This Woman Is Mine backdrop
This Woman Is Mine

This Woman Is Mine

MADNESS...MUTINY....AND A MAID!

4.0 / 1019411h 32m

Synopsis

Three seafaring fur traders fall in love with a female stowaway they discover aboard their ship. Many adventures follow.

Genre: Adventure, Romance

Status: Released

Director: Frank Lloyd

Website:

Main Cast

Franchot Tone

Franchot Tone

Robert Stevens

John Carroll

John Carroll

Ovide de Montigny

Walter Brennan

Walter Brennan

Captain Jonathan Thorne

Carol Bruce

Carol Bruce

Julie Morgan

Nigel Bruce

Nigel Bruce

Duncan MacDougall

Paul Hurst

Paul Hurst

Second Mate Mumford

Frank Conroy

Frank Conroy

First Mate Fox

Leo G. Carroll

Leo G. Carroll

Angus 'Sandy' McKay

Abner Biberman

Abner Biberman

Lamazie

Sig Ruman

Sig Ruman

John Jacob Astor

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

It seems like hardly any time at all since Franchot Tone was sailing aboard HMS “Bounty” but here he is, again, aboard a ship, again flirting with mutiny, on a trading mission to Oregon. It’s captained by the fastidious but not inhumane “Thorne” (Walter Brennan) and crewed by a usual mix of seafaring types and by cocky Frenchman “de Montigny” (John Carroll). They have barely left the port when “Stevens” (Tone) discovers a stowaway in his cabin. “Julie” (Carol Bruce) has been snuck aboard by her French beau on the pretext that they are going to France. Before he gets a chance to get to the bottom of things, the captain walks in for some charts and, angry at being deceived, insists that she adopt the role of his cabin boy. The rest of the voyage sees her cause just about everyone to spar and spat before they arrive and the ship’s two Scottish traders (Nigel Bruce and Leo G. Carroll) attempt to seduce the locals with trinkets and live piglets. Once their trading colony is set up, what adventurous elements to the plot there were largely disappear. It really just becomes a pretty flat love-triangle style of soap that Brennan looks uncomfortable with, Nigel and Leo G. look vaguely perplexed by, whilst Tone and the other Carroll just coast along woodenly as they woo the final Carol in this story, who is meantime doing her best “Esmeralda” impersonation. The dialogue is not much to write home about but the seagoing score sometimes livens things up as they ease their halyards and tighten their mizen tops and it passes the time easily enough before an ending I could quite imagine Brennan had fancied doing half an hour earlier.