Showing posts with label Myrna Loy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Myrna Loy. Show all posts

May 11, 2011

Discuss: Who should play Nora Charles?


Johnny Depp is going to play Nick, Rob Marshall (Pirates of the Caribbean) will direct the remake of The Thin Man...but who is going to play Nora? 

I know, the first obvious answer is..."no one!! stop this remake!! let's protest in the streets!!" etcetera, etcetera, etcetera, as Yul Brynner would say

But if you had to choose a modern actress to play this witty, charming, funny character, who would you choose? Remember that she must have a great on-screen chemistry with Johnny, which is one of the many powerful aspects of the original movie. 

My takes:



a) An unknown actress. This would be cool, a talented fresh new face.

b) Cate Blanchett. Why? Because I'm convinced that this woman can play anything. She can be really funny, she's one of the reasons why I love Bandits. And she's classy too. 
c) Kate Winslet. Same as above, super versatile, reliable actress.  

d) Marion Cotillard. I know! Kind of a risky choice. But I really, really, think that she could pull it off very well. She has that contagious je ne se quoi that makes you connect with her happy mood, just like Myrna Loy in her funny scenes. Plus she has worked with Johnny in Public Enemies.
e) ....

...you tell me. I think that my nominees would make a real contribution to the saga and it wouldn't end like just another forgettable remake. 

Comment, leave some names, maybe we could make a poll with the most named actresses.

-------------
PS: If you, for some weird reason I can't figure out, haven't seen this movie, check Reasons You Should Watch The Thin Man (1934) from Lindsay's Movie Musings and convince yourself.

Dec 30, 2010

3 movies about marriage (p. 3): funny "Third Finger, Left Hand" (1940)


Here's (probably) my last review of the year. This is the third movie about marriage I happened to saw by chance, and even when it's a minor film compared with the others, I enjoyed it the most :)

Third finger, left hand (1940) made laugh out loud in many occasions. It was directed by Robert Z. Leonard (Pride and Prejudice, The great Zigfield, Marianne) and, as you can see, Myrna Loy & Melvyn Douglas play the leads.

Mryna's character problem with marriage is that she invented hers. Yes, because she is the editor in a magazine and needs to keep the men off. Even her family believes she's married, despite the fact that no one has ever seen the husband. She explains a lawyer admirer of hers (Lee Bowman) how it (supposedly) happened:

Myrna: I don't understand it myself sometimes. But there I was alone in Rio in April.
Admirer: Very romantic.
Myrna: Madly romantic. It was raining. Spring rain turning the pavements blue. I adore rain.
Admirer: I detest it. It gives me head colds. And furthermore, if it was so romantic, why did you leave him?
Myrna: It stopped raining.


Well, she meets Melvyn Douglas, a painter heading from NY to his town, Wapakoneta, and they start getting along. Melvyn hears that Myrna is supposedly married, and after a little investigation, he discovers the truth. He's kind of irritated with her, so he presents himself as her husband to her relatives, initiating an amusing conflict.
This is a funny little film with no pretensions but to entertaining you for an hour and a half. Myrna and Melvyn have their usual good timing and charm and if you don't expect more than that, I recommend this movie to you.

Here's my favorite scene from the movie, where Myrna pretends to be an uneducated woman in front of Melvyn's hometown friends, just to get even with him (sorry for the French subtitles):


Well, that's all for now, see ya soon with a special post to say goodbye to 2010 :)



 Read part 1 and 2 of this post:  

Nov 27, 2010

(Video) Poll Results: Irene Dunne is the funniest gal around...

