Blondie Knows Best (1946) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
7 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Dagwood Bumstead, Boss for a Day
lugonian28 February 2007
BLONDIE KNOWS BEST (Columbia, 1946), directed by Abby Berlin, the 18th installment to the popular "Blondie" film series based on Chic Young's comic strip characters, is another winning entry.

First, the domestic standpoint of the story, which starts off quietly for the Bumsteads as Blondie (Penny Singleton), Dagwood (Arthur Lake), Alexander (Larry Simms) and Cookie (Marjorie Kent) are all gathered together at the breakfast table. Alvin Fuddow (Danny Mummert), Alexander's best friend and next door neighbor, arrives with the news that they have a new neighbor, who isn't very nice. Dagwood decides to go over and introduce himself, but the good neighbor policy falls apart as he tries to assist Mr. Conroy (Arthur Loft) by fixing his car parked on the driveway. Dagwood accidentally parks the car on Conroy's foot (ouch!), and as he tries to move it, Dagwood drives the car right through the garage door. Next scene, Dagwood is home with a bruised bump on his head given to him by Conroy with a wrench. Dagwood is later followed by Jim Gray (Shemp Howard), a myopic process server out to deliver a summons for him to appear in court, compliments of Conroy, who is suing Bumstead for damages. As Dagwood makes every effort to hide from Gray, he picks up the summons dropped by Gray, but Alvin tells him that it's not legal until the summons is hand delivered to him personally. So what Dagwood has to do is stay out of his reach, which isn't easy. At the workplace: Because Dagwood's boss, Mr. Dithers (Jonathan Hale) had an argument with another driver for bumping into his car, he discovers too late that the man he had insulted happens to be Charles Peabody (Jerome Cowan), an important client. Wanting the business deal to go through, Dithers has Dagwood assume his identity as boss while Dithers impersonates Bumstead. This trading places situation reaches its high point when situations are turned as Dagwood as Dithers fires "Bumstead," making an impression on Mr. Peabody for being the only way for him to sign a contract. The confusion gets even more complicated when Gray attempts to serve his summons to Dagwood Bumstead or to Mr. Dithers.

In spite of Blondie's name used in the title, BLONDIE KNOWS BEST, is, as usual, Dagwood's film all the way. Blondie may know best, but it is Dagwood who certainly knows how to get into situations leading to his spouse to come to the rescue, especially when Dagwood agrees to become the subject for doctors Schmidt (Steven Geray) and Titus (Ludwig Donath) of a lunatic asylum as a guinea pig to a new truth serum experiment for which Dagwood gets to collect his needed $500. Without such mishaps, there would be no story, in fact, no comedy, nor Daisy, the Bumstead dog, inducing her usual antics ranging from raising her ears with element of surprise or holding her head between her paws whenever situations appear hopeless. And that's the truth.

Alyn Lockwood joins the cast as Mary, the new switchboard operator at the Dithers Construction Company. Others in the cast include Edwin Cooper as David Armstrong; Carol Hughes as Gloria Evans; and Jack Rice as Ollie Merlin, the office trouble maker of Dagwood's.

It should be interesting to note that this was to be Jonathan Hale's 16th and final time as Dithers. Jerome Cowan, who appears as client, Charles Peabody, would become a series regular as well as Dagwood's new boss, George M. Radcliffe in the next entry. In spite that the "Blondie" series was pretty much consistent in keeping the actors and their roles virtually the same, it's not unusual for actors to be seen assuming different characterizations in series films. This would be one of the rare cases in finding the likes of Cowan acting a role in one film and appearing in another.

BLONDIE KNOWS BEST is funny and agreeable family viewing. Formerly distributed on video cassette through King Features, it had a successful run on American Movie Classics from 1996 to 2001, where this, and most of the series had its opening and closing restored to its original theatrical credits. Next installment: BLONDIE'S BIG MOMENT (1947) (***)
7 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A litigious neighbor
bkoganbing12 January 2016
This film might have been the cause for confusion for devoted viewers of Columbia's Blondie series. Jerome Cowan who later played George Radcliffe who bought the Dithers Construction company from Jonathan Hale and became Dagwood Bumstead's boss shows up here cast as a wolfish potential client for J.C. Dithers.

It all starts when Arthur Lake in his usual bumptious way tries to make friends with an irascible neighbor Arthur Loft and wrecks the man's car and garage. More bad luck because Loft is a lawyer who just loves suing people. At the same time Jonathan Hale gets into a fender bender with Cowan before each knows who the other is. Hale and Lake change identities, Dagwood in order to avoid a determined but nearsighted process server played by Shemp Howard. Shemp and Lake have the best scenes in the film.

