Daily Archives: August 24, 2013

Three Smart Girls (1936)

Three Smart Girls
Directed by Henry Koster
Written by Adele Comandini
1936/USA
Universal Pictures

First viewing

 

[box] Mrs. Lyons: Believe me, Donna, ten million at the altar is worth twenty million in the bush![/box]

Deanna Durbin’s feature film debut is an entertaining, if predictable, light comedy..

Kay, Joan, and Penny Craig live with their divorced mother in Switzerland.  When the newspapers run a headline that their millionaire father (Charles Winninger) intends to remarry, it makes their mother cry.  So the enterprising young ladies head for New York determined to break up the marriage.  When the girls meet their father’s gold-digging fiancée Donna (Binnie Barnes), they are even more eager to interfere.  So they hire a penniless count (Misha Auer) to alienate Donna’s affections.   Along the way, Kay and Joan find love and Penny sings a few songs.  With Ray Milland as a monied aristocrat and Alice Brady as Donna’s mother.

Somehow, Deanna Durbin’s trained soprano voice doesn’t match her girl-next-door charm and comedic talents but I always enjoy her.  The movie, too, was fun with a top-notch cast of character actors.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFRm7c4X3NA

Trailer

 

Romeo and Juliet (1936)

Romeo and Juliet
Directed by George Cukor
Adapted by Talbot Jennings from the play by William Shakespeare
1936/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

First viewing

 

[box] Juliet: Romeo. Romeo. Wherefore art thou Romeo?[/box]

This lavish production of the Shakespearian tragedy has a lot going for it but is marred by some inappropriate casting.  With Leslie Howard as Romeo, Norma Shearer as Juliet, C. Aubrey Smith as Capulet, Basil Rathbone as Tybalt, John Barrymore as Mercutio, Reginald Denny as Benvolio, Edna May Oliver as Juliet’s Nurse, and Andy Devine as Peter.

This film was MGM’s answer to Warner Bros. production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream the previous year.  It has the same sumptuous art direction with a look a little like a medieval tapestry.  The music is also wonderful and many of the performances, particularly by the British cast members, are quite good.

The problem lies with the age of the cast.  Leslie Howard was 43 when this was made and Norma Shearer was 34, far too old to be the adolescents of the story.  Howard takes this in stride, playing Romeo as a grown man.  However, I think Shearer suffers greatly. Apparently someone thought she could get away with playing a young girl.  Her performance is thus very mannered and simpering in the first part of the film.  After Juliet’s marriage to Romeo, Shearer suddenly begins playing her as a mature woman. Unfortunately, this means she pulls out all the stops overacting to an almost embarrassing extent.  John Barrymore, who was 57 and nearing the end of his creative life, doesn’t do himself any favors either.

On the night of the Los Angeles premiere, Shearer’s husband, MGM production head Irving Thalberg, died at age 37.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5D6BxQwYQ4I

Trailer