The poll about the actresses that make you laugh the most is closed. Here's the countdown to #1, I embedded and linked funny scenes from each participant (you don't have to find the scene in the videos, I added a code to make them start in the relevant part). Enjoy:

# 11 (TIE)  Barbara Stanwyck (0%)
No votes for Miss Stanwyck? I mean, haven't you seen Christmas in Connecticut? Or this one?:



# 11 (TIE) Rita Hayworth (0%)
I couldn't find her hilarious job interview from Cover Girl, but she's really funny in this clip:



#10 (TIE) Paulette Goddard (4%)
I haven't seen many movies from her, plus there are not many videos with her scenes on Youtube and the ones available like the catfight from The Women can't be embedded, so I chose a tribute to her films with Charlie Chaplin:


#10 (TIE) Marlene Dietrich (4%)
 I couldn't find any clip from The lady is willing in which she's simply hilarious. I'm embedding a scene from Golden Earrings:



#9 (TIE) Claudette Colbert (6%)
I thought Claudette would get more votes, after all she was in one of the most famous comedies ever, It happened one night. I love most of her comedies with Fred MacMurray & Ray Milland. In the next scene from Arise, My love she pretends to be Ray's wife to save his life:


#9 (TIE) Marion Davies (6%)
You know my opinion about her terrific skills for comedy. So I'll just leave you with a clip from The Patsy:


#8 Una Merkel (8%)
It was a great and positive surprise to see Una getting so many votes. Youtube doesn't do her justice, there aren't many clips from her. I uploaded a bit from Evelyn Prentice:


#7 Jean Arthur (13%)
Maybe a scene from The More The Merrier? Or maybe the pig scene from Easy Living? Or maybe Jean just being funny in The talk of the town? I'll go with the discussion about percentages in Easy Living, I love when she says "You don't have to get mad just because you're so stupid"


#6  Ginger Rogers (12%)
There are hundreds of hilarious lines and moments from all the films she did with Fred, like the kiss scene from Swing Time. Ginger was so funny: maybe you love how she played a little girl in The Major and The Minor? Or her drunk scene from Stage Door? Or a funny remark from Bachelor Mother? Well, the one I chose was the catfight from Vivacious lady:


#5 (TIE) Katharine Hepburn (15%)
Again, too many funny scenes, from this one to this one. But one of my favorites is how she tries to prepare a breakfast in Woman of the Year:



#5 (TIE) Myrna Loy (15%)
I know you all have your favorite funny scene from Miss Loy. Maybe a witty line from "The Thin Man", maybe her instructions for painting the house in "Mr. Blandings build his dream house" or even her secondary role in the overall dull  Love me tonight. So I tried to choose a more unknown part, the scene where her character goes out with Clark Gable in Test Pilot (watch until they go to the cinema):


#4 Eve Arden (17%)
Wow, fourth position! I haven't seen her tv show,  but her secondary characters in Mildred Pierce, Cover Girl & One Touch of Venus were great. This clip is from the latter:


#3 (TIE) Rosalind Russell (19%)
Roz always makes me laugh. She was hilarious in The Women or practically every film she was in, from My sister Eileen to The Trouble with Angels, and obviously her performance as Hildy Johnson is one of the funniest ever. But I'm embedding a scene from Auntie Mame (when she hears the kid talking about drinks, she seems to be embarrassed but in the next second she makes a proud gesture with her face, lol):


#3 (TIE) Carole Lombard (19%)
She was so funny! I almost prefer her outtakes to the actual movies :) What did I choose? A clip from Mr. and Mrs. Smith? Or maybe from My Man Godfrey, Nothing Scared or To have and have not? No, the clip is Lombard pretending to be an annoying phone operator in Hand across the table:


# 2  Lucille Ball (37%)
Does she need any explanation? I couldn't decide what clip to choose, I had like a million in my head. One of my favorites is the Vitameatavegamin scene, but it was too long. I also love the restaurant scene with William Holden or every time she has problems with Spanish (that clip has one of the bests punch- lines ever : 'yeah, well that's what we're having'). Anyway, I finally picked this one:


#1  Irene Dunne (38%)
Finally the number one: Irene Dunne was just great at everything. Her comedies were hilarious and of course, my favorites are the ones she made with Cary Grant. In this clip from The awful truth she pretends to be an uneducated woman just to annoy Cary (my favorite part is when she says: 'don't anybody leave this room, I've lost my purse!')


And here's the official data:


 I'd love if you could leave a link to your favorite comedy scenes from these girls (or describe them) ^^

Nov 19, 2010

New Poll: actresses that make you laugh the most?


This is my post # 200, so I decided to choose a joyful subject for my next poll.
I'd like to know which of the next actresses make you laugh the most (you can choose more than one option on the sidebar):

Carole Lombard
Lucille Ball
Ginger Rogers
Myrna Loy
Una Merkel
Jean Arthur
Rosalind Russell
Barbara Stanwyck
Marlene Dietrich
Rita Hayworth
Irene Dunne
Katharine Hepburn
Paulette Goddard
Marion Davies
Claudette Colbert
Eve Arden

I added people that are not mainly known for their comedy skills (like Marlene Dietrich and Rita Hayworth); people who generally played secondary characters (Eve Arden, Una Merkel); and left out some actresses like Marilyn Monroe, the Bennett sisters, Miriam Hopkins, Judy Holliday, etc, because it was too crowded already :) But you can comment and give them kudos.  

Oct 21, 2010

Funny lines from "The Thin Man"

Today I spent hours doing this for my Tumblr site (wait until it moves)...


...so I decided to share it with you guys too. "The Thin Man" is one of my favorites movies and if you haven't seen it yet, you're about to be surprised by Myrna and William and their witty lines. I picked some of my favorites from Imdb:

Nora Charles: Waiter, will you serve the nuts? I mean, will you serve the guests the nuts?

Nick Charles: Oh, it's all right, Joe. It's all right. It's my dog. And, uh, my wife.
Nora Charles: Well you might have mentioned me first on the billing.

Nora Charles: You asleep?
Nick Charles: Yes!
Nora Charles: Good... I want to talk to you.

Nora Charles: How many drinks have you had?
Nick Charles: This will make six Martinis.
Nora Charles: [to the waiter] All right. Will you bring me five more Martinis, Leo? Line them right up here.

Nora Charles: [suffering from a hang-over] What hit me?
Nick Charles: The last martini.

Nick Charles: The murderer is right in this room. Sitting at this table. You may serve the fish.
Uhm, before I go, I just wanted to add that everything went right yesterday. Although I was kind of nervous (it was crowded plus there were big screens showing the ceremony and my shoes weren't comfortable) I didn't trip or anything when walking to receive the thing. My family and friends were there and I say goodbye to some of my favorite teachers. Thanks for your comments guys :)

Oct 12, 2010

My Top 10 Average|Bad Movies with Terrific Actors

After watching "The proud and the profane" the other day I thought: "with these actors they could have done a better movie". And then I thought: "hey, that's a good idea for a list!". I don't usually see movies that have low ratings and bad reviews, but I dared to watch some of these just because of the casting. Last thing: I would say that the top 3 qualifies as "bad" the rest is just "average":

10. Undercurrent (1946: Katharine Hepburn, Robert Taylor, Robert Mitchum): This movie starts OK (I got very interested), but ends ridiculously. Kate Hepburn marries an important guy (Taylor) with issues with a "bad" and missing brother (Mitchum). He talks about him so much that Kate gets interested. Finally, nothing is like it seemed and things get violent and creepy. The best of this film is this lovely theme by Brahms played all over the film.


9. Made for each other (1939: Carole Lombard, James Stewart, Charles Coburn): A couple marries the day after they met; Carole has problems with her mother-in-law because she disapproves her lack of housewife skills; then the couple has a baby that sleeps in the living room because the apartment is too small, etc. A not very well constructed movie, the main genre isn't properly suggested from the beginning which is disconcerting; the story is very basic (I mean, before the last 10 minutes their problems are not really that dramatic); the main actors are totally wasted, playing characters that don't have real chemistry. Has its moments though.

8. Once Upon a Honeymoon (1942: Cary Grant, Ginger Rogers): One of the two opportunities these two had to work together... in a film that doesn't make justice for such event. Ginger wants to have a better social position so she marries a German Baron. Cary, a reporter, is investigating this Baron because he's probably a Nazi. Ginger and Cary fall in love. There are some interesting and tense scenes, but overall this a forgettable movie.


