When Charlie Mason is promoted from irresponsible reporter to hard-nosed city editor, it costs him his girlfriend, ace reporter Rusty Fleming. After he hears she's engaged to another, he qui... Read allWhen Charlie Mason is promoted from irresponsible reporter to hard-nosed city editor, it costs him his girlfriend, ace reporter Rusty Fleming. After he hears she's engaged to another, he quits and tries to win her back.When Charlie Mason is promoted from irresponsible reporter to hard-nosed city editor, it costs him his girlfriend, ace reporter Rusty Fleming. After he hears she's engaged to another, he quits and tries to win her back.
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Did you know
- TriviaOne of over 700 Paramount Productions, filmed between 1929 and 1949, which were sold to MCA/Universal in 1958 for television distribution, and have been owned and controlled by Universal ever since. Its earliest documented telecast took place in Asheville Sunday 2 August 1959 on WLOS (Channel 13), followed by Omaha Saturday 22 August 1959 on KETV (Channel 7), by Minneapolis 8 November 1959 on WTCN (Channel 11), by Johnstown 23 November 1959 on WJAC (Channel 6), by Seattle 9 December 1959 on KIRO (Channel 7), by Columbus 2 February 1960 on WBNS (Channel 10), by Phoenix 3 March 1960 on KVAR (Channel 12), by Wichita 3 August 1960 on KTVH (Channel 12), by Detroit 25 August 1960 on WJBK (Channel 2), and by Palm Beach 3 November 1960 on WPTV (Channel 5). It was released on DVD 19 April 2016 as one of 18 titles in Universal's Cary Grant - the Vault Collection.
- Quotes
Marriage License Clerk: [Reviewing a marriage license] Do you solemly swear that the statements are?... Say! What's the matter with you? You've got the day of your birth down here August 4, 1934. That makes you two years old!
Charlie: That;s right. Next year I'll be eligible for the Kentucky Derby... and if you were marrying a girl like mine, you'd feel that young yourself.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hollywood: The Gift of Laughter (1982)
Another device is the newsroom. We don't have these today in the same way. Reporters and cops don't mix it up as they used to. We don't actually "get the story," instead get some sort of manufactured fiction that glues facts together in appealing ways.
But 70 years ago there was a magical confluence of what it meant to make or discover stories, what it meant to "see," and what it meant to be an American. Mixed in there was this notion of an alert woman.
Its hard to impress on youngsters beyond a cartoonish awareness that women in society and film were extremely limited in options. Homemaker, secretary, teacher, nurse. Whore. If a woman was intelligent and witty and active, she was a reporter.
Seeing and discovering was sexy. Its lost today, that effect. This is post-code; "Picture Snatcher" is a better example where the sexiness is darned explicit.
Imagine a film that presents a woman far beyond your experience, what you know from real life. Imagine her witty and sexually available outside marriage, at least temporarily so. Smart, full of humor and ready to play severe and grand jokes. Its impossible to do today where Angelina can fight, Tilda can control and Julianne can affect.
But just imagine the cinematic power of a newsroom with such juice. The folding, of course with them writing stories and we seeing stories simultaneously. Our admiration of her just as Grant's and both of us conspiring in creating a spectacle around her.
(For those who haven't seen it the story is Cary and Joan are lovers copulation is obvious and both are star reporters. They decide NOT to marry as not to "ruin things." He advances to control the paper (the story) and she becomes engaged to a book writer. The books in question are vapid "self-help" books that lack the vim of "real" stories. Grant, drunk and with the help of a gangster pal, conspires to give her firetrucks, policecars, ambulances, even a hearse, all responding to the house where she will wed. That's the present: life.)
Oh how I wish we had such power to pull from in film today! Where's the sex in story, the newsroom of today?
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
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- Runtime1 hour 21 minutes
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- 1.37 : 1