Interference (film)

It stars Clive Brook, William Powell, Evelyn Brent, and Doris Kenyon, all making their sound film debuts.

[1][2] At a Remembrance Day service in London, Deborah Kane spots her old flame Philip Voaze who was supposedly killed during World War I.

The film was praised in the New York Times as "a specimen of the strides made by the talking picture".

[5] At the London premiere, Clive Brook's mother remembered a gaff during the screening that put the crowd in an uproar.

The needle on the disk for sound got stuck and kept repeating, "Another one of those damn postcards," over and over again while Brook, on-screen, took his wife into his arms and kissed her.

The full film