Year: 1940
Runtime: 100 mins
Language: English
Director: Lewis Milestone
Filled with gaiety, laughter and original, sprightly romance, the film blends modern, unconventional humor with a wholly entertaining tone. Two strangers divide a sweep‑stakes windfall and embark on a sham honeymoon, leading to delightfully predictable, comic consequences.
Warning: spoilers below!
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Read the complete plot breakdown of Lucky Partners (1940), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.
David Grant Ronald Colman is a Greenwich Village sidewalk portrait painter and caricaturist who passes Jean Newton Ginger Rogers on a bustling street and casually wishes her good luck. Jean, who works in a small book shop just across from his compact second-floor studio, becomes entangled in a small act of chance after a wealthy customer gifts her a dazzling gown she never actually wants. Believing that David brings luck, she suggests they pool a modest sweepstakes ticket for a $150,000 racehorse, and he agrees—on one condition: if they win, she will join him on a country-wide, strictly platonic tour before she commits to a conventional, settled life in Poughkeepsie with her fiancé, Freddie Harper [Jack Carson]. Their financial gamble is light, but the promise of adventure feels real enough to tilt their doubts toward something bolder than expected.
When the ticket proves valuable—one of the few that draws a winner—their future dimly brightens: the stake climbs from a few dollars to about $12,000 in perceived value, enough to tempt Freddie, an insurance salesman, to pressure them to cash out. Yet the others decide to press on toward the jackpot, hoping for a bigger payoff. The horse ultimately fails to place, and Freddie reveals that he sold his half of the ticket for $6,000. Jean, stunned by the duplicity, offers half of the money to David, who negotiates only if she adheres to the bargain they struck earlier.
Their first stop on the cross-country journey is Niagara Falls, a scenic backdrop that amplifies their growing closeness. They travel in a brand-new car that David has bought for Jean, and they check into rooms under a ruse of “brother and sister,” two floors apart, sharing a champagne toast and a quiet, early night. A mix-up at the hotel desk, however, places Jean’s room directly adjacent to David’s, connected only by a set of locking double doors. Freddie, still uneasy about the situation, follows and secretly plans another late-night ambush, convinced now that something unseemly is unfolding. In response, David arranges with the hotel staff to swap rooms, bringing them back into close contact.
As the night unfolds, the two lie awake in their separate rooms, speaking softly across the corridor and eventually stepping out for a moonlit dance. The outdoor ballroom is romantic and lightly charged, and a kiss seals a pivot in their feelings. David, aware that he is bending the terms of his own bet, pulls back emotionally, while Jean allows herself to be drawn closer. Their moment is interrupted when Freddie bursts in, fully convinced that David is hiding on the other side. He finds Jean instead, and when he learns that David has checked out, he leaves a note that Jean refuses to share with him.
On the way back to New York City, David is stopped by a police officer who discovers the car isn’t his. He is taken into custody, and the hotel house detective, prompted by the investigation, accuses Jean of involvement in a scheme with David. They are hauled into a courtroom in sensational fashion, becoming the center of attention for a social set eager to witness a spectacle. Both Jean and David decide to act as their own counsel. On the witness stand, David reveals his true identity as Paul Knight Somerset, a celebrated painter who disappeared three years earlier after being imprisoned for producing what had been deemed indecent illustrations for a book. The revelation turns the courtroom into a media sensation, filled with elites eager to see how the case will resolve.
As the proceedings unfold, David speaks honestly about his genuine love for Jean, and she, facing the judge, admits that she loves him as well. With the evidence weighed, the judge clears both of the charges and fines Freddie a modest sum, while offering an apology on behalf of the American judicial system to David for how he was treated. The judge’s gesture carries a note of hope: with the legal hurdle behind them and a future together ahead, David’s artistic career and their potential marriage may finally be given the chance to flourish.
Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 11:24
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