The Bride Comes Home

The Bride Comes Home is a 1935 comedy film made by Paramount Pictures, directed by Wesley Ruggles, and starring Claudette Colbert, Fred MacMurray and Robert Young.

It was written by Claude Binyon and Elisabeth Sanxay Holding.

After the bankruptcy of her father's business, the penniless socialite Jeannette Desmereau (Colbert) works with magazine editor Cyrus Anderson (MacMurray) and publisher Jack Bristow (Young).

This is a romantic comedy with money, bad tempers and love in the balance.

Writing for The Spectator in 1936, Graham Greene strongly praised the film as "satirical comedy of a very high order".