Bad for Each Other

He takes your life in his hands!

5.7
19531h 23m

A doctor returned from the Korean War must choose between joining a glamorous practice and helping the poor.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Bad for Each Other • 1953 • Theatrical Trailer

Bad for Each Other • 1953 • Theatrical Trailer

Cast

Photo of Charlton Heston

Charlton Heston

Dr. Tom Owen

Photo of Lizabeth Scott

Lizabeth Scott

Helen Curtis

Photo of Dianne Foster

Dianne Foster

Joan Lasher

Photo of Mildred Dunnock

Mildred Dunnock

Mrs. Mary Owen

Photo of Arthur Franz

Arthur Franz

Dr. Jim Crowley

Photo of Ray Collins

Ray Collins

Dan Reasonover

Photo of Marjorie Rambeau

Marjorie Rambeau

Mrs. Roger Nelson

Photo of Lester Matthews

Lester Matthews

Dr. Homer Gleeson

Photo of Rhys Williams

Rhys Williams

Doc Scobee

Photo of Lydia Clarke

Lydia Clarke

Rita Thornburg

Photo of Chris Alcaide

Chris Alcaide

Pete Olzoneski

Photo of Robert Keys

Robert Keys

Joe Marzano

Photo of Frank Sully

Frank Sully

Tippy Kashko, Townsman

Photo of Ann Robinson

Ann Robinson

Lucille Grellett

Photo of Dorothy Green

Dorothy Green

Ada Nicoletti

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Charlton Heston ("Col. Owen") returns from almost ten years as an army surgeon to his Pennsylvania home to find that his dead brother has been accused of sloppy practices that caused fatalities at a coal mine. His mother (Mildred Dunnock) and local doctor "Scobee" (Rhys Williams) hope he will stay and help the local community, but he discovers that his late brother had run up quite a bit of debt and determines to pay it back. A chance meeting with the "Helen" (Lizabeth Scott) - the daughter of the man who holds the debt - introduces him to new opportunities. She is wealthy, twice divorced, and well connected. His quick thinking after an incident at a party sees an association with prominent, and rather venal, doctor "Gleeson" (Lester Matthews) offer him a route to success and prosperity. Along the way, he proposes to "Helen" and all looks set fair. Much of this film takes a swipe at the hypochondriac patients - mostly wealthy women - and at the physicians who are little better than charlatans; charging a small fortune for glorified Alka Seltzer. Will "Owen" continue to be satisfied with this increasingly unfulfilling existence or will his innate instincts developed during wartime send him back to tend to the more legitimate and urgent needs of the community at large? Heston is a bit on the wooden side here, he delivers his dialogue rather stiltedly and without much passion. Scott is adequate - but more as an effective conduit for the decisions the doctor might make, and there is a decent, if sparing, contribution from Dianne Foster as the voice of reason in the man's increasingly conflicted life - and not just professionally, either. It's way too wordy but it does offer food for thought about practices that probably still exist today and is a bit better than I was expecting.

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