Canadian Film Weekly (Jul 19, 1944)

Record Details:

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| i | le. | | | uN & | REVIEWS | INFORMATION i RATINGS | Vol, 9, No. 29 Pin-up Girl with Betty Grable 20th-Fox 83 Mins. LAVISH TECHNICOLOR MUSICAL IS A SPECIAL TREAT FOR THE MEN; OFFERS GRABLE AT HER BEST, With “Pin-up Girl’ as the title and Betty Grable as the girl], this Technicolor musical extravaganza ought to be a natural with the boys, The lovely color catches the star in all her exciting glamor in a film that gives her ample opportunity to display her feminine wiles to the fullest advantage. What the picture Jacks in story merit it more than compensates for in the way of beauty and musical content, shaping up aS a gay romantic frolic of broad appeal, especially to those young in years and in ideas. The action keeps moving in and out of bistros—a fact that provides plenty of excuse for the staging of a raft of song numbers, not to mention several very lavish and excellently presented production numbers. No less than eight Mack Gordon-James Monaco tunes have been kneaded into the footage. é' The story, utterly preposterous, is featherweight and is lost in the shuffle, which matters little, for the important thing about “Pin-up Girl” is the parade of dazzling production and musical numbers. The tale tells about a gal (Miss Grable) who resorts to trickery to get a break ds a performer. The fun begins when Miss Grable and her: bosom pal (Dorothy Kent) stop off in New York en route to Washington for Government jobs. Miss Grable falls in love with John Harvey, a national war hero back from the South Pacific. The guy, like everyone else, falls for her story about her being a Broadway star. Miss Grable tries to sustain the pretense, but the truth eventually outs, By that time Miss Grable, billed as the nation’s top pin-up girl, has become a success in her own right. : Miss Grable performs to the complete delight of the boys. As the hero. Harvey is passable. Martha Raye and Joe E. Brown are prominent in the laugh department. CAST: Betty Grable, John Harvey, Martha Raye, Joe E. Brown, Eugene Pallette, Dorothy Kent, Dave Willock, Condes Brothers, Skating Vanities, Charlie Spivak and orchestra, Robert Homans, Marcel Dalio, Reger Clark, Leon Belasco, Irving Bacon, Walter Tetley, Ruth Warren, Max ‘Willenz, Manton Moreland, Charles Moore. DIRECTION, Good, PHOTOGRAPHY, Fine, REVIEWS FROM FILM DAILY, NEW YORK The Lady and The Monster with Vera Hruba Ralston, Richard Arlen, Erich von Stroheim Republic 86 Mins. FEAR-PROVOKING PSYCHOLOGICAL MELODRAMA STRONG ENTERTAINMENT THAT RAISES BRAINSTORM. In ‘The Lady and the Monster” Republic has a _ psychological shocker that will give the creeps to those susceptible to this sort of thing. Weird and tense, the picture is quite a compound of fear-inducing elements. Suspense is worked for all it is worth in an effort to hold the audience under the picture's spell. The story is a far-fetched affair acceptable only because departure from reality is to be forgiven in melodramatic entertainment of the type under discussion. In an attempt to heighten the sinister mood of the story the production has been directed at a slow, deliberate pace by George Sherman, who also func~ tioned as associate producer. Plot developments result from the attempt of Erich von Stroheim, satanic man of science, to prove that the human brain can be kept functioning after death, with the aid of a machine invented by his assistant, Richard Arlen. Von Stroheim swipes the brain of a plane accident victim, a brilliant but ruthless individual in his lifetime, and submits it to the test. Through the use of telepathy von Stroheim places Arlén under the influence of the brain, causing the latter to take on the personality of the dead man and indulging in criminal deeds alien to his nature. Aghast, Vera Hruba Xalston, Arlen’s fiancee and yon Stroheim’s ward, tries to put a halt to the experiment. Arlen, finally shaking off the spell, defies von Stroheim with the assistance of Miss Ralston. The film winds up with a Slam-bang fight between hero and villain in which the brain is put out of operation. f Miss Ralston, Czechoslovakian skating star who has been featured in Republic's ice extrayafanza, performs appealingly in her first straight role. Arlen and von Stroheim discharge their assignments well. CAST: Vera Hruba Ralston, Richard Arlen, Erich von Streheim, Helen Vinson, Mary Nash, Sidney Blackmer, Janet Martin, Bill Henry Charles Cane, Juanita Quigley, Josephine Dillen, Antenic Triana and Lola Montes, DIRECTION, Goed, PHOTOGRAPHY, Good, Stephenson, Two Girls and A Sailor with Van Johnson, June Allyson, Glorix DeHaven M-G-M 124 Mins. MUSICAL OFFERING QUALITY AND QUANTITY HAS EVERYTHING TO SET IT UP AS BOXOFFICE BANG. Bursting with entertainment delivered by a battery of topflight performers, “Two Girls and a Sailor” is a super-musical that bids for the maximum of business, and justly so.