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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| WIFE VS. SECRETARY (director: Clarence Brown; screenwriters: Norman Krasna/John Lee Mahin/Alice Duer Miller/based on a story by Faith Baldwin; cinematographer: Ray June; editor: Frank E. Hull; music: Edward Ward/Herbert Stothart; cast: Clark Gable (Van Stanhope), Jean Harlow (Helen 'Whitey' Wilson), Myrna Loy (Linda Stanhope), May Robson (Mimi), Hobart Cavanaugh (Joe), George Emery (Simpson), George Barbier (J.D. Underhill), James Stewart (Dave), Don Rowan (Battleship); Runtime: 88; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Hunt Stromberg; MGM; 1936) |
| "It's a star
vehicle with Clark Gable, Myrna Loy and Jean
Harlow, that's filled with old-fashioned
Hollywood gloss."
Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Clarence Brown ("Idiot's Delight"/"National Velvet"/"Anna Christie") efficiently directs this production code lightweight romantic comedy about the perceived problems of women in the workplace. It's a star vehicle with Clark Gable, Myrna Loy and Jean Harlow, that's filled with old-fashioned Hollywood gloss. The stars make the snappy screenplay of Norman Krasna, John Lee Mahin and Alice Duer Miller work. It's based on a story by Faith Baldwin. Ambitious
magazine publisher Van Stanhope (Clark
Gable), of a high-priced edition, has been happily
married for three years to his easy going devoted
wife Linda (Myrna Loy), whom he surprises with the
anniversary gift of a diamond bracelet hidden in her
breakfast brook trout. Stanhope's efficient
secretary, Whitey (Jean Harlow),
is engaged to the low- paid salaryman Dave (James
Stewart), who is annoyed she's always busy doing
work for her boss and not able to even spend many
evenings with him. Van's suspicious meddling mother
Mimi (May Robson) warns
Linda that she shouldn't trust her husband with such
a pretty woman as a secretary and should get her
fired. But Van finds the secretary invaluable and
continues to innocently see her at all hours, and
Linda refuses to believe the
gossip among her social set and seems
content that nothing is happening. But Linda's
unconcerned attitude changes when hubby refuses to
give Whitey a promotion to a different spot in the
office despite the recommendation of the magazine's
board of governors and then goes on a business trip
to Havana to meet magazine tycoon Underwood (George
Barbier), who he
is involved with in a deal to take over the cheaper
magazine. Linda was not allowed to go, but when she
calls hubby at 2am in his hotel room and is shocked
to find the secretary Whitey answering the phone she
gets upset and when hubby returns to Manhattan she
asks for a divorce. Things get straightened out when
Whitey visits Linda and reassures her that hubby was
always a gentleman, and that she was foolishly
divorcing an innocent man. This
is the kind of adult drama old-timers look back at
with a strong sense of nostalgia and wonder why
Hollywood can't still make such entertaining mature
films. REVIEWED ON 2/9/2013 GRADE: B- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |