Twin Husbands


1h 8m 1934

Film Details

Also Known As
Birds of a Feather
Genre
Crime
Release Date
Feb 24, 1934
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Invincible Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Chesterfield Motion Pictures Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 8m
Film Length
7 reels

Synopsis

After he wakes from a deep sleep in a strange Long Island mansion, a dazed man finds a calendar dated 1938, four years later than his last recollection, and evidence that his name is Jerome "Jerry" Peyton Werrenden. Greyson, a butler, tells Jerry that he is the mansion's owner and that he has been ailing mentally for months. Jerry, however, quickly deduces that he has been kidnapped and drugged and that Greyson was hired to pose as a longtime servant as part of a scheme to convince him that he is suffering from amnesia. Curious about the scheme, Jerry pays Greyson to continue his part, while he pretends to be Werrenden with Chloe, his supposed wife, and with Colton Drain, his supposed secretary. When Chloe and Colton realize that Jerry is wise to the plot, they offer him $10,000 to impersonate Werrenden, who is living in Europe, in a meeting with Colonel Gordon Lewis, the estate trustee, who has been asked to deliver $200,000 in bonds. Jerry accepts the offer and, while waiting for the colonel, overhears Chloe and Colton discussing plans to leave for South America. After requesting a signed receipt, Lewis, apparently fooled by the impersonation, gives Jerry the bonds, which Jerry then places in a safe, the combination to which only the real Werrenden knows. Later that night, Colton and Chloe discover two thugs, Feets and Chuck, breaking into the safe. When the thugs see Jerry, they identify him as The Sparrow, a master "cracksman," and as a favor to his fellow crooks, Jerry allows them to escape before the police arrive. After a confused interrogation of Chloe, Colton, Lewis and Greyson about Jerry's identity, Sergeant Kerrigan orders Jerry and Chloe to police headquarters. To Chloe's surprise, however, Jerry takes her to his house, explaining that Greyson had telephoned his minion, Kerrigan, with orders to impersonate a police sergeant. After Jerry determines that Chloe was actually trying to save her ne'er-do-well husband from the financial scheming of Colton, he confronts Lewis about the bonds. Cornered, Lewis confesses that he had hired Feets and Chuck to steal the bonds because he needed the money to cover his own overdraughts. Jerry then breaks into Colton's private vaults and unearths several documents that reveal that Colton had covered up news of Werrenden's death and had stolen his securities. Jerry returns to the Werrenden mansion and shows Chloe, with whom he has fallen in love, his evidence. Supported by Chloe, a repentant Lewis and Greyson, Jerry convinces the police that he is Werrenden and that Colton is suffering a nervous breakdown. Unable to expose Colton to the police because of his own criminal activities, Jerry nonetheless satisfies Chloe by forcing Colton to agree to leave immediately for South America. Chloe then convinces a reformed Jerry not to run away, but to stay with her indefinitely.

Film Details

Also Known As
Birds of a Feather
Genre
Crime
Release Date
Feb 24, 1934
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Invincible Pictures Corp.
Distribution Company
Chesterfield Motion Pictures Corp.
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 8m
Film Length
7 reels

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

The working title of this film was Birds of a Feather. Variety reviewed the film on two different dates. Sources disagree as to the names of some of the characters. In a version of the script, which was submitted with the copyright records, "The Sparrow's" real name is never mentioned, while Miljan's character is referred to as "Jerry" throughout the story. Reviews, however, list Miljan's character as "Jerry Van Trevor." It is not known if "Jerry Van Trevor" is an incorrect name or is actually the real name of "The Sparrow." Maurice Black's character is listed as "Red" in reviews, but as "Feets" in the script.