When all seems lost Dagwood decides to donate his body to scientists Steven Geray and Ludwig Donath who eye him the way Bela Lugosi eyed Lou Costello in Abbott&Costello Meet Frankenstein.

Of course because of the mysterious providence that protects the family Bumstead it all works out in the end. And Dagwood even gets to work for Jerome Cowan in the future.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Dagwood is Mr. Dithers and Mr. Dithers is Dagwood....understand?!
planktonrules12 August 2017
"Blondie Knows Best" is among the strangest of the Blondie and Dagwood films. First, the title has absolutely nothing to do with the picture. Second, it ends with brain doctors experimenting on Dagwood (I can only suppose they wanted a brain with little wear)! Odd...but still enjoyable.

The story begins with idiot Dagwood going to meet a neighbor and offer him a helping hand with fixing his car. In the process of providing unwanted help, Dagwood destroys the man's car and garage...and spends the rest of the film running from a process server because this neighbor is suing him...and deservedly so.

Shortly after this, Mr. Dithers gets in a fight with a stranger...only to find out it's a potential client!! So, to get out of insulting the man, he pretends to be Dagwood and begs Dagwood to pretend to be him!! As a result, things get awfully confusing.

The story is wacky and weird...but still fun. Also, while Blondie gets a bit miffed when Dagwood (as Mr. Dithers) is out with the client and some sexy ladies, she's not the green-eyed monster filled with jealousy she was in a few of the other Blondie films...realizing her beloved Dagwood wouldn't cheat on her. Worth seeing...but odd.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Good cast, dull director!
JohnHowardReid10 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Penny Singleton (Blondie), Arthur Lake (Dagwood), Larry Simms (Baby Dumpling), Marjorie Kent (Cookie), Steven Geray (Dr Schnidt), Jonathan Hale (J. C. Dithers), Shemp Howard (Jim Gray), Jerome Cowan (Charles Peabody), Danny Mummert (Alvin Fuddle), Ludwig Donath (Dr Titus), Arthur Loft (Conroy), Edwin Cooper (David Armstrong), Jack Rice (Ollie), Alyn Lockwood (Mary), Carol Hughes (Gloria Evans), Kay Mallory (Ruth Evans), Ralph Sanford (cop), Fred F. Sears (man on park bench).

Director: ABBY BERLIN. Screenplay: Edward Bernds, Al Martin. Story: Edward Bernds. Based on characters created by Chic Young. Photography: Phillip Tannura. Film editor: Aaron Stell. Art director: Perry Smith. Set decorator: James Crowe. Music: Alexander Steinert. Music director: Mischa Bakaleinikoff. Producer: Burt Kelly.

Copyright 17 October 1946 by Columbia Pictures Corp. No recorded New York opening. U.S. release: 17 October 1946. U.K. release: December 1946. Australian release: 9 January 1947. 7 reels. 6,298 feet. 70 minutes.

SYNOPSIS: Dagwood ineptly impersonates his boss to close a business deal and lands up to his neck in trouble.

NOTES: Number 18 of the 28-picture series.

COMMENT: The 18th film in the series and an infusion of new and much-needed writing talent (Bernds himself was later to direct the last 5 entries) has given it new life. Some of the gags and situations are genuinely amusing and the playing throughout is of a much higher standard and much brighter than in the immediately preceding films.

Jonathan Hale in his last appearance as Mr. Dithers has finally warmed to the part and doesn't put a foot wrong until the climax where he muffs a few lines slightly. But otherwise he is a delight and has risen admirably to the challenge of the much broader acting range the script offers him here.

Shemp Howard doing his short-sighted bit which he made his comic specialty in his non-Stooge films, is very amusing too, while Jerome Cowan plays the part of the somewhat obnoxious Peabody with such infectious enthusiasm, he was invited back into the series to take over what amounted to Hale's role as Dagwood's new boss, Radcliffe! (It's lucky picture-goers have short memories!)

A big welcome back to Danny Mummert in his old role as Alvin. Master Simms is not as natural as usual and in fact is somewhat wooden and strained. Miss Kent has a few lines as Cookie and manages them well.

Mr. Lake is his usual gibbering self and Miss Singleton is looking somewhat old and certainly not sufficiently glamorous to take the eye of a confirmed wolf like Peabody.

Steve Geray and Ludwig Donath as a pair of slightly mad German doctors over-act effectively — their climactic scene with Howard is amusing. Nice to spot Ralph Sanford and Fred F. Sears in bits too.

Berlin's direction is pretty much as dull as usual, though he actually uses a couple of reverse angles in an early domestic scene between Dagwood and Blondie. A scene in the park between these two is a little too saccharine and should be trimmed.

