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(director: Walter Lang; screenwriters: F. Hugh
Herbert/from the novel Belvedere by Gwen Davenport;
cinematographer: Norbert Brodine; editor: Harron Jones;
music: Alfred Newman; cast: Clifton Webb
(Lynn Belvedere), Maureen O'Hara (Tacey King), Robert
Young (Harry King), Richard Haydn (Clarence Appleton),
Louise Allbritton (Edna Philby), John Russell
(Bill Philby), Ed
Begley (Horatio Hammond), Ken
Christy (Mr. McPherson), Betty
Ann Lynn (Ginger),
Anthony Sydes (Tony King), Roddy
McCaskill (Roddy King), Larry
Olsen (Larry King); Runtime: 84;
MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Samuel G. Engel; 20th Century
Fox; 1948) "This is the effete curmudgeon character film role that endeared the 60 -year-old Clifton Webb to the public and made him a star." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Enjoyable
domestic comedy of manners on uptight suburbanites and
their imperious know-it-all male babysitter. This is
the effete curmudgeon character film role that
endeared the 60 -year-old Clifton Webb
to the public and made him a star. Because the
film was so popular, it led to several sequels. Walter
Lang ("The Mighty Barnum"/"Mother Wore Tights"/"State
Fair") does a nice job keeping the snappy
story moving crisply along. It's based on the
1947 novel Belvedere by Gwen Davenport and is written
by F. Hugh Herbert. In the serene middle-American suburb of Hummingbird Hill resides the struggling attorney Harry and the housewife Tacey King (Robert Young and Maureen O'Hara). They are a young middle-class couple with three bratty boys-- Tony (Anthony Sydes), Larry (Larry Olsen) and the toddler Roddy (Roddy McCaskill). The couple can't keep maids because of the troublesome kids and the over friendly giant pet great Dane excitedly jumping over them. Tacey puts an ad in the local paper for a live-in baby-sitter and it's answered, to their surprise, by a pompous, stuffy elderly man named Lynn Belvedere (Clifton Webb), who states he's a genius, doesn't care much for kids and does everything well. The unlikely baby-sitter is hired after the unruly kids take to the eccentric self-absorbed snob, who shows he will not put up with their nonsense when he dumps a bowl of oatmeal over Roddy's head after the toddler threw oatmeal in his face and laughed. Local
gossip, an elderly horticulture fanatic who still
lives with his overbearing mother, Clarence
Appleton (Richard Haydn),
spreads false rumors that Belvedere and Tacey are
carrying on an affair while Harry is out-of-town on
business. Clarence maliciously informs
Harry's hypocritical boss (Ed
Begley), who threatens
to fire him unless he gets rid of Belvedere. After a
series of misunderstandings, with Tacey moving back
with mom, we learn that Belvedere
is secretly writing a book about life in Hummingbird
Hill and how unsophisticated and cruel people
can be in the 'burbs. Though it settles for being a breezy sitcom
comedy, it still pumps into its storyline some
subversive moments such as a possible
intellectual homosexual male being better at caring
for children than the idealized American heterosexual
couple and that being unconventional will cause a
witch hunt in such conventional suburban places where
conformity is more important than finding one's own
identity. The social commentary offers a slice
of life view on how things operate in the 'burbs, but
backs off onto safe ground after railing against how
the leading citizens are trapped into leading boring
lives because of their fears of social pressure and
ostracism. REVIEWED ON 10/15/2012 GRADE: B Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |