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| Index | 61 reviews in total |
26 out of 30 people found the following review useful:
Tremendous fun, if not the sharpest screwball specimen., 26 March 2004
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Author:
Tom May (joycean_chap@hotmail.com) from United Kingdom
There are some lovely, touching and dryly amusing scenes in this film.
Kanin and the scriptwriters manage to form a substantive, if
occasionally gossamer light, whole out of the playing of fine leads and
canny comic incidents. The basic story may be the oldest of chestnuts,
but it is here embellished with some degree of incisiveness. Grant's
scene by the pool with Dunne and Scott reaches a fine pitch of
hilarity, and who can forget the impressionistic scene of Scott's
diving coming into Grant's mind and being presented in miniature
on-screen?
That master player of light, witty material, Grant, is of course
sublime, and I was surprised by Irene Dunne - who I had never
previously seen in a lead film role. She was magnificently feline, as
Pauline Kael says; dispensing slinky, fluttering phrases and quips, and
making it clear what a laugh the character is having; she seems rather
to be getting off on the entangled situation. The speech patterns are
drolly created by Dunne; wonderful Southern hamming, or archetypal
screwball dame quick-talk... Her warming, gadding-about voice is
charms, along with deft facial acting; look at the "Oh Bianca..." scene
at the hotel early on, where she sensuously reclines on a settee and
gets Grant to pretend he is entering the room and kissing his new wife.
Minxish mischief of the most heartwarming kind, aye...!
Remarkable to think that Ms. Dunne was over forty when this was made.
She has the bearing of many years younger and conveys an impressive
vigour. One takes to her unconventional good looks; her slight
awkwardness as a 'star' is amusingly alluded to, under the surface, in
her son's dialogue late on; very poignant little moment, that. Like
Rosalind Russell and Kate Hepburn, she is no textbook beauty, and it is
her characterful playing conveys a winking, winning attractiveness. Why
is it that we have so few similarly idiosyncratic actresses around
today? All - or rather much - has to be homogenised; pop star product
looks are apparently required, and conveyor-belted into mainstream
films. Film is missing the enticing depths of real-life when it opts
for the conformist teenage boy's supposed 'dream woman' -
mass-media-fostered - over a greater variety of people and appearances,
as one encounters in actual reality.
The actor playing the world-weary, rather Robb Wilton-esquire
magistrate ought to have been involved more than he was; an enjoyable
turn, that would have been effectively woven deeper into the narrative.
Randolph Scott amused slightly too, in his support role; a worthy foil.
Things did perhaps get rather sentimental with the involvement of the
couple's children, although this is hardly the worst such offender in
Hollywood history. The insidious wryness seems completely blunted by
the end, when the couple are finally reconciled. One may be charmed by
the actors' performances, but it all starts to seem a bit indulgent,
and the feeling grows that chances were missed.
But really, one must be indulgent, critically; there is priceless stuff
in this film's fibre, and while it fires not on all screwball-comedy
cylinders, it is a very pleasant feature with glorious screen presences
making (deceptively) light of life.
22 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
"You're Not Allowed To Have Two Wives, You Know", 13 March 1999
Author:
Michael Coy (michael.coy@virgin.net) from London, England
From the opening moments, when the big wooden doors part and usher us
into a beautifully spare art deco courtroom with slanting shafts of sunlight
enhancing the clean architectural lines, we know that this is going to be a
deftly-made, elegant film. What follows does not disappoint
us.
Attorney Nick Arden (Cary Grant) lost his wife Ellen in a shipwreck in
the Pacific seven years ago. He has now decided to have her declared
officially dead, so that he will be free to marry Bianca (Gail Patrick).
The irascible judge eventually accedes to both the declaration and the
marriage, and the newly-weds set off for a honeymoon in Yosemite.
Meanwhile, who should turn up at the Arden residence, very much alive, but
the long-lost Ellen? When she hears of the recent marriage, she heads
straight for the honeymooners' hotel ...
"My Favourite Wife" is a fine example of those early Cary Grant farces,
the ones in which he gawps with surprise, double-takes and mutters to
himself as only he can. Irene smoke-gets-in-your-eyes Dunn is great as
Ellen, unveiling a hitherto unsuspected gift for witty comedy. Scotty
Beckett and Mary Lou Harrington come close to stealing the show as the
Ardens' cute little kids. Randolph Scott is interestingly cast as Steve
Burkett, the muscle-bound Adonis who spent seven years on the desert island
with Ellen.
Some of the film's highlights are worth mentioning here, like the
superimposition of Burkett performing gymnastic feats alongside Nick Arden's
troubled face as he muses at his desk, conveying with economy the husband's
jealous preoccupation. It is unfair to give away a film's jokes, but one
gag which lose nothing in the telling is Ellen's outfit at the Yosemite
hotel. She has been out of circulation for seven years, and she looks
comically untrendy in her 1932 polkadots and lapels, and obtrusive hat.
Watch for the derisive glances from the other hotel guests.
Such a light, charming piece of entertainment is hard to fault, but the
film does have some shortcomings. Its central problem, which is not
resolved, is what to do with Bianca. She married Nick in good faith and has
done nothing wrong, yet she is neglected by Nick. Because there is no
satisfactory way of dealing with her, she is simply dropped. Ellen's return
from a watery grave after all those years would be a news story of
international importance, but instead she arrives home having hitched a ride
in a truck. Her entry into the country seems to have gone unannounced, even
to her husband. The scene in which she persuades a shoe store clerk to pose
as 'Adam' in front of Nick has enormous comic potential, but is abandoned
after a few seconds. Nick's sleeping-in-the-attic scene is far too long for
the humour it contains.
However, the film is a pleasant and very amusing romp, and such
weaknesses as it contains do not detract from its appeal.
20 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Better than the remake, 4 May 2005
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Author:
rac-21 from United States
I agree that Move Over Darling is a very good remake of My Favorite Wife, but Doris Day and James Garner, much as I like them, cannot reach the level of sophistication of Grant/Dunne. Randolph Scott does nothing to detract from the picture. Certainly no more than Chuck Connors does in the same role in Move Over Darling. The courtroom scenes with Grant and Granville Bates as the judge are superior, and Donald McBride as the hotel clerk is exceptional. Cary Grant's facial expression on the elevator when he first sees Dunne after 7 years is so memorable that I can still remember it 35 years after first seeing it. If you are a Grant fan, you have to see this movie.
15 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
Hilarious, 29 August 2001
Author:
Matthew Ignoffo (mermatt@webtv.net) from Eatontown, NJ, USA
Cary Grant makes this the best of the numerous versions of the script --
later attempted as SOMETHING'S GOT TO GIVE (Marilyn Monroe's last film) and
remade as MOVE OVER, DARLING.
Just the expressions Grant has on his face make this worth watching. It's a
delightful look at him in a classic comic predicament -- a man who thinks
his first wife is dead discovers on his honeymoon night with his second wife
that wife #1 is still amongst the living. The next complication: she has
spent 7 years with another man -- and Grant gets to do his best as the
jealous husband.
This is just plain funny.
17 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Entertaining Screwball, 9 May 2005
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Author:
C.K. Dexter Haven from BC
...albeit a little slow-paced in the first half. Leo McCarey's chaotic
pace which made The Awful Truth so much fun is missed here, but Garson
Kanin directs capably in his absence and the script and actors deliver
enough good wit and chemistry to keep it all balanced out in the end.
Cary Grant gets himself into an unwitting romantic pickle when he's
confronted by his thought to be long dead wife on his honeymoon with
his new bride. Hilarity ensues, as it does in every brilliant screwball
comedy Grant was the star of, and there are some priceless moments
along the way.
As in The Awful Truth, Grant and Irene Dunne make a fetching and
compatible screen couple. Dunne's comedic felinity and tendency to
affect nutty stereotypes in order to get what she wants is better than
Katharine Hepburn's imitation of her in Bringing Up Baby and The
Philadelphia Story. Grant and Hepburn were terrific in their movies
together too, and not taking anything away from Great Kate, but Grant
and Dunne's chemistry was just that much better and it's a shame they
never made more comedies together.
Hilarious in-jokey scenes between Grant and Randolph Scott, and a near
scene stealing turn by Granville Bates as The Judge round out a pretty
funny flick.
The Doris Day/James Garner remake "Move Over, Darling" is memorable in
its own right and viewed right after this would make for a good video
double-bill.
12 out of 16 people found the following review useful:
Who's Two Timing Who, 23 February 2006
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
Cary Grant's got a real problem on his hands. He thinks his wife was
killed in a plane crash seven years ago. So he goes to court with Gail
Patrick who he now intends to marry after getting the judge to declare
Irene Dunne legally dead.
Wouldn't you know it, Dunne turns up the day of the honeymoon and puts
Cary in an awful pickle. He's a lawyer and he's busy trying to work out
all the ramifications of what's happened.
I've thought about it for a while and I came to the conclusion that
it's Grant's professional training that prevents him from just
confessing to one and all what's happened. Where a lot of the laughs
come in is Grant trying to avoid marital consummation with Patrick
until he can work it out.