Although there is no spectacular climax, production values are well up to average "B" standards, and credits, though undistinguished, are competent.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Nasty neighbors and crooked clients.
mark.waltz9 November 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I think that Dagwood Bumstead got fired more times by Mr. Dithers than clients on "The Apprentice". In this one, he's immediately rehired because he has to take Mr. Dithers' place to complete a business deal after Dithers had a fight with Jerome Cowan outside the office, unaware that Cowan is the client that he was supposed to meet. Dagwood, playing the neighborhood welcome wagon, accidentally destroys the car and garage (and foot) of cranky new neighbor Arthur Loft who sues him for damages. Process server Shemp Howard, suffering from bad eyesight, tries to pass on the summons to Dagwood who manages to escape him while posing as Mr. Dithers.

Then there's the wacky psychoanalysts Steve Geray and Ludwig Donath who spot Arthur Lake in a restaurant and decide that he's perfect for their experiments. It's all too much going on in a short running time which also includes all of Penny Singleton's constant interference in Lake's every move, funny in small doses, but a bit off putting as her dizzy bossiness goes too far in similar situations. They say that God takes care of fool which could be why Dagwood and Blondie's situations seem to resolve themselves. Danny Mummert is back as Larry Simms' pal, but they are not as amusing as they used to be. It seems that this goes on longer than it needs to, resolving one situation and moving right onto more absurdities.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Blondie Knows Best was Jonathan Hale's final appearance in the series as Mr. J.C. Dithers
tavm20 July 2015
Warning: Spoilers
This is the eighteenth in the Blondie movie series. This one marked the return of Danny Mummert as Alvin Fuddle after being absent from the last two entries. It's also the first one co-written by Ed Bernds who would also direct some future entries. In this one, Dag has to work on Sunday but before he does that he gets in trouble with a new neighbor. So he gets a summons from him. Actually, the process server-played by Shemp Howard before returning to The Three Stooges-ends up giving it to anyone BUT him. See, Mr. Dithers insults someone he later finds out is a potential client-a Mr. Charles Peabody (Jerome Cowan)-so he makes Dagwood pretend to be him to get the account. This results in a hilarious switch in characterizations for both as Dag takes pleasure in "firing" his boss and that boss later impersonates him on the phone by doing his familiar laugh! There's more but I'll just say that Blondie Knows Best was another funny outing in the series. P.S. While no one-with the exception of regulars Larry Simms and Danny Mummert-from my favorite movie-It's a Wonderful Life-appears in this one, the woman who teases Dagwood at the nightclub sequence is Carol Hughes-the wife of Frank Faylen who was Ernie in IAWL. This is the only other movie in the series that I managed to watch the original Columbia credits as opposed to the King Features replacement ones of the others. The only other time I saw the original credits was on the first Blondie one-where they had the cartoon faces dissolve into the live action ones playing them-that I taped off of American Movie Classics back in 1995 when they did their annual Film Preservation Festival in which the theme was comedy. Oh, and they also played the original music for those original credits when that was shown. And this turned out to be the last one to feature Jonathan Hale as Julius Caesar Dithers. When playing the character, he managed to convincingly be both mean and nice, making one love him despite his faults. Which makes it very sad that he eventually took his life-after years of movies and TV guest appearances-on February 28, 1966. Cowan would replace him in the next installment as Mr. Radcliffe.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Decidedly Inferior To The Comic Strip.
rsoonsa7 August 2004
Chic Young's very popular comic strip has always been entertaining and was utilized by Columbia Pictures as foundation for the Blondie film series (this one is number 18 of 28!), yet it is puzzling to some as to the cause of the success of these movies as they are shot through with inanity, strongly the case here. In this chapter, Dagwood Bumstead's boss Mr. Dithers is involved in a verbal altercation over a parking space in front of his office, not realizing that the man with whom he is arguing is a person that he hopes to persuade into signing a lucrative contract, and when he discovers the fact, he cajoles Dagwood, whom he has just fired, to masquerade as him in order to complete the business deal. The impersonation entails Dagwood's entertaining the prospective client (with "borrowed" women) at a night club where circumstances prescribe that he be discovered by Blondie and after the expected commotion has simmered down, Dagwood serves as a subject for a team of odd scientists who are testing a truth serum and have offered him $500. The feeblest element within the Blondie films is Dagwood, interpreted by Arthur Lake as an individual who ranks barely above an imbecile with his grating one-note mannerisms quite far removed from Young's original so that chirpy Penny Singleton, as Blondie, seems far more substantive, in comparison, than she should. Some talented actors are wasted in this slapstick episode, including Steven Geray, Jerome Cowan, and Jean Willes, all defeated by their puerile dialogue with only little Marjorie Kent, as Cookie Bumstead, being effective (one of the few appealing elements of the series is the chronologic aging of the children); her winning performance is fitting as the targeted audience apparently is from three to four years of age, and torpid.
4 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed