In Our Time

1944 "Their Love was all these things"
6.6| 1h50m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 19 February 1944 Released
Producted By: Warner Bros. Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

It is early 1939 in Poland when Mrs. Bromley and Jennifer come to buy antiques for her business in London. Jennifer meets Count Stephen and they wine, dine and see the sights though out the city. He wishes to marry, but his family is against plain Jennifer. When she tries to leave, he catches her at the train station and they are married. To be self sufficient, they modernize the family farm with tractors and increase production, but then Germany starts the war.

Genre

Drama, Romance

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Director

Vincent Sherman

Production Companies

Warner Bros. Pictures

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In Our Time Audience Reviews

Redwarmin This movie is the proof that the world is becoming a sick and dumb place
Rijndri Load of rubbish!!
Mjeteconer Just perfect...
Humaira Grant It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.
edwagreen Excellent 1944 film with a greatly subdued, but still superior Ida Lupino, finding love in Poland with a count-wonderfully played by Paul Henried.What makes this film so good is that it shows the class distinctions among the Polish-from peasants to aristocracy, the latter unwilling to give up their status even as war beckons.Had this been a comedy, Mary Boland would have stolen the show. The gifted actress, with her high-pitched voice, was wonderful as the woman who takes Lupino to Poland in the former's search to buy antiques.Victor Francen is the embodiment of the aristocracy unwilling to change its ways. I thought by the end that he would have Nazi sympathies, given the type of person he generally played in films.A wonderful patriotic movie filled with commitment, duty and love.
rickscafe419 Very enjoyable indeed. I always enjoyed the stoic acting of Paul Henreid anyway and to see the very attractive and talented Ida Lupino at age 26 was a treat.The important idea of a beau, either male or female, not being good enough for the family into which he or she's becoming a part of through marriage, is ancient. I know that here in the USA, it reigns galore but of course from studying history, I had learned that the "quality" of the beau in aristocratic Europe families was intense. Like for instance, here in the USA, family crests and all that jazz are meaningless but not so in Europe. There, lineage, pomp and ceremony are of supreme importance.This is why Ida Lupino's entrance into the family of Count Orvid's of Poland is fascinating. It was like pitting the old Brooklyn Dodgers against the mighty New York Yankees in so many World Series games. Obviously in the film, Dodger Lupino didn't stand a chance except for uncle Leopold Baruta's warm understanding of why aristocracy shouldn't destroy love.In the meantime, this enchanting love story is set in the backdrop of maniac Hitler's preparations for invading Poland. The film therefore has tension cleverly wound within the fabric of the entire film. And what will happen to the love affair and marriage of Ida and Paul once Hitler attacks? See for yourself--it's a good movie on Turner Classics.
sol1218 (Some Spoilers) Very heavy handed WWII propaganda movie involving a young British tourist Jenny Whittridge, Ida Lupino, in Warsaw Poland looking to buy antiques for her picky boss British interior designer Mrs. Bowley, Mary Boland, who also happens to be a marshmallow addict. Jenny ends up falling in love with handsome Polish Count Stefan Orwid who's played by everyone's favorite refugee from fascism back in those WWII Hollywood days Paul Henreid.Meeting Jenny in a Warsaw antique shop Stefan is fascinated with her knowledge of one of Poland's favorite sons musical composer Chopin and falls for her in Jennys ability to pay his piano concertos so expertly. As it turned Jenny's father was a piano teacher back in England who was also a Chopin enthusiast. In no time at all, in what seems like 48 ours, Stefan asks Jenny for her hand in marriage. Now living at the 10,000 acre Orwid Estate Jenny gets to work on her helpless, in him being forced to stay there, husband Stefan by taking control of the estate's summer harvest. Using tried and true principles of the Social/Capitalistic system Jenny uses a profit shearing scheme to get the local peasants who work there in order to increase their own output in the harvest. This all has Stefan's Uncle Pavel, Victor Francen, the man who controls the money for the Orwid clan get very angry in that Jenny who's not even Polish and didn't go beyond high school in her educational pursuits is able to make him look ridicules in his inability to get those, the local peasants, at the estate to do their jobs like she did! What's really bugging Uncle Pavel is the peasants planing to form a union in order to get higher, instead of slave, wages for their labors. This would end the gravy train that Uncle Pavel and his good for nothing and high minded, in themselves, relatives have been riding on for the last 400 years!All this is suddenly put on the back burner when Hitler's Nazi Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939 with his Panzers Stukas and mechanized divisions. Stefan who joined up with his unit, in which he ended up being its only survivor, in the Polish Calvary had his horse shot from under him as he tried to stop the German advance. Now with Poland not only fighting off the Germans but the USSR ,who joined the war as Germany's ally, as well it became obvious that Poland's days as a free and independent nation were numbered. With Poland now totally defeated and devastated all Jenny and Stefan could do is join the Polish resistance and continue the fight against fascism as guerrilla fighters. As the movie ends we see Jenny & Stefan set the Orwid Estate aflame to prevent the Germans from getting their hands on it and march off into the Polish forest to join up with the Polish partisans to the music of the Polish National Anthem "The Polonaise". As for the fearless and take no BS, from Jenny & Stefan, Uncle Pavel he played it safe and checked out of the country with all the gold coins and silverware he could carry to peaceful and neutral Romania. As things, and history, was soon to turn out Uncle Pavel's freedom was short lived with peaceful and neutral Romania joining up with Germany and becoming her ally two years later in Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union! The very nation that helped him carve up Poland two years earlier! That while Poland's "steadfast" allies France and England, who declared war on Germany for its invasion of Poland, stood by without as much as lifting a finger to stop it!
The-Lonely-Londoner As an actress, Ida Lupino achieved success in the 40's acting alongside Humphrey Bogart and Edward G. Robinson. For me, she was a totally average actress. As a director, she had more substance to offer in the 50's and 60's, but I guess she was just paying the bills with this film.