When We Are Married
The Helliwells, the Soppitts, and the Parkers are old friends gathered to celebrate their silver anniversaries. To their dismay they learn that their marriages may not be valid. On hand are an outrage…
When We Are Married
The Helliwells, the Soppitts, and the Parkers are old friends gathered to celebrate their silver anniversaries. To their dismay they learn that their marriages may not be valid. On hand are an outrageous housekeeper and a photographer. The film is an adaptation of a 1938 stage play by John Boynton Priestley. It is set in Edwardian-era Yorkshire, where three married couples gather to celebrate their Silver Anniversaries; they were all wed on the same day, a quarter-century ago. To their surprise, they learn that a legal technicality may render all three marriages invalid, meaning that they have been "living in sin" for 25 years. Following their initial shock, they start contemplating single life. Some of them are fed up with their spouses, others remember past love interests whom they have not seen in a long time, and others are trying to get reacquainted with their spouses. —Dimos I
When We Are Married
Comedy
Film Details
The Helliwells, the Soppitts, and the Parkers are old friends gathered to celebrate their silver anniversaries. To their dismay they learn that their marriages may not be valid. On hand are an outrageous housekeeper and a photographer.
The film is an adaptation of a 1938 stage play by John Boynton Priestley. It is set in Edwardian-era Yorkshire, where three married couples gather to celebrate their Silver Anniversaries; they were all wed on the same day, a quarter-century ago. To their surprise, they learn that a legal technicality may render all three marriages invalid, meaning that they have been "living in sin" for 25 years.
Following their initial shock, they start contemplating single life. Some of them are fed up with their spouses, others remember past love interests whom they have not seen in a long time, and others are trying to get reacquainted with their spouses. —Dimos I.