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  1. Platinum Blonde

    Platinum Blonde

    R2008 · Fantasy · 1h 20m

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  1. Platinum Blonde is a 1931 American pre-Code romantic comedy motion picture directed by Frank Capra, written by Jo Swerling and starring Loretta Young, Robert Williams and Jean Harlow. Platinum Blonde was Robert Williams' last screen appearance; he died of peritonitis three days after the film's October 31 release.

  2. Platinum Blonde: Directed by Frank Capra. With Loretta Young, Robert Williams, Jean Harlow, Halliwell Hobbes. A young woman from a very rich family impulsively marries a reporter, but each assumes the other is the one whose lifestyle must change.

    • (3.5K)
    • Comedy, Romance
    • Frank Capra
    • 1931-10-31
  3. Platinum Blonde (1931) -- (Movie Clip) Baby-Kins Reporter Stew Smith (Robert Williams) is looking to return incriminating letters to society gal Ann Schuyler (Jean Harlow) who's taken by surprise in Frank Capra's Platinum Blonde, 1931.

    • Frank R. Capra, C. C. Coleman
    • Loretta Young
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  5. Investigative journalist Stew Smith (Robert Williams) has a reputation for being merciless in his reporting. In a break from convention, after writing a tell-all story on a wealthy family of ...

    • (44)
    • Jean Harlow
    • Frank Capra
    • Romance, Comedy
  6. Overview. Anne Schuyler is an upper-crust socialite who bullies her reporter husband into conforming to her highfalutin ways. The husband chafes at the confinement of high society, though, and yearns for a creative outlet. He decides to write a play and collaborates with a fellow reporter. Frank Capra. Harry Chandlee. Douglas W. Churchill.

  7. Nov 4, 2003 · Written to showcase Harlow’s talent, looks and charm, PLATINUM BLONDE is a glorious spoof of the newspaper business in New York City during the Depression. Ann Schuyler (Harlow), a wealthy socialite, meets reporter Stew Smith (Robert Williams, Devotion) and the two fall madly in love.

    • DVD
  8. Synopsis by Hans J. Wollstein. A rather bleak comedy-drama from Frank Capra, Platinum Blonde basically starts where Capra's later and much more buoyant It Happened One Night (1934) ends: the marriage between a brash newspaperman and a society dame.

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