August Weekend (1936) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Quietly Scandalous Behavior Does Not Rouse the Production Code
boblipton24 December 2018
Valerie Hobson takes the lead in this movie from Chesterfield. It's about a get-together at the country home of kindly, frankly climbing broker Paul Harvey who, it turns out, is facing jail for tax fraud and suggests to Miss Hobson that a life as an international fugitive with him might be fun. The guests (who are penniless members of the 400) and occupants of the house have their own plots running. This, however, is not made from an Elinor Glyn novel, but from one by Faith Baldwin. With the Production Code looking on, you can be sure that matters will end appropriately.

Miss Hobson was near the end of her two-year sojourn in Hollywood. She rarely got out of Gower Gulch and would soon return to Britain. There she would become a screen star, benefiting from her marriage to Anthony Havelock-Ellis. Her second marriage would be less successful; husband John Profumo became a byword for scandal throughout the United Kingdom.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A dialog-bound comedy of manners
JohnHowardReid2 September 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Aside from the pleasure of seeing Valerie Hobson in one of her Hollywood movies, August Weekend has little to recommend it. The other players led by Paul Harvey try hard, but make little impression on what is admittedly a rather boring excuse for a plot. As a dialog-bound comedy of manners, the film fails dismally because the script is just not witty and/or exciting enough to carry an audience for half an hour let alone 72 minutes. It's true too that, aside from Hobson, the other players simply don't have the charisma to enthrall an audience. And if viewers are simply not interested in the people of the play and don't really care what their troubles are and what happens to them, then the movie can only be regarded as a failure. Charles Lamont's deadly dull direction doesn't help either. Available on a very good Alpha DVD.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Money doesn't buy happiness....but it does buy some really annoying children.
planktonrules26 December 2019
The Washburne family is very rich and they're having a party at their mansion for their friends. Through the course of the film, you see that although rich, the Washburnes are a bunch of jerks. The father has two loves...money and adultery. The grown children are spoiled idiots--with the son spouting communist ideology while sponging off his father and the daughter a very annoying brat. In contrast, the poorer folks seem happier and far better adjusted....and that's the obvious message of this movie.

So is it any good? Not especially....which isn't a surprise since it's a cheap B-movie from Chesterfield Pictures. The major problem is the script, as it really didn't know what to do with the message....and the film just seemed to end with nothing actually being resolved. Easy to skip.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Messed up rich family messes up the lives of their guests.
mark.waltz1 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
A poor man's "Dinner at Eight", this poverty row drawing room drama is filled with mainly unlikable characters truly living an imitation of life. There are simply too many people to try and keep track of their own individual soap operas, and this takes the storyline all over the map with no chance whatsoever of getting it back on track. While the storyline development is definitely sound, it is written so lethargically that the situations never ring true. Family patriarch Paul Harvey insists that the most important things in his life are money and power, and is cheating on his wife in addition to obviously cheating the government. Their children are also involved in pathetically selfish lives, entangled along with both Harvey's employees from the business and estate. The storyline has a potential of swinging into high gear in a party sequence where they get together to play a murder mystery game, but this just leads to a boring plot twist involving a stolen necklace. For the most part, all the women seem extremely alike and spend more time trying to bring each other down through insults and never rising above their own pathetic natures. A wise gardener makes an attempt to provide some moral to the story, but with his daughter involved in all of the family intrigue, this is just exposed as a trashy dime store novel where too much drama in too short of a time leaves a hollow feeling that the film never recovers from.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A fine country-weekend social drama
CatherineYronwode3 July 2011
"August Weekend," adapted from a great ensemble-cast story by Faith Baldwin, stars, among others, Valerie Hobson, Paul Harvey, Claire McDowell, and Betty Compson. Those who enjoy such "weekend at the country estate" stories along the line of Aldous Huxley's "Crome Yellow" will recognize the genre and surely appreciate the deft plot, which pits the stock-market rich against the socially prominent who are financially impoverished, and drags the servants and gardeners along for the ride. Lots of fun 1930s touches here too -- "The Proletarian Handbook" among them. The plot is complex, so don't think that a quick viewing is in order. Each individual has a story to tell, and repressed sexual desire drives those who are not fueled by a desire for wealth. Excellent social observations can be found amidst the old-school styling of the script. Enjoy!
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed