Daily Archives: June 18, 2015

Take Me Out to the Ball Game (1949)

Take Me Out to the Ball Game
Directed by Busby Berkeley
Written by Harry Tugend and George Wells from a story by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen
1949/USA
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
First viewing/Netflix rental

 

[box] Eddie O’Brien: Oh, Miss Higgins! You’re the prettiest manager in baseball.

K.C. Higgins: You’re certainly the prettiest shortstop.[/box]

MGM puts two-thirds of the cast of On the Town together with Esther Williams for a mighty derivative musical on the old baseball diamond.

Eddie O’Brien (Gene Kelly), Dennis Ryan ( Frank Sinatra) and Nat Goldberg (Julius Munchen) are players on the Wolves, a turn-of-the-century baseball team.  Eddie and Dennis do a vaudeville act during the off season.  Eddie is a cocky womanizing braggart and Dennis is more the shy retiring type.

During spring training, the team hears the bad news that it has been inherited by K.C. Higgins, who intends to take an active role in management.  Lo and behold, it turns out that her given names are Katherine Catherine Higgins (Esther Williams) and she is a looker (and a dynamite swimmer).  Dennis immediately develops a crush on her but she and Eddie spar.  She gives Eddie a very bad time for breaking training.

In between musical numbers, Shirley Delwyn (Betty Garrett) spots skinny, little Dennis from the stands.  She lustily pursues him for the rest of the picture.  The last act drama comes when Eddie plays hooky to go to rehearsals for a show which, unbeknownst to him, is backed by gamblers who are betting against the team.  With Edward Arnold in a small role.

I was not crazy about On the Town and I liked this one less.  It has less story, more mugging, and the music is not as good.

Can you imagine a time when Sinatra was seen as a loser with the ladies?  It boggles the mind.

Clip – Finale

Never Fear (1949)

Never Fear (AKA “Young Lovers”)
Directed by Ida Lupino
Written by Ida Lupino and Collier Young
1949/USA
The Filmmakers
First viewing/Amazon Prime

 

[box] When I was about 9, I had polio, and people were very frightened for their children, so you tended to be isolated. I was paralyzed for a while, so I watched television. — Francis Ford Coppola[/box]

Ida Lupino makes a nice solid little picture her first time in the director’s chair.

Carol Williams (Sally Forrest) and Guy Richards (Keefe Brasselle) are an aspiring dance duo and madly in love.  Their nightclub act looks ready to make the big time so he proposes. Just when their act is booked and bringing in enough money to afford an engagement ring, she develops a fever.  It’s polio.  She is looking at months of rehabilitation.

Carol spends much of her time in the hospital feeling sorry for herself, crying, and depressing all the other patients.  She finally picks up and starts to work on learning to walk again but it’s going much too slow for her taste.  She keeps picking fights with Guy, who has gotten himself a job selling real estate rather than looking for another partner.

Just as Carol is released, now walking with a cane, Guy finally gives up and starts another partnership and act.  Carol tries to start a spark with another patient who has been kind to her but it’s no go.  Is she going to have any support in starting over again?

I thought this was a sensitive look at the courage it takes to overcome a disability and the emotional obstacles patients face.  It’s nothing great, about on the level of a good Lifetime movie, but very watchable.  Apparently Lupino made an uncredited contribution to the screenplay.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9hvmr_i7UjI

Clip – Guy looks for a little TLC