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Sentimental Journey

An actress becomes taken with Hitty, a young orphan prone to dreaming. Julie soon finds out that she is ill and has only a short time to live. She decides to adopt the child so that her husband Bill will not be alone when she dies. Unfortunately, Bill is not charmed by Hitty.

Top Cast

  • John Payne

    John Payne

    William O. Weatherly

  • Maureen O'Hara

    Maureen O'Hara

    Julie Beck Weatherly

  • William Bendix

    William Bendix

    Donnelly - Uncle Don

  • Cedric Hardwicke

    Cedric Hardwicke

    Dr. Jim Miller

  • Glenn Langan

    Glenn Langan

    Judson

  • Mischa Auer

    Mischa Auer

    Gregory Petrovich Rogozhin

  • Kurt Kreuger

    Kurt Kreuger

    Walt Wilson

  • Trudy Marshall

    Trudy Marshall

    Ruth

  • Ruth Nelson

    Ruth Nelson

    Mrs. McMasters

Overview

An actress becomes taken with Hitty, a young orphan prone to dreaming. Julie soon finds out that she is ill and has only a short time to live. She decides to adopt the child so that her husband Bill will not be alone when she dies. Unfortunately, Bill is not charmed by Hitty.

Rating

6.4 / 10
6 Reviews
1 Popular

1 Reviews

  • CinemaSerf
    CinemaSerf
    6 Jul 7, 2022

    Maureen O'Hara ("Julie) and John Payne ("Bill") are a happily married, successful, theatrical couple for whom all is going well until she starts to feel a bit poorly. It transpires that she has an heart condition, so she decides that it might be a good idea to adopt a child so her husband will have someone once she has gone. She alights on the rather high maintenance "Hitty" (Connie Marshall), a girl with lots of fantastic dreams of unicorns, and whose heart is in the right place. Bill, initially, doesn't take to the youngster but as things run their inevitable course, the three of them must all learn to adapt. There are a couple of fine supporting efforts from William Bendix as "Uncle Don" and some gravitas from Sir Cedric Hardwicke as her doctor; and for the most part the drama is paced well and the production adequate. O'Hara doesn't quite work for me here, though - there is little chemistry between her and Payne; and the whole premiss of the film I found too far-fetched, even cheesy, for me to enjoy. It certainly lives up to it's title, and is frequently peppered with the eponymous, and charming, song but it's was all just a bit too schmaltzy for me.

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