Mi último amor


1931

Film Details

Also Known As
Momento loco, Su último amor, Their Mad Moment
Release Date
Jan 1931
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 28 Nov 1931
Production Company
Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the book Basquerie by Eleanor Mercein (New York, 1927).

Synopsis

[The following plot summary is based on the English-language version of this film, Their Mad Moment ; character names refer to that version.] American Suzanne Stanley, who is nearly broke, has taken her stepdaughter Emily to Biarritz to look for a wealthy husband. Emily agrees to end a short-lived romance with a Basque boatman, Esteban Cristera, and accept the marriage proposal from a man she does not love, Sir Harry Congers, whom she considers to be sweet, but pompous. Annoyed with Sir Harry, she goes to her hotel room, where Esteban enters through a window. He asks her to be his wife and come to his hacienda in the mountains to meet his grandmother, who is the head of his clan. While Dibbs, Emily's cousin, encourages her to go, Emily confesses that although she loves Esteban, she hasn't the courage to accept him as he is; however, when Suzanne rebukes her for associating with a peasant, Emily resolves to accompany Esteban and, in her words, live her whole lifetime in the next few days before her wedding to Sir Harry. On the mountain roads during a rainstorm, Emily hits her head on the windshield when the car skids. Esteban takes her to an inn, and because there are no women to help, he assists her in removing her soaked clothing. When she learns that a woman in his village, Stancia, is in love with him, she encourages him to stay the night with her, but he leaves the room, saying that he loves her and that he is afraid of himself. At the hacienda, Esteban's grandmother cautions him that Emily is not of their kind, but he reminds her of his own mother, also not of their kind, whom "Grand Mere" loved. Grand Mere warns Emily of the hardness of a Basque woman's life, and when Stancia describes this life of work, scrubbing, feeding the men and bearing children, Emily says she envies a woman like Stancia, who welcomes such a life with Esteban. Feeling out of place, Emily sneaks away at night and drives back to Biarritz. Esteben defends her to Grand Mere and Stancia and blames himself for not being satisfied to take romance as he finds it. On the day that her wedding to Sir Harry is to take place, Emily, upset that he vows to teach her to hunt despite her assertion that she does not like to kill, leaves the hotel for one last hour of freedom. Esteban finds her in a park, and when she explains that she believes love to be a luxury she cannot afford, he frightens her with a description of the lonely life of those who live without love. He says he will not let her go, and overcome, she asks him to take her back to the mountains; however, he vows to take her to another place, but will not say anymore, and she agrees to go. Esteban rows her in his boat to a yacht on which they set sail for England. Dibbs, Suzanne and Sir Harry, after watching them through binoculars from the hotel, learn that Esteban made a fortune in America and that he is back in Spain for his usual return to his home for the harvest. As Dibbs, who is tickled by the irony, takes a last look, the happy couple sails away.

Film Details

Also Known As
Momento loco, Su último amor, Their Mad Moment
Release Date
Jan 1931
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 28 Nov 1931
Production Company
Fox Film Corp.
Distribution Company
Fox Film Corp.
Country
United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the book Basquerie by Eleanor Mercein (New York, 1927).

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

This was a Spanish-language version of the 1931 film Their Mad Moment, which was directed by Chandler Sprague and starred Dorothy Mackaill and Warner Baxter. The plot summary was based on a screen continuity in the Twentieth Century-Fox Produced Scripts Collection, while the screen credits were taken from credit sheets in the Twentieth Century-Fox Records of the Legal Department, both of which are at the UCLA Theater Arts Library. Although the screen credits state that the film was "From the novel Basquerie by Eleanor Mercein," the book was actually a collection of six short stories, all of which were appeared originally in The Saturday Evening Post, beginning with the story "Basquerie" in the July 3, 1926 issue, and ending with the story "Nostalgia" in the August 13, 1927 issue. The working title of this Spanish-language version was Momento loco, and New York Times reviewed the film in 1933 under the title Su último amor. The setting of the this version was Baja California. It is possible that Paul Perez was involved in the adaptation of the Spanish version, and some sources mention the participation of Eduardo Ugarte in the Spanish adaptation, but this is very unlikely. According to a news item, Twentieth Century-Fox planned to remake the film in 1941 as a Walter Morosco production, and Harold Buchman and Lee Loeb were to write it, but that film was never made.