7. Green Mansions (1959: Audrey Hepburn, Anthony Perkins): This movie was directed by Mel Ferrer, Audrey's husband at the time. The things you do for love. Audrey plays Rimma, the Bird Girl that lives in the jungle. Some natives believe she killed the son of the chief, so she has to hide with her "grandparent". She falls in love with Anthony Perkins, a prisoner of this tribe that was sent to kill her. They start a trip to visit the remains of her town, something that the grandpa was avoiding since always. It's not very well edited, the distances they cover don't feel right; most importantly, the story is not convincing and the ending is weird. Great song though.


 
6. The proud and the profane (1956: William Holden, Deborah Kerr, Thelma Ritter):  A disperse melodrama based on a novel that wants to be epic like "From here to eternity" and fails. Deborah Kerr is widower of a soldier. She wants to know all about his last minutes of life so she enlists to help. An aggressive Colonel with issues with his origins arrives to the base. Thelma Ritter, Deb's superior, founds the Colonel despicable but she manages to show him Deborah sunbathing on the beach. The editing is not very good and it loses tension half way trough the movie. The character of a chaplain is used to explain what's happening with the main characters and important info is given trough little characters that talk a lot. Everything gets more and more soppy and tragic. The end.

5. Dance, Girl, Dance (1940: Maureen O'Hara, Louis Hayward, Lucille Ball,  Ralph Bellamy): I didn't get it. Maureen wants to be a ballet dancer but she's stuck with a group of girls that dance in clubs. One of these girls, Sassy Lucille becomes famous and invites serious Maureen to dance ballet in her comical number just to laugh at her. Since her opportunity to meet an important ballet guy is lost after her teacher is run over (really), Maureen accepts. There are some characters that are not very well defined, at the point you don't know who they are. The ending is ludicrous.

4. Man of the World (1931: William Powell, Carole Lombard):  A con man (Powell)  falls in love with the nephew of one of the man he defrauded. This could have been great, but Carole's character was too good, simple and nice (and boring) for her and you forget the whole film after "The End" can be read on the screen.


3. Paris Blues (1961: Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Sidney Poitier, Louis Armstrong): Boring, boring, boring. Two girls go to Paris and fall in love with two musicians. They go to some endless jam sessions and talk a lot.

2. Man-Proof (1938: Myrna Loy, Rosalind Russell, Walter Pidgeon): Use it in case of insomnia. Myrna is in love with a terribly dull guy that marries Rosalind Russell playing an awfully plain character.


1. Bloodline (1979: Audrey Hepburn,Omar Sharif, James Mason, Romy Schneider): The worst movie I've ever seen. Avoid it. After Audrey's dad is killed, she becomes the president of a great company and the new target of...I don't know, some killer. I never liked Ben Gazzara as a “romantic” lead, he's so unattractive. The whole movie is awfully edited, it looks like a trailer: some scenes don't seem to have a real connection. It even has a flashback to early XX century that seems out of place. There are a lot of shocking scenes (sex and murder) that weren't really needed, and what's more stupid, they are repeated along the movie, when they could have been suggested. The story is really badly developed, at some points you really don't understand where it is going. Most of the characters are despicable and there are some plot holes (if you think that someone wants to kill you, and you have escaped from death in several occasions, would you go alone to dark and solitary places and expose yourself?). Well, the worst (and saddest) thing is to see great actors like Audrey and Omar Sharif in this... thing.

What do you think?  Do I need to re-watch any of these?

Sep 11, 2010

Day 19- Who’d you like to party it up with in the afterlife

William Powell and Myrna Loy of course (yeah, I'm thinking really in Nick and Nora Charles). And Clark Gable and Carole Lombard. Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz (he would be in charge of the music obviously). I'd invite Peggy Lee and Frank Sinatra to sing some of their hits. Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, and Ginger Rogers to show some moves. Oh, oh, and Bette Davis and Joan Crawford :) I would go with Cary Grant so we two will laugh about all the craziness around, while S. Z. Sakall tell us some interesting gossip. Everyone would go —just like in Well, did you Evah? lyrics— "what a swell party this is!". 

Sep 1, 2010

Day 18- Actor or Actress who should have won an Oscar

Uhm, before I start rambling about the many Oscar injustices, let me say that I finished my internship and I'm officially a journalist. So, I'm officially a journalist.
Ok, now let's see...

