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Forbidden Hours

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Cinematography
  
Genres
  
Romance Film, Drama film

Country
  
United States

Director
  
Production design
  
Cedric Gibbons

Duration
  

Language
  
English

Release date
  
March 5, 1927 (1927-03-05)

Writer
  
John Colton (titles), A.P. Younger (screenplay), A.P. Younger (story)

Cast
  
,
Renee Adoree
, , ,
Roy DArcy

Similar movies
  
The Merry Widow (1925)

Forbidden Hours is a 1928 American silent film directed by Harry Beaumont as a vehicle for Mexican-born star Ramon Novarro. It was the second of four films to pair Novarro with leading lady Renée Adorée.

Contents

Plot

Set in the fictitious European kingdom of Balanca, Prince Michael IV is being coerced, by his advisers, to marry a young woman of royal blood. However, he has fallen for a peasant.

Production

The film was shot in Los Angeles with a budget of $293,000. Working titles included The Sun King, His Night and The Loves of Louis. The script originally contained reworked plot elements from Man in the Iron Mask but these elements were eventually discarded and the film took on a more Prussian design scheme reminiscent of the earlier Novarro success, The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg. Plot elements were allegedly adapted from the reign of Louis XIV of France. The Palm Beach Post suggested that Marie of Romania had inspired the character of the Queen Mother, played by Dorothy Cumming.

News sources reported that Jacqueline Gadsden, Marcelle Corday and a Shirley O'Hara were also in the cast. Sven Hugo Borg may have also appeared in the film.

As originally scripted, Prince Michael eventually marries his betrothed in order to keep peace between his nation and hers. The concluding scene showed him passing a convent where Marie now resides as a nun. This ending, which deliberately recalled Student Prince, was changed to a happier one, but press materials were still issued by the studio detailing the original ending, causing some confusion in the press.

Release

Forbidden Hours premiered at the Capitol Theater in New York on 22 July 1928. The film was greeted with mixed critical responses. The Film Daily described it as a "rehash of Student Prince and Merry Widow themes." The Palm Beach Post, however, was one source who praised the film's scenario, design and performances. Reviewer Anne Austin suggested in her report on the film's altered ending that Renée Adorée seemed too old for the role of Marie.

As a prestige picture, Forbidden Hours was widely distributed and advertised. At the California Theatre in San Jose, California, it was accompanied by Hi-Yeller Idea, a live prologue staged by Fanchon and Marco.

Forbidden Hours eventually made a profit of $109,000. It was considered a commercial disappointment by the studio, however. Long thought to be lost, Forbidden Hours was discovered to have survived in 2000, and had its first theatrical screening in seventy-three years at the Bijou Theater in Lincoln City, Oregon in 2002.

References

Forbidden Hours Wikipedia
Forbidden Hours IMDb


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