences by crying on cue. Little Terry Parker returns from a sleep-away camp to find his scientist father (Lewis Stone) replaced by an unwelcome stepfather (Conrad Nagel). Mother Lois Wilson hopes both of her sons will accept the change, but Terry rebels when Nagel clamps down with new house rules, such as prohibiting Terry from playing in the kitchen with his pet lizard. The miserable Terry finally runs away, his lower lip jutting out in protest. But his older brother Al (Maurice Murphy) almost drowns looking for him. Seeing his new stepdad donate blood to save Al's life, Terry dries his tears and decides that, "having two fathers is not so bad after all." Reviewers of the time gave equal praise to newcomer Jean Parker in a supporting role, and a comic dog that sleeps with one eye open. Jackie Cooper remained an audience favorite, especially when he re-teamed with Wallace Beery in Treasure Island. Lewis Stone would earn a second chance at proper fatherhood in the long running Andy Hardy series, as a wise paterfamilias and advisor to Mickey Rooney.

By Glenn Erickson
Divorce In The Family -

Divorce in the Family -

Separate from his enormously popular buddy pictures with Wallace Beery, MGM's talented child star Jackie Cooper starred in other, smaller comedies and family dramas. 1932's Divorce in the Family sees Jackie once again winning over audiences by crying on cue. Little Terry Parker returns from a sleep-away camp to find his scientist father (Lewis Stone) replaced by an unwelcome stepfather (Conrad Nagel). Mother Lois Wilson hopes both of her sons will accept the change, but Terry rebels when Nagel clamps down with new house rules, such as prohibiting Terry from playing in the kitchen with his pet lizard. The miserable Terry finally runs away, his lower lip jutting out in protest. But his older brother Al (Maurice Murphy) almost drowns looking for him. Seeing his new stepdad donate blood to save Al's life, Terry dries his tears and decides that, "having two fathers is not so bad after all." Reviewers of the time gave equal praise to newcomer Jean Parker in a supporting role, and a comic dog that sleeps with one eye open. Jackie Cooper remained an audience favorite, especially when he re-teamed with Wallace Beery in Treasure Island. Lewis Stone would earn a second chance at proper fatherhood in the long running Andy Hardy series, as a wise paterfamilias and advisor to Mickey Rooney. By Glenn Erickson

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Father's Sons and Father and Sons were working titles of the film. Some sources reviewed it under the title After Divorce. The Motion Picture Herald review incorrectly credits Samuel Ornitz as co-author of the story. According to pre-production news items in Hollywood Reporter, Walter Huston was originally cast in the role of John Parker, and actor Conrad Nagel initially objected to playing the role of a "father" of a five-year-old boy in the film. Another news item in Hollywood Reporter noted that actress Verree Teasdale, originally cast in the role of Grace, had to be replaced just prior to the film's production because of a severe case of tonsilitis; however, a production still shows Teasdale in one scene, indicating that she May have done some work on the picture before her illness. According to Jackie Cooper's autobiography, the desert sequences in the film were shot in Mojave, CA. Divorce in the Family marked the screen debut of actress Jean Parker (1915-2005).