People who should have won a real non-Honorary-Oscar but sadly didn't because life generally isn't fair...or because their contenders were too good 

(The titles below the pictures correspond to the best movies I've seen of each actor and it doesn't necessarily mean that they are Oscar-nominated roles.)

CLAUDE RAINS: Hello? Mommy's boy in "Notorious", the cop from "Casablanca"?

WILLIAM POWELL AND MYRNA LOY: Together: The Thin Man? Libeled Lady? Separated:  The Best Years of Our Lives? My Man Godfrey?

EDWARD G. ROBINSON: Key Largo? The Whole Town's Talking? Double Indemnity?

GLORIA SWANSON: Sunset Boulevard???

IRENE DUNNE: I remember mama??? The Awful Truth? Show Boat? My favorite wife? Penny Serenade?
JEAN ARTHUR: Mr. Deeds Goes to Town? The more the merrier? History Is Made at Night?

MARLENE DIETRICH: Witness for the Prosecution?? Morocco? Shanghai Express? Der blaue Engel? Blonde Venus??

CARY GRANT: WHAT?????
GRETA GARBO: Camille? Anna Christie? Ninotchka?
ROSALIND RUSSELL: His girl Friday? Auntie Mame? Picnic?

BARBARA STANWYCK: WHAT?????????????
CAROLE LOMBARD: My Man Godfrey? In Name Only? Nothing Sacred? To Be or Not to Be?
ORSON WELLES: Citizen Kane? The Third Man? Touch of Evil?

ROBERT MITCHUM: The Night of the Hunter??? Out of the Past? Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison? The Sundowners? 

MAUREEN O'HARA: The quiet man? How Green Was My Valley? 

MONTGOMERY CLIFT: A Place in the Sun?? From Here to Eternity? Suddenly, Last Summer? The Heiress??
DEBORAH KERR: SIX nominations and NO Oscar??

AVA GARDNER: The Barefoot Contessa? The Night of the Iguana?
LAUREN BACALL: To have and have not?
OMAR SHARIF: Doctor Zhivago? Funny Girl?

Aug 8, 2010

Crazy poll: Whose feet are these?


The first poll at Via Margutta. The feet on the picture belong to:

a) Myrna Loy
b) Rosalind Russell
c) Ginger Rogers
d) Irene Dunne
e) Carole Lombard
f) Marlene Dietrich

Choose an actress on the sidebar. Name the movie for extra kudos. I still haven't decide what's the point of this poll. Maybe if the most of the voters answer correctly...my readers are really attentive. Whatever.

Jun 1, 2010

Day 01- Four films you’d pick as the TCM Guest Programmer

This survey was created by Jessie.


I'm gonna cheat a little bit here. If I'd be the Guest Programmer for Latin American TCM, I'd pick movies that I really want to see, but I can't just because I can't find Spanish subtitles for them. The four I'm thinking right now are:

1.- Virtue (1932): I've heard it's a good pre-code drama, starring Carole Lombard. Since "In name only" is one of my favorite movies from her, I'd like to see her playing another dramatic role.

2.- Thirteen women (1932): Myrna Loy and Irene Dunne in the same movie.

3.- Joy of living (1938): Mostly because my friend Rena uploaded this tribute and presented me this ridiculously  lovely song:


4.- Romance in Manhattan (1935): Ginger Rogers in love with a Czech immigrant. It seems like an interesting movie.

