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Our Betters
Plot Synopsis by Hal Erickson

Our Betters is adapted from Somerset Maugham's play about the shallowness and hypocrisy of the idle rich. American heiress Constance Bennett snares a titled British husband (Alan Mobray), but when she discovers that he is merely marrying her for her money, she decides to carry on a few affairs of her own. Going from wide-eyed innocent to bitter cynic, Bennett tries to maneuver her own sister (Anita Louise) into a titled marriage so that the "gravy train" of privileges and sexual liaisons will never end. Bennett ultimately ends up alone and miserable, though she retains her wealth and puts up a good front right to the final fade-out. Maugham's original play was intended to satirize wealthy Americans who buy their way into European society, but the film version of Our Betters is far rougher on the Continental Set than it is on Constance Bennett.

Similar Works
Dangerous Liaisons  (1988, Stephen Frears)
The Age of Innocence  (1993, Martin Scorsese)
Gosford Park  (2001, Robert Altman)
Other Related Works
 Is related to:    The Moon and Sixpence  (1943, Albert Lewin)
   Of Human Bondage  (1934, John Cromwell)
   The Razor's Edge  (1946, Edmund Goulding)
   The Letter  (1929, Jean de Limur)