Discover
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Ernst Lubitsch
Director -
Samson Raphaelson
Screenplay -
Roger Heman Sr.
Sound -
James Basevi
Art Direction -
Alfred Newman
Original Music Composer -
Dorothy Spencer
Editor -
René Hubert
Costume Design -
Cyril J. Mockridge
Original Music Composer
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CinemaSerf 12/22/2024 11:34:59 AM
I kept seeing Clifton Webb in the role of "Henry Van Cleve" here, but Don Ameche manages it well enough as he arrives in the waiting room "downstairs" for an interview with Laird Cregar. He thinks he has lived his successful life in such a fashion as to merit refusal up where Mozart and Beethoven still play, but his interviewer decides to let him tell his own story and that's where we come in. "Henry" comes from a wealthy New York family where he is expected to conform to society rules by his father "Randolph" (Louis Calhern) and mother "Bertha" (Spring Byington). Well suffice to say he doesn't ever really want to play that game, but nobody quite expects him to pinch his cousin's bride-to-be "Martha" (Gene Tierney) just as they get engaged. What now ensues sees the couple's trials and tribulations as they bring up their own son "Jack" with the assistance of their grandpa "Hugo" (Charles Coburn) before sadness tinges his life. At the start we all make assumptions about "Henry", but gradually we realise that he's actually quite a decent cove whose instinctive behaviour is refreshing amongst the formality and pseudo-snobbishness of a society that's long since forgotten it's own shoot from the hip roots. Coburn is on good form, Eugene Palette - and his instantly recognisable tones - turns in a few fun cameos as her father and though maybe a bit long, it tells us a story of true love in a gently amiable, quite personable fashion that allows the chemistry between Ameche and Tierney to gently simmer.
Gene Tierney
Martha Strabel Van CleveClara Blandick
Grandmother Van CleveDon Ameche
Henry Van CleveBess Flowers
Party Guest (uncredited)Gary Gray
Boy in Park (uncredited)Spring Byington
Bertha Van CleveClarence Muse
JasperSigne Hasso
Yvette ("Mademoiselle")