Another factor comes into play when Grant learns that Dunne spent
several years on the desert island with hunky Randolph Scott. Grant
starts to feel a little less guilty then.
The whole mess is dumped on the judge who originally declared Dunne
legally dead, Granville Bates. His role as the judge gives him some of
the best lines in My Favorite Wife.
I do feel sorry for Gail Patrick though. Usually she plays a lot of bad
girls and other women in movies. But she really is the wronged party
here.
Dunne and Grant worked well together in another marital comedy, The
Awful Truth and they were just as bright in My Favorite Wife as they
were in the first film.
One interesting footnote it was a remake of this film Something's Gotta
Give that Marilyn Monroe did not complete. Eventually it was made over
with Doris Day and James Garner.
That one was good, but this one is great.
11 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
An Entertaining Use of the Idea, 24 August 2005
Author:
Snow Leopard from Ohio
This gets pretty good comic mileage out of the often-used 'Enoch Arden'
(or, as here, 'Ellen Arden') idea of the long-lost spouse who returns
to find his/her spouse now involved with someone else. Numerous movies
have used it both for drama and for comedy, and in this case, the
premise is adapted to the screwball comedy formula that was so popular
for a time in the 1930s and 1940s.
The story starts by slightly revising the usual setup, with Irene Dunne
as the formerly shipwrecked spouse, Cary Grant as the husband who has
since become involved with another woman (Gail Patrick), plus Randolph
Scott as a wild card in the relationships. Practically every stage of
the story is highly implausible (probably deliberately so) but amusing,
and it is generally left to the cast to make things work, which they
usually do.
Grant usually seems quite at home in this kind of comedy, and he and
Dunne work well together, depicting their characters' relationship with
the kinds of intangibles that help make the whole scenario more
believable. Patrick is always quite good as an elegantly icy rival to
the heroine, and Scott also works well here in his role. Amongst the
supporting cast, Granville Bates gets some very good moments as the
grouchy judge.
For as far-fetched as the scenario seems at times, it works pretty
well. The cast is strong enough to carry the weight, and it would have
been hard to improve upon their combination of talents. It doesn't have
quite the depth of comic variety or the subtlety of implied commentary
that the best screwball comedies have, but it's an entertaining movie
worth seeing.
10 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
A Shakespearian masterpiece of farce., 25 July 2001
Author:
Alice Liddel (-darragh@excite.com) from dublin, ireland
Garson Kanin's best films are so bright, fast and funny, and have been
plundered by so many pallid, feel-good imitators, that it's easy to overlook
how courageously critical they can be, of prevailing social norms, for
instance, what society takes to be normal - 'natural' - about crucial
concepts like family, gender, marriage etc. In 'My Favorite wife', Kanin
takes the idea that a particular social order is natural, and tears it
apart, by putting civilisation on one side, nature on the other, and
revealing that there's nothing remotely natural about civilisation, or our
places in it; that these things are man-made, and so can be questioned,
negotiated, even changed by man (or, as is more usual in Kanin's world,
woman).
'Wife' opens with an elaborate sequence showing the structure of
civilisation at work in its most intrinsic form - the legal system. The
hero is a lawyer, and is trying to declare his missing first wife dead so he
can marry another. There are a few things we notice here: the judge is
hilarious, a cantankerous old buffer, testy, capricious, and not at all
rigorous, or even knowledgeable in his application of laws which, after all,
structure people's lives, and which, we learn, are constantly overturned by
the Court of Appeals, so that something that should be inviolable is shown
to be provisional. there is room for manoeuvre, but there is also room for
corruption.
More important for Kanin's purposes are two incidental details. The wife
has been missing for seven years, a fairy-tale or mythical number in a site
of legal process, undermining its claims to ultimate, 'official' reality.
The hero's name is Arden, which might remind us of Shakespeare's Forest ('As
you like it'), and the spirit of play that will inform the film, with people
assuming and discarding roles, putting on costumes, using props, putting on
'plays' or performances to deceive, enlighten or outmanoeuvre others.
On one level, this warns us against accepting appearances in a civilised
world that depends on appearances (all the talk about respectability); on
another, it shows that certain roles - like being a mother, or husband -
aren't God-given, but roles which have to be constantly rehearsed and
refined. Play can be subversive - the way Ellen Arden dresses up as a man,
breaks up a marriage, or tries to conceal a possible adultery - but it is
also seen as a necessary process of socialisation: the children learn to
imitate their parents, as they theatrically make their lost mother 'perform'
her confession. They learn that society is fluid, not fixed; they also
learn to lie. (the hero winds up in an Attic (as in Greek comedy), but that
might be taking the analogy to far!)
