Showing posts with label Cary Grant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cary Grant. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Dug Up: My Favorite Wife vs, The Parent Trap

YouTuber, helped me out big time with this one! In My Favorite Wife, Nick Arden (Cary Grant) does a crazy lean to catch a glance of his long lost wife as the elevator doors close. I immediately thought, "Haven't I seen that gag before?" Yep. In The Parent Trap


Be sure to check out 's upload explanation for more details.


Saturday, June 11, 2011

"Oh, you Casanova, you."

Suite C is my favorite scene in the movie. Nick Arden discovers that his wife is alive while on his honeymoon. He rents Suite C for the "old" Mrs Arden so that they can talk things over. "Old" Mrs. Arden gives him a hard time about his new marriage and how he intends to break the news of her return to the "new" Mrs. Arden (in Suite B).

posted on YouTube by

Thursday, June 9, 2011

"My Favorite Wife" Adapted for Radio

Check out the Screen Director's Playhouse radio version of My Favorite Wife (courtesy of Internet Archive). The 60-minute radio adaptation of the movie was broadcast on December 7, 1950 with Cary Grant and Irene Dunne reprising their film roles.

What do you think of  radio adaptation?




P.S.
This adaptation can also be found under Special Features on Turner Home Entertainment's DVD release (June 1, 2004) of My Favorite Wife starring Cary Grant and Irene Dunne.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Wednesdays with Cary Grant - My Favorite Wife


Actors: Cary Grant, Irene Dunne Randolph Scott, Gail Patrick
Rated: Not Rated 
Production Studio: RKO Studios 
U.S. Movie Release Date: May 17, 1940 
DVD Release Date: June 1, 2004
Run Time: 88 minutes
Color: Black and White
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Award Nominations:
  • Best Black and White Art Direction (1940) - Mark-Lee Kirk
  • Best Black and White Art Direction (1940) - Van Nest Polglase
  • Best Original Score (1940) - Roy Webb
  • Best Original Story (1940) - Leo McCarey*
  • Best Original Story (1940) - Bella Spewack* 

*The story is contains an adaptation of Alfred Lord Tennyson's poem Enoch Arden. The screenplay's main characters' last name is Arden.


    Friday, May 13, 2011

    The Awful Truth: Scandalous relatives can mess up your game

    The Awful Truth: Scandalous relatives can mess up your game.

    Just ask Elizabeth Bennet (Pride And Prejudice) or Jerry Warriner (The Awful Truth). There's is nothing like a relative making a bad impression.

    In this scene, Jerry Warriner's soon-to-be ex-wife, Lucy (Irene Dunne), pretends to be his drunken sister in order to undermine his relationship with his fiancee and her family. It is my favorite scene in The Awful Truth. Lucy Warriner's dialogue is priceless! Samples:

    "Saa-ayy, wait a minute. Don't anybody leave this room. I've lost my purse."

    "I had three or four [drinks] before I got here, but they're beginning to wear off, and you know how that is. [Lucy to Jerry] Well, don't look at me like that. You like a little drink yourself. We call him him 'Jerry the Nipper.' He likes to sneak 'em when nobody's looking."

    "[Singing] I used to dream about a cottage small, a cottage small by a waterfall, but I wound up with no home at all, my dreams have gone with the wind."

    "I never could do that."



    posted on YouTube by

    Wednesday, May 11, 2011

    "The Awful Truth" is awfully funny!

    In Leo McCarey's 1937 screwball comedy, The Awful Truth, unresolved suspicions of affairs lead a married couple to begin divorce proceedings. During the 60 days before the finalization of the divorce, the spouses try to undermine each other's attempts remarry.


     

    Next week - His Girl Friday

    Thursday, May 5, 2011

    The Awful Truth: I'm addicted to screwball comedies.

    I am addicted to screwball comedies. There. I said it. Step 1 on the road to recovery.
    1. I admit I am powerless over screwball comedies—that my movie queue has become unmanageable.
    See, what had happened was .... it all started with the Thin Man series ... though some would argue that it is not true screwball .... whateva.

    Then I saw Bringing Up Baby which led to His Girl Friday and The Awful Truth (I ♥ Cary Grant). All of which I found odd, but captivating.

    After comparing the movie descriptions, I realized that they were considered screwball comedies. To me, a screwball comedy is somewhere between a farce and a romantic comedy. And at times, kinda like sophisticated slapstick.

    "What goes on?" I don't normally like slapstickish movies. I must admit that I am not really sure what keeps me watching screwball comedies. They are like train wrecks. I know what's doing to happen, but I cannot look away.  Perhaps it is the combination of:
    • Clever fast-paced dialog
    • Reversal of traditional gender roles
    • Comedy of error (I was paying attention in literature class)
    • A ridiculous/unpredictable situation
    • A smidgen of slapstick

    Now my movie queue is all backed up. I must watch all of the other screwball comedies. I cannot help myself. Crack (slapstick) is wack. I know. I know.

    Do you like (err ... love) screwball comedies?

    Wednesday, May 4, 2011

    Thoughts on "Evenings with Cary Grant"


    My Amazon.com Review

    I wasn't expecting to like Evenings With Cary Grant: Recollections in His Own Words and by Those Who Knew Him Best so much. I cannot think of a lovelier "biography." To be honest, it is less of a biography and more like a collage of an amazing life as told by Grant and those who knew him (guided by Nancy Nelson's narrative hand). With a forward by Barbara (Grant's wife) and Jennifer (Grant's daughter), the book has an air of credibility that you don't often find with celebrity biographies.

    A charming, troubled, generous, witty, stylish and talented actor, the "real" Cary Grant seems even more likable after finishing the book (if you can imagine that). It's rare to find a movie star that has such appeal with both men and women. The book makes you wonder what your life story would read like as told by the words you left behind and those who knew you.

    Many thanks to Nancy Nelson for enabling me to snuggle up with Cary Grant for a couple of evenings. "Happy Thoughts!"

    P.S.
    I am curious to see what the books of Grant's daughter Good Stuff: A Reminiscence of My Father, Cary Grant and his ex-wife (Dyan Cannon) Dear Cary: A Memoir have to add.

    Tuesday, May 3, 2011

    Out Today: Good Stuff: A Reminiscence of My Father, Cary Grant

    Good Stuff: A Reminiscence of My Father, Cary Grant by Jennifer Grant


    Also check out "Cary Grant: Debonair dad" from @CBSNews "Jennifer Grant writes of her cherished childhood and the iconic Hollywood star who gave up acting to raise his only daughter"