I know, what a brief post.
——

Day 01- Four films you’d pick as the TCM Guest Programmer
Day 02- Film that got you interested in Old Hollywood
Day 03- Favorite Actor
Day 04- Favorite Actress
Day 05- Actor or Actress you think is underrated
Day 06- Favorite movie from your favorite Actor
Day 07- Favorite movie from your favorite Actress
Day 08- Favorite Old Hollywood couple
Day 09- Old Hollywood stars you wish had worked together
Day 10- Favorite movie
Day 11- Team Bette or Team Joan
Day 12- Favorite Barrymore
Day 13- Classic movie you just couldn’t get into
Day 14- A legend everyone appreciates, but you can’t personally stand
Day 15- An Actor or Actress you’ve been meaning to give a chance, but haven’t gotten around to it yet
Day 16- Favorite director
Day 17- Favorite line from a film
Day 18- Actor or Actress who should have won an Oscar
Day 19- Who’d you like to party it up with in the afterlife
Day 20- Favorite Silent film star
Day 21- Old Hollywood couple you’d watch a sex tape of
Day 22- If you could go back in time and trade places with an Old Hollywood star, who would it be
Day 23- A film you think is underrated
Day 24- Favorite film from Hollywood’s greatest year, 1939
Day 25- Which character from a film do you fantasize about being
Day 26- Which unsolved scandal would you most like the answer to
Day 27- Who’s death hit you the hardest and why
Day 28- A movie you never expected yourself to enjoy
Day 29- Who’s private lifestyle shocked you the most
Day 30- Which 5 Old Hollywood stars would you invite to dinner
 

May 1, 2010

April is gone...so the [last] monthly review has come...


[I forgot to add the post title and Blogger took the first line I had to create the url direction...I hate when this happens]

This is the second and last monthly review because I think it's better if I review every movie right after watching it. I saw some films that I didn't include because I'm gonna add them in a complete filmography post I'm preparing. Anyway, April brought great movies to see. Let's go...

Carole was too good for this minor role. Anyway, she married William.


Man of the world (Richard Wallace, 1931)
Who’s in it: Carole Lombard + William Powell
What it's about: a con man falls in love with the nephew of one of the man he defrauded.
The good: William Powell is always attractive, and the movie depends on him; the romantic scenes are fine (they should be, since William and Carole married three months after the movie was released); there’s tension coming from the main character's ex-lover and “co-worker”; the ending was unpredictable.
The bad: Carole’s character was too good, simple and nice for her; saw it yesterday and now I don’t even remember what there was before the ending. 
Should I see it? Only if you are a fan of Powell or Lombard.

IMBD explains: "The title refers to the superstition that if three people light their cigarettes with the same match, the third person will soon die"

Three on a match (Mervyn LeRoy, 1932)
Who’s in it: Joan Blondell + Ann Dvorak + Bette Davis (+ Bogie)
What it's about: the story of three classmate girls, and how their lives change and connect when they grow up.
The good: interesting story, unpredictable switches, and the little boy was so cute; all the actors are fine, Bogie is very young (has few scenes though).
The bad: too melodramatic at some points; the way to show the passage of time was kind overblown and repetitive; Bette’s character seemed to have no life of her own and was a minor force in the movie.
Should I see it? Yes, it’s good overall.

One Edward G. Robinson here...



...and two of them here.

The whole town’s talking (John Ford, 1935)
Who’s in it: Edward G. Robinson + Jean Arthur
What it's about: a modest employee is confused with an awfully bad gangster ...and the latter takes advantage of the situation…
The good: Edward G. Robinson plays the two roles (employee-gangster) magnificently; you really believe they’re two different people; his employee is so kind, and sweet, and Jean is funny as always, loved the scene at the police station in which she starts to blame Mannon of everything, it’s hilarious; the story is unpredictable and interesting.
The bad: Nothing I guess.
Should I see it?: Yes, good movie.

 This belongs to the first tree quarters. 

Small town girl (William A. Wellman, 1936)
Who’s in it: Robert Taylor + Janet Gaynor + Jimmy Stewart
What it's about: A girl from a small town (yes, the small town girl) is sick and tired of her boring life and the dull people that surrounds her so she decides to go away with a young and handsome doctor from a big city…
The good: The first three quarters of the movie are great; Janet Gaynor knew how to play this kind of role, she looked vulnerable but she was also very funny; Robert Taylor is very good with his two sided character: on one hand he’s a despicable and conceited rich kid but on the other he’s a sensible doctor that takes good care of his patients.
The bad: In my opinion the last part is not very well developed, Robert’s character behaves awfully and Janet’s boring admirer (Stewart) proves to have great values, so the ending is kind of weird.
Should I see it? Yes, the first three quarters worth it.  

Alone in the woods. a romantic detail by Wilder and Brackett.

Arise, my love (Mitchell Leisen, 1940)
Who’s in it: Claudette Colbert + Ray Milland
What it's about: Reporter Augusta Nash (Colbert) and soldier Tom Martin (Milland) fall in love…just before World War II begins.
The good: everything; the script by Wilder + Brackett, filled with details, some funny, some emotive, but always interesting; the story is entertaining and captivating; the performances of the leads are delicious.
The bad: Nothing.
Should I see it? Of course.


       William & Myrna: great chemistry again. 


LOL


I love you again (W.S. Van Dyke, 1940)
Who’s in it: William Powell + Myrna Loy
What it's about: After his head is hit with a boat oar a role-model- man (Powell) recovers his first identity … a con man. The problem is that he's going back to a small town where he's very well known...
The good: The leads have their usual perfect chemistry; William Powell is great, funny and clever as always and his performance is solid; there are a lot of hilarious moment (loved the one with the scouts).
The bad: Loy’s character is kind of subordinated to Powell’s, and this isn’t very frequent in their movies; she doesn’t have many memorable lines.
Should I see it? Yes, it’s funny.  

What a beautiful couple were these two.

That Hamilton woman (Alexander Korda, 1941)
Who’s in it: Vivien Leigh + Laurence Olivier
What it's about: the love story of married Emma Hamilton and married English Naval officer Horatio Nelson.  
The good: the leads are great in their roles, and they (obviously) have chemistry; the story is very dramatic and the tension is very well managed; there are some great scenes.
The bad: the movie ends abruptly.
Should I see it? Yes.  

Seemed to be such a happy couple.
 


Rex Harrison's eye in detail.


Unfaithfully yours (Preston Sturges, 1948)
Who’s in it: Rex Harrison + Linda Darnell
What it's about: An orchestra director (Harrison) imagines different ways to confront her apparently cheating wife…
The good: the story is very original and unpredictable, Rex is great as the husband and his reactions from denial, to suspicion and then to anger are all good; there’s chemistry between the leads; there are great shots (like the the extreme close-up to Harrison’s eye); the last part is very funny.
The bad: Some scenes were very brutal and exaggerated for my taste and that didn’t seem very funny to me; the end is too fast and brief after all the hypothetical situations.
Should I see it? Yes, just because it’s something unique.  

"Tree"
"Rooster"

Johnny Belinda (Jean Negulesco, 1948)
Who’s in it: Jane Wyman + Lew Ayres + Charles Bickford + Agnes Moorehead
What it's about: a good and nice doctor (Ayres) teaches deaf-mute girl (Wyman) to communicate…but not all the men in town are that good and nice.
The good: everything! the story is so interesting and emotive; the way the show how these two people start communicating is so touching and memorable; the characters are so well played by the leads, Jane Wyman is great as the impaired girl (won Oscar), so vulnerable but at the same time with such a inner strength; Lew Ayres is excellent too; the girl’s dad (Charles Bickford) and her aunt (Agnes Moorehead) change their attitude to the girl in such believable and moving way; the bad guy (Stephen McNally) is really really bad and despicable; the movie is beautifully shot, there are some great countryside scenes. Everything is very well developed. 
The bad: Maybe that there's an unsolved case, but it didn't bother to me.
Should I see it? Saw it twice in two days.

Movies I couldn't finish because I fell asleep:

BO-RING.
Man-Proof (Richard Thorpe, 1938): Starring Myrna Loy as a girl in love with guy that marries another woman (Rosalind Russel in a part that was too simple for her). Zero chemistry, you really don’t understand why she loves him so much; and the scenes are boring and she argues all the time with other guy (obviously she will end with him). The only interesting thing was the personality of her mother, a liberal writer that gave her some advices.


Vulgar and violent.
The bank dick (Edward F. Cline, 1940): I didn’t get the humor of this movie; W.C. Fields’s character was really detestable and all the women seemed to be uneducated and violent. Una Merkel was there too but her character was boring and she didn't shine. I’m blaming this kind of movies for some awful and decadent comedy movies we have today (like Borat, and movies starring Ben Stiller, Mike Myers or Adam Sandler).

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