Parole Girl

Parole Girl is a 1933 American pre-Code romantic drama film directed by Edward Cline.

She becomes friends with chatty fellow inmate Jeanie Vance, who offers to team up with her and commit more crimes once they have served their time.

Tony Gratton, her partner in the failed con, tries to talk her into marrying him and going to Chicago to continue their life of crime, but she is determined to avenge herself.

Tony shows up, masquerading as the person who married them; he gives Joe the marriage license the couple supposedly left behind.

Threatened with a charge of bigamy, Joe reluctantly agrees to support Sylvia for a year, the length of her parole.

Joe is unhappy when he sees all her purchases and asks her to be reasonable in light of his paycheque and send them back to the store.

Mr. Taylor, the store's somewhat eccentric owner, has found out that Joe is married, so he is coming to dinner at their apartment.

Her friend has been released early and intends to blackmail her husband (whom she married long ago while he was in college and then lost track of), once she can locate him, before heading to Florida with Sylvia.