° Diversion in the lush Metro tradition, the film is another distinct achievement for Producer Joe Pasternak, who has stinted neither in cost nor . talent to guarantee the success of the enterprise. To say the picture is an unalloyed delight is an understatement. No less than 18 song creators have contributed their work to “Two Girls and a Sailor.” Most of the accompaniments are provided by Harry James and his Music Makers and Xavier Cugat and his orchestra. Of special interest is one piano rendition by Jose Iturbi. Lina Romay executes several songs with the Cugat aggregation that explain why Metro signed her to a long contract. Others whose singing talents are enlisted in the glittering and expansive production numbers are Lena Horne, Virginia O’Brien, Carlos Ramirez, the Wilde Twins, and Helen Forrest, not to mention June Allyson, Gloria DeHaven and Durante, all three of whom film’s story. The charming story tells of two sisters (Misses Allyson and DeHaven), entertainers, vying for the affection of the same chap, a wealthy sailor lad (Van Johnson). When the youth is forced to make a choice, he picks Miss Allyson, Miss DeHaven finding her man in a soldier (Tom Drake). The cast is tops. Johnson and the Misses Allyson and DeHaven and Drake play the young people superbly. Durante is terrific in the chief comedy assignment. Others in the story sequences who deserve mention are Henry Henry O'Neill and Frank Sully. CAST: Van Johnson, June Allyson, Gloria DeHaven, Jose Iturbi, Jimmy Durante, Gracie Allen, Lena Horne, Tom Drake, Henry Stephenson, Henry O'Neill, Ben Blue, Carlos Ramirez, Frank Sully, Albert Coates, Donald Meek, Ampare Novarre, Virginia O'Brien, Wilde Twins, Frank Jenks, Harry James and His Music Makers, Helen Forrest, Xavier Cugat and orchestra, Lina Romay. DIRECTION, Fine, PHOTOGRAPHY, Fine, appear in the $2.00 Per Annum Shine on, Harvest Moon with Ann Sheridan, Dennis Morgan Warner 112 Mins. LAVISH MUSICAL IS JAMMED WITH POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT; KEYED FOR SUBSTANTIAL GROSSES. In “Shine on, Harvest Moon” Warners has delivered another of its entertainment-loaded musicals aimed squarely at the boxoffice. In this instance the studio has built the show around the characters of Nora Bayes and Jack Norworth, two topliners of the golden days of American vaudeville, Plenty ef color, life and gayety have been brought to this story of the noted duo of show business —a story that is told with romantic fervor and with strong regard for comedy. The musical content is irresistible, with several of the tunes inspiring fine production numbers, the most expansive being that accorded the title song in an impressive Technicolor sequence that brings the picture to a stunning close. The picture doesn’t go extensively into the lives of Miss Bayes and Norworth. The screenplay, a commendable job by Sam Hellman, Richard Weil, Francis Swann and James Kern, is concerned principally with their romance, their teaming as a husband-and-wife act, and their ups and downs in their struggle to hit the big time. All the heartaches, all the joys of their devoted partnership are included in the story. The picture ends in a burst of happiness with their triumph in the “Ziegfeld Follies.” The production has a first-rate cast. Ann Sheridan and Dennis Morgan act and sing attractively as the Bayes-Norworth combination. Irene Manning contributes good singing and acting as Miss Sheridan’s professional and romantic rival. Jack Carson, 8S. Z. Sakall and Marie Wilson. take care of the comedy nicely. Robert Shayne attracts attention as the villain who threatens the happiness of Miss Sheridan and Morgan by applying the blacklist against them. CAST: Ann Sheridan, Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson, Irene Manning, S. Z. Sakall, Marie Wilson, Robert Shayne, The Ash-~ burns, Four Step Brothers, William Davidson, James Bush, Joseph Crehan, Betty Bryson, Don Kramer, George Rog~ ers, Harry Charles Johnson, Walter Pietilla. DIRECTION, Good. PHOTOGRAPHY, Excellent,