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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| MY LITTLE CHICKADEE (director: Edward F. Cline; screenwriters: Mae West/W.C. Fields; cinematographer: Joseph Valentine; editor: Edward Curtiss; music: Frank Skinner; cast: Mae West (Flower Belle Lee), W.C. Fields (Cuthbert J. Twillie), Joseph Calleia (Jeff Badger), Dick Foran (Wayne Carter), Ruth Donnelly (Aunt Lou), Margaret Hamilton (Mrs. Gideon), Donald Meek (Amos Budge), George Moran (Milton), Fuzzy Knight (Cousin Zeb); Runtime: 83; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Lester Cowan/Jack J. Gross; Universal; 1940) |
| "It's
really not a good movie, but it
had something special about it that defied a rational
critique."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Edward F. Cline ("The Bank Dick"/"Hook Line and Sinker"/"Private
Buckaroo") directs Mae
West and W.C. Fields in a clash of comedy shticks that
should have been
great because of who was in it but was too uneven to
reach such acclaim
despite their usual gags performed throughout. West superbly delivers her
scripted
well-timed sexual burlesque humor of double-entendres,
swagger and
wisecracks (weakened by the Production Code's
censorship); while Fields
delightfully runs through some of his arsenal of scam
artist and misogynist
routines that include witty ad
libs, his ridiculous fumbling of things and
well-delivered elocution lessons.
But all was not well on the set, as the two
egotistical stars couldn't
handle not
being the center of attention and
fought over the scripts each had written,
scene-stealing and film
credit. Fields came out the best of the two, as was
generally agreed.
It's really not a good movie, but it had something
special about it
that defied a rational critique--like watching the
mega-stars get their
comedy over despite such an inadequate storyline, what
seemed like
uncomfortable moments and not liking each other.
Nevertheless, it did
very well at the box office and remains a favorite
among film buffs,
even though it was not considered a top-notch pic. Flower Belle Lee (Mae
West)
is seen by the town gossip Mrs. Gideon (Margaret Hamilton) kissing
the notorious
stage robber known as the Masked
Bandit and is
kicked out of her
hometown of Little Bend. The sheriff says she can't
return until
married and respectable. Going by train to Greasewood
City, Flower
Belle meets card-hustler and
snake-oil salesman Cuthbert J. Twillie (W.C. Fields) and thinks he's rich
because he has a bag
full of money. Flower Belle gets gambler Amos Budge (Donald Meek), who looks like a
preacher, to marry them
on the train. Flower Belle also single-handedly kills
an Indian raiding
party attacking the train. In Greasewood, the
town bad
guy, the saloon owner Jeff
Badger (Joseph
Calleia), appoints
the lying braggart Twillie as sheriff, after he boasts
at the bar he
was the hero on the train who stopped the Injuns. As the latest sheriff, he
follows the
five others killed in recent months by Badger.
Meanwhile Flower Belle
discovers hubby's satchel of money is fake and thereby
courts the Masked
Bandit, the
saloon owner Badger
and the crusading newspaper
publisher Wayne
Carter (Dick
Foran). The pic could never
resolve
that the Masked Bandit and the evil saloon owner were
one in the same,
and have the heroine getting romantic with the villain
(which takes
away a lot of the sympathy we may have had for the
West character). It
ends with Flower Belle trying to decide on choosing
either Badger or
Carter as her latest boyfriend, or going with her
usual entourage. REVIEWED ON 5/2/2011 GRADE: B+ Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |