Don't Bet on Love (1933) Poster

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6/10
Lew Ayres as a punting profligate plumber...
AlsExGal14 July 2019
... talk about playing against type! Of course this was before he was known for his roles as sympathetic physicians, but still it is a bit of a shock seeing Ayres play what is basically a very deplorable person.

The film tries to soft peddle it with an opening montage of stockbrokers selling bad stocks, bankers saying their banks are on solid ground, a man pretending to be blind and begging, and a common purse snatcher, I guess, the lesson being, that everybody has a racket and is on the take, but it didn't soften the blow for me.

Ayres plays Bill McCaffery, the son in McCaffery and Sons Plumbing. His dad tries to warn him against continuing to play the horses, and his best girl (Ginger Rogers as Molly) says she won't marry him until he stops playing the horses, yet he continues on. First he turns five dollars into 250 dollars, then he turns fifty dollars into 1500. When Molly says she is done with him because of his gambling, Bill takes the train to Saratoga and turns what was to be their honeymoon into a month long horse betting jag. He returns to New York with fifty thousand dollars after making all of the columns in the papers. 50K would be roughly a million dollars in today's money.

Dad and Molly stand their ground. And the law of gravity says what goes up must come down, but Bill is unswayed and thinks his luck will run forever, and complications ensue.

The film has some funny anecdotes that don't make you think any better of your fellow man. One involves a gold digger and the other involves Bill pulling a ruse that could land him in the penitentiary or even in the grave when he crosses a gangster.

I guess the funniest part (unintentional I am sure) of the film is when Bill is at a nightspot in Saratoga and out comes the floor show. They are actually rather pudgy girls in two piece outfits with stripes that make them look like convicts. Their dance routine is basically sitting down, crossing and uncrossing their legs, and then standing up again. Rinse and repeat. Talk about your all talking all singing all dancing convicts! Busby Berkeley this is not!

Lew Ayres and Ginger Rogers, who were married for six years, met making this film. It was probably a bad omen that, although in love and engaged, they spend most of the film feuding and apart.

I'd mildly recommend this, because it is a rare case of an existing Universal that is a straight precode in the Warner Brothers tradition. If you are a film history buff I would definitely recommend it.
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6/10
Marriage is a gamble, just don't toss in the chips....
mark.waltz8 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Lew Ayres is a struggling plummer with a dilemma: Give up gambling or give up his girlfriend. Ginger Rogers is the perky young manicurist he loves, but he has to decide if he loves gambling more. She won't marry him until he's saved up $1000, which during the depression seems like an impossible task, but at least she's making the demands before the marriage rather than tricking him and trapping him. Ayres, though, can't beat temptation, and goes off on his own when she discovers he's broken his promise.

This rarely seen little romantic comedy is a sweet film with Ayres and Rogers (who were married briefly in real life) a good team. Charley Grapewin ("The Wizard of Oz") acts as Ayres' conscience, while Shirley Grey is the femme fatal who briefly tempts him away from the woman he really loves. At just over an hour, this was just what the doctor ordered during the depression, and today holds up as a pleasing little treat.
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5/10
It's Ayres in the Lead with Rogers Breaking from the Pack
boblipton10 May 2017
Charley Grapewin is a plumber and his son, Lew Ayres, works for him. His heart is at the track, and when he makes enough money for Ginger Rogers to marry him, she throws him over because he won't give up the ponies. He carries the torch for her, but he wins huge sums of money through his doping out winners.... for a while.

There's lot of snappy patter in this Pre-Code, but it seems that only Ayres and Grapewin put any energy into their performances. 1933 was the year in which Miss Rogers began to distinguish herself, but this is pretty is pretty much a placeholder role, and any of a dozen starlets could have taken her place. It's a one-hour programmer with a conventional message about how hard work will beat luck over the stretch and pretty painless.
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3/10
The script is a disappointment.
planktonrules26 November 2016
In this film, Bill (Lew Ayres) is a guy who's tough to love...yet inexplicably Molly (Ginger Rogers) is in love with the jerk. Despite having a serious gambling addiction, he promises to reform and they plan on getting married after he makes a big killing at the track. Not surprisingly, his promise meant nothing and she learns that his choice of honeymoon spots is a place known for horse racing! So, she calls off the wedding...and Bill plunges even deeper into gambling.

Although you'd expect to see Bill heavily in debt and miserable, the guy somehow manages to keep winning...and winning big. Despite this, Molly will have nothing to do with him because she isn't stupid. In the meantime, Bill lives high on the hog and has women...and seems okay without Molly. Naturally, his luck can't hold out forever...or can it?!

The problem with this movie for me is that Bill is a terrible person...and it's hard to care about him or his addiction. He's far from the heroic type...and it's an odd sort of amoral role for Lew Ayres. Also, the ending is abrupt and unsatisfying. Overall, some good actors with a second-rate script and nothing more.
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3/10
Don't bet on this movie
vert00126 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
DON'T BET ON LOVE is a dull little morality tale warning against the evils of betting on horses. Lew Ayres has a steady job as a plumber, not to be sneezed at in 1933, a year which was still at the lowest depth of the Great Depression, yet he has a fondness for playing the ponies and, from what we see here, astounding luck in picking them. His father, Charles Grapewin, disapproves, and fiancée Ginger Rogers disapproves even more. Ginger won't marry him unless he quits gambling, something Lew promises to do, but he's not a very honest fellow in this movie and just can't help but follow any hot tip that he runs across. Ginger calls off the wedding, Lew runs through the ups and ultimate down of the gambling life, and everybody lives happily, if modestly, ever after.

The cast is better than the material even if our two leads are somewhat miscast (Tom Dugan as the comical 'best friend' perhaps fares best). Ayres had the manner neither of a plumber nor of a gambler (doctors and lawyers were more in his line), and Rogers is pretty much limited to nagging him throughout. The director moves his camera a lot but to little effect, and there's a general aura of cheapness to the production and flatness to the drama. Too bad as it's the only time that soon-to-be husband and wife Ayres and Rogers ever worked together, and they were capable of much, much more.
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