Walls of Gold
Cast & Crew
Kenneth Mackenna
Sally Eilers
Norman Foster
Ralph Morgan
Rosita Moreno
Rochelle Hudson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Barnes Ritchie, a businessman for his uncle's steel firm, prides himself on being a sworn bachelor, but in reality desires to marry someone with traditional values. Barnes and Jeanie Satterlee, a sophisticated businesswoman who runs an employment agency, meet in the lobby of a New York office building when Barnes accidentally steps on her lipstick, and they soon begin dating. As Barnes makes plans to attend a New Year's Eve party at his uncle Gordon's house with Jeanie and her younger naïve sister Honey, Gordon, a philanderer, warns him about Jeanie, whom he believes to be a manipulative and materialistic girl. During the party, Gordon is attracted to Jeanie. Later, as she waits for Barnes before going to dinner, Gordon shows up in his stead and makes excuses for Barnes's absence. She at first refuses an expensive chinchilla coat that he offers her, but weakens when she tries it on and finally accepts it. When Barnes arrives at his uncle's home that night, he is angered upon learning that Jeanie accepted the coat, as she had earlier refused his attempt to replace her broken lipstick, and he now thinks she has proven his uncle's low opinion of her. Later, Barnes arrives drunk at the Satterlees' home in search of Jeanie and finds Honey, instead. Jeanie, who has decided to return the coat, learns that the two have married, and she begins to date Gordon, but admits that she does not love him. They marry when Gordon convinces her that mutual fondness is the sanest justification for marriage, and that she was made for the kind of luxury that he can offer her. At a Paris racetrack on their honeymoon, Gordon shows himself to be an unfaithful husband by pursuing other women. When they return to New York, Jeanie learns that Honey is pregnant and that Barnes has left Gordon's steel firm for a job in the jungles of South America. Jeanie herself would like to have a child, but Gordon is adamantly opposed to the idea. Jeanie gets a phone call from Honey's doctor and rushes to the hospital where Honey is dying after having given birth to a son. Honey admits to Jeanie that she seduced Barnes when he was looking for sympathy, and Jeanie promises to care for Honey's child. Barnes returns from South America to visit his son Bill, but seeing how attached Jeanie has become to the baby, he lets her keep him. Realizing that Gordon is unfaithful, Jeanie ignores his escapades, but when exotic dancer Carla Monterez, one of his mistresses, insists on performing at a party they give, Jeanie is humiliated. After handling the situation diplomatically, Jeanie asks Gordon for a divorce. Suspecting that she loves Barnes, Gordon vows to ruin him should she insist on the divorce. Gordon's other mistress, Joan Street, the Ritchies' young maid, is also greatly upset by Gordon's affair with Carla, and when he refuses to go away with her, she pulls a gun on him as they argue. Gordon dies from a heart attack before she fires, however, and Jeanie has Barnes sneak Joan out of the house. Sometime later, a reunited Jeanie and Barnes drive with Bill and their new baby.
Director
Kenneth Mackenna
Cast
Sally Eilers
Norman Foster
Ralph Morgan
Rosita Moreno
Rochelle Hudson
Fredric Santley
Marjorie Gateson
Mary Mason
Margaret Seddon
Gloria Roy
Charles Coleman
Rolfe Sedan
Adrian Rosley
Houghton Norfleet
Crew
Jasper Blystone
S. C. Chapman
Lester Cole
Duncan Cramer
Max H. Golden
R. L. Hough
Samuel Kaylin
Marion Orth
Royer
George Schneiderman
Edmond Seward
Wallace Sullivan
Sol M. Wurtzel
Film Details
Technical Specs
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
In the opening credits, the film is introduced as "Kathleen Norris' Walls of Gold." The novel was originally serialized in American Magazine (Oct 1932-April 1933). Emma Dunn was originally cast as "Mrs. Satterlee." The Twentieth Century-Fox Records of the Legal Department at the UCLA Theater Arts Library contain correspondence from an official of Fortune Magazine, who complained that a fictional magazine in the film, which was called Fame and Fortune, was similar in format and layout to Fortune, but was "a rather cheap puff sheet." Although Fortune did not threaten to take any legal action, executive producer Sol M. Wurtzel, in a letter, asked W. C. Michel, Fox Vice-President, to advise Fortune that at their next opportunity they have in a picture, "we will make up for it."
Variety noted about this film: "There is considerable library footage, entirely too much, and one Dunning [special effects] bit in which the background and characters in front fail utterly to match....Either the director or editor had a weakness for cutting back and forth in intimate scenes, and that tires." Variety also commented that the Paris racetrack scene contained newsreel footage. According to Daily Variety, cast member Houghton Norfleet was a UCLA football star.