7/10
Dassin at M-G-M!
30 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Producer: Irving Starr. Copyright 7 July 1942 by Loew's Inc. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Australian release: 28 January 1943. Sydney release at the St James: 20 January 1943. 7 reels. 66 minutes. 5,984 feet. Shooting title and U.K. release title: ONCE UPON A THURSDAY.

SYNOPSIS: Maid writes scandalous best-seller.

NOTES: Jules Dassin worked at MGM from 1941 to 1946 before joining up with producer Mark Hellinger on Brute Force and The Naked City. He then made Thieves' Highway at Fox — his last U.S. film before the blacklist forced him to flee to Europe and eventual world-wide fame with Rififi.

COMMENT: The Affairs of Martha is hardly characteristic of Dassin's work. Nevertheless, his direction is a great deal more assured than on his first feature, Nazi Agent. In fact, for a second feature (in both senses of the adjective), his direction is quite polished.

Admittedly he is helped by the efforts of a large, hard-working and agreeable assembly of players, headed by the pleasantly unassuming, mildly vivacious Marsha Hunt, and taking in some fine character people including the redoubtable wicked witch Margaret Hamilton and "Z"-western stalwart, Raymond Hatton.

Even when the plot slows down occasionally and dialogue threatens to take over, the film is always attractive to look at. Unlike Nazi Agent it has been treated all over with MGM's best production gloss — bright photography, attractive sets and costumes, smooth film editing — and Dassin's deft, stylish direction. Only the ponderously Mickey Mouse music score strikes an off-note.

To sum up: On the whole, an entertaining, enjoyable domestic comedy which has dated surprisingly well.
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