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You Belong to Me Poster

You Belong to Me

A JOYOUS REUNION OF THE STARS OF "THE LADY EVE"
1941 | 94m | English

(928 votes)

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Popularity: 0.6 (history)

Details

A playboy marries a woman doctor then grows jealous of her male patients.
Release Date: Oct 22, 1941
Director: Wesley Ruggles
Writer: Dalton Trumbo, Claude Binyon
Genres: Comedy, Romance
Keywords doctor, jealous husband
Production Companies Columbia Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Jan 29, 2026
Entered: Apr 21, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Barbara Stanwyck Helen Hunt
Henry Fonda Peter Kirk
Edgar Buchanan Billings
Roger Clark Frederick Vandemer
Ruth Donnelly Emma
Melville Cooper Moody
Ralph Peters Joseph
Maude Eburne Ella
Renie Riano Minnie
Ellen Lowe Eva
Mary Treen Doris
Gordon Jones Robert Andrews
Fritz Feld Hotel Clerk
Paul Harvey Barrows
Lloyd Bridges Ski Patrol (uncredited)
Jeff Corey Mr. Greener (uncredited)
Byron Foulger Delaney (uncredited)
Name Job
Friedrich Hollaender Original Music Composer
Viola Lawrence Editor
Dalton Trumbo Story
Wesley Ruggles Director
Edith Head Costume Design
Claude Binyon Writer
Joseph Walker Director of Photography
Lionel Banks Art Direction
Name Title
Wesley Ruggles Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 4 6 2
2024 5 5 8 3
2024 6 4 9 2
2024 7 5 14 2
2024 8 5 19 1
2024 9 2 4 1
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2024 12 2 5 1
2025 1 3 6 1
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2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0
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2025 12 1 3 0
2026 1 1 5 0
2026 2 0 0 0

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Reviews

Geronimo1967
N/A

After an accident on the slopes, wealthy playboy “Peter” ends up in the care of physician “Helen” (Barbara Stanwyck) who basically tells him there is nothing wrong with him that a few hours in bed won’t cure. Being a man of means, however, plenty of other doctors are hovering around him offering all ... kinds of treatment, but he’s taken a bit of a shine to “Helen” so decides to stick with her. She just wants to get on with her patients, but he’s no slouch when it comes to distracting her and so, yep it’s a whirlwind romance. She’s I’ll prepared for his stately home nor it’s fastidious butler (Melville Cooper), but she’s far less prepared for her new husband’s suspicions. She can barely look down a patient’s throat without him suspecting she is up to something, and these problems only spiral as friend the share in common just make matters worse. After one calamitous intervention, she loses her temper and demands that he find some sort of purpose, else their relationship will be doomed. Never having worked a day in his life, he hasn’t really a clue, but he determines to abscond from their home until he can present her with a shock. Well, a few actually - but will it save the day? This starts off quite strongly with both Stanwyck and Fonda working well together delivering a lively script and some borderline slapstick scenarios whilst Cooper remains stiff upper lipped amidst the chaos. It struggles into it’s last quarter though as the pace drops off and the story rather runs out of steam. There never was an whole heap of jeopardy, no, but the banter between them was initially quite good fun and it entertained for a while showcasing both of their comedic skills and it’s worth a gander for the first hour or so before sentiment bared it’s teeth and it became just a little too twee. Still, it’s a solid team effort that raises a smile.

Jun 05, 2025
Geronimo1967
N/A

After an accident on the slopes, wealthy playboy “Peter” (Henry Fonda) ends up in the care of physician “Helen” (Barbara Stanwyck) who basically tells him there is nothing wrong with him that a few hours in bed won’t cure. Being a man of means, however, plenty of other doctors are hovering around hi ... m offering all kinds of treatment, but he’s taken a bit of a shine to “Helen” so decides to stick with her. She just wants to get on with her patients, but he’s no slouch when it comes to distracting her and so, yep - it’s a whirlwind romance. She’s ill-prepared for his stately home or it’s fastidious butler (Melville Cooper), but she’s far less prepared for her new husband’s suspicions. She can barely look down a patient’s throat without him suspecting she is up to something, and these problems only spiral as a friend they share in common accidentally makes matters worse. After one calamitous intervention, she loses her temper and demands that he find some sort of purpose, else their relationship will be doomed. Never having worked a day in his life, he hasn’t really a clue so he decides to abscond from their home until he can present her with a shock. Well, a few actually - but will it save the day? This starts off quite strongly with both Stanwyck and Fonda working well together delivering a lively script and some borderline slapstick scenarios whilst the starchy Cooper remains stiff upper lipped amidst the chaos. It struggles into it’s last quarter though as the pace drops off and the story rather runs out of steam. There never was an whole heap of jeopardy, no, but the banter between them was initially quite good fun and it entertained for a while showcasing both of their comedic skills and it’s worth a gander for the first hour or so before sentiment bared it’s teeth and it became just a little too twee. Still, it’s a solid team effort that raises a smile.

Jun 05, 2025