Hitchcock once said that he often used Cary Grant because he wanted to work
against his established image. But the figure of masculine immaturity and
insecurity so richly realised in Roger O Thornhill ('North by Northwest') is
already fully-formed here in a 'hero' who jumps at any chance to avoid
making difficult decisions. Kanin, like Hitchcock later, makes brilliant,
ironic use of Grant's most famous previous roles: 'Topper', another story
about a professional flustered by a 'ghost'; and, especially, 'Bringing up
baby', not just in the comically ghastly leopardskin bathrobe his second
wife buys him, but in the animal imagery used throughout (kids going to the
zoo; Steve as Tarzan etc.), contrasting with his civilised world that is
making him desperately unhappy, his identity and masculine certainty
fragmenting. (knowledge that Grant used to live with Randolph Scott adds
further comic potency to their scenes)
This conflict between Nick's civilisation and the 'natural' order is
typically complicated - Nick clearly married Bianca for her sexual prowess;
Ellen and Nick are compatible because of their intellectual superiority to
everyone else (which gives a streak of cruelty to their games, and makes one
feel genuinely sorry for BIanca).
'Wife' is a masterpiece of farce, of shared rooms, opening and shutting
doors, frustrated sexuality, mixed identities - but what makes it a true
classic are the flashes of whimsy - the Steve diving sequence that results
in some the most bizarre, incongruous, and sidesplittingly funny visions
ever seen on film.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Mostly Funny, 20 July 2008
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Author:
kenjha
After his shipwrecked wife is declared dead and he takes on a new wife, Grant's first wife resurfaces, rescued after seven years on an island. This reteaming of Grant and Dunne after their success with "The Awful Truth" is pretty funny for the most part, as Grant tries to solve the problem of one wife too many while dealing with jealousy after learning that Dunne had a male companion (Scott) on that island. The only complaint is that the laughs stop in the last quarter of the movie, which is rather uninteresting as the focus shifts from comedy to romance. Bates, who is hilarious as a flustered judge, died in July 1940 but managed to act in 12 films released that year!
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Top-notch romantic comedy, 20 April 2006
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Author:
robb_772 from United States
Two attempted remakes and dozens of rip offs have failed to diminish
the hilarious complications and romantic musings of this
often-imitated, never duplicated screwball farce. Loosely based on the
Alfred Lord Tennyson poem "Enoch Arden" (Tennyson does not receive a
screen credit in the finished film), MY FAVORITE WIFE piles on the
fast-paced, snappy dialogue and outrageous, comedic misunderstandings
at a frantic rate. Director Garson Kanin skillfully maintains the
perfect serio-comedic tone throughout the film's runtime, and the
picture is easily respected screenwriter's best film as a director.
Interestingly enough, Kanin took over the directing duties from Leo
McCarey (an Oscar winner as Best Director for 1937's THE AWFUL TRUTH,
which also starred Grant and Dunne) after McCarey was injured in an
automobile accident (McCarey also co-wrote the screenplay with Kanin
and Sam and Bella Spewack).
The cast is marvelous, topped by yet another Oscar-worthy performance
by Irene Dunne, who offers a multi-dimensional portrayal in a genre
where one-note characterizations typically run rampant. Dunne was
indeed a rare actress who could peerlessly balance madcap humor and
genuine pathos, without ever appearing forced or contrived. Cary Grant
is every bit Dunne's match as the befuddled husband who finds himself
with one wife too many. Although his role doesn't permit him to display
the jaw-dropping physical prowess that was showcased so remarkably in
THE AWFUL TRUTH, Grant's mastery of internal comedy is given ample
screen time here - especially in the final two-third when he discovers
he may have a romantic rival.
The supporting cast is also diligently cast, although there's no animal
scene-stealer, a la canine performer Asta's memorable turn as Mr. Smith
in THE AWFUL TRUTH. Platinum-haired beefcake Randolph Scott is fun as
Grant's rival for Dunne's affections, and the fact that Grant and Scott
were lifelong friends and roommates only makes their scenes together
even funnier (there's also a hilarious sight gag involving the two of
them that will have even the most reserved viewer rolling on the floor
with laughter). The appropriately rigid Gail Patrick plays the role of
the stereotypical shrew as well as anyone could, and director Kanin
also pulls natural performances from the two children in the cast. A
comedy with a large dosage of wit and an ample amount of intelligence
is quite rare, and MY FAVORITE WIFE has all of that and more in
abundance - it's simply a picture where everything works.
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