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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| FOOLS FOR SCANDAL (director: Mervyn Leroy; screenwriter: Herbert Fields/Joseph Fields, Irving Brecher/based on the play Return Engagement by Nancy Hamilton, James Shute, Rosemary Casey; cinematographer: Ted Tetzlaff; editor: William Holmes; music: Adolph Deutsch/Rodgers and Hart; cast: Carole Lombard (Kay Winters), Fernand Gravet (Rene), Ralph Bellamy (Phillip Chester), Allen Jenkins (Dewey Gibson), Isabel Jeans (Lady Paula Malverton), Marie Wilson (Myrtle, Kay's maid), Ottola Nesmith (Agnes), Tempe Pigott (Bessie, cook), Norma Varden (Cicely), Elspeth Dudgeon (Cynthia), Michael Romanoff (Party Guest); Runtime: 81; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Mervyn Leroy; Warner Bros; 1938) |
| "A misfire
screwball comedy."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz A misfire screwball comedy. Too many lame jokes over
mistaken identities (trying to channel the 1936 My Man
Godfrey) and a
whiny unappealing male romantic lead, Fernand Gravet, sink this
contrived story.
Even the presence of the
bubbly Carole
Lombard, in her
only film for Warner Bros., can't save this dud.
Director Mervyn
Leroy
("I Am A Fugitive From A Chain Gang"/"Little
Caesar"/"Five Star Final") shows
why comedy is not his forte, as he can't prevent
things from becoming
leaden and unbelievable. It's based
on the unproduced play Return
Engagement by
Nancy Hamilton,
James Shute, and Rosemary
Casey. The inept screenplay is by the brothers Herbert
and Joseph
Fields, who prior to this film never wrote a screwball
comedy and prove
they don't have an ear for that genre Hollywood movie star Kay
Winters (Carole
Lombard) is in London making
a film, when she takes the weekend off to go incognito
to vacation in
Paris. Kay meets in the street Rene (Fernand Gravet), who
is wearing
evening clothes and offers to show her the real Paris.
She doesn't know
he's an impoverished French marquis and he doesn't
know that she's a
wealthy famous American actress. Charmed by his French
accent, Kay
skips her dinner party given by Lady
Paula Malverton (Isabel
Jeans) and
spends the day sightseeing by cab with
Rene and in the evening
they dine at the same restaurant
where Lady Malverton has brought her
guests. Kay skips out on Rene when seeing the
gossip-monger Lady
Malverton, leaving him a note to
meet her
the next day at the fountain in Montmartre. But he
oversleeps amd
misses their meeting. When Rene learns Kay returned to
London and from
his cabbie learns she's a Hollywood star, he follows
her to London with
his roommate (Allen Jenkins) and arrives at her house
while she's
giving a masquerade party with the guests wearing
animal heads. Kay
invites him to stay for dinner. This gives Rene an
opportunity to show
off his talent as a cook when he makes his specialty,
crepes
suzette. The incensed household cook quits on the
spot, and Rene moves
into Kay's house as he maneuvers himself into being
the replacement
cook. Lady
Malverton discovers this and tells her friends and the
reporters, and
Kay's reputation comes into question. But Rene refuses
to leave, which
makes Kay upset with him. In
the
meantime Phillip
Chester (Ralph
Bellamy),
Kay's square American insurance
businessman boyfriend, proposes to her, and even
though she doesn't
love him decides to accept. It's then up to Rene to
spoil their
marriage plans and get Kay to admit she loves him.
That Rene
accomplishes his mission and the Bellamy character is
once again made
the sap in a sitcom film, was hardly pleasing, funny
or credible. The large budget Fools
for
Scandal proved to
be a rare
box-office
dud for Lombard. REVIEWED ON 10/8/2010 GRADE: C- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |