IMDb RATING
7.2/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
A high school girl falls for a playboy artist, with screwball results.A high school girl falls for a playboy artist, with screwball results.A high school girl falls for a playboy artist, with screwball results.
- Won 1 Oscar
- 1 win total
Ransom M. Sherman
- Judge Treadwell
- (as Ransom Sherman)
Gregory Gaye
- Maitre d'Hotel
- (as Gregory Gay)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Shirley Temple is interviewing Cary Grant after his lecture at her high school, he refers to her as "Miss Kilgallen" instead of her character's name of Miss Turner. This is a reference to Dorthy Kilgallen, a popular American journalist of the time.
- GoofsIn the end, when Nugent and Margaret are doing the "man with power" routine; there is a rear screen projection showing various passengers in the background walking toward the plane. However when they end the routine and it does a quick cut to a live shot; the passengers in the background have changed. Additionally, a plane crew appears underneath the plane that wasn't there before.
- Quotes
Richard Nugent: Hey, you remind me of a man.
Susan Turner: What man?
Richard Nugent: The man with the power.
Susan Turner: What power?
Richard Nugent: The power of whodoo.
Susan Turner: Whodoo?
Richard Nugent: You do.
Susan Turner: Do what?
Richard Nugent: You remind me of a man...
- Alternate versionsAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Screen Writer (1950)
- SoundtracksThe Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer
(uncredited)
Music by Joseph Meyer and Don Meyer
Lyrics by Howard Phillips
Featured review
Want some insight into what titillated movie-goers in the post-war 1940's? This 1947 RKO production is a good place to start. There's the marquee value of a seductively handsome Cary Grant coupled with that spunky symbol of all-American innocence Shirley Temple, enough at the time to draw in ticket-buying throngs with its naughty innuendo of daring departure and forbidden pleasure. In fact, the underage subtext lingers beneath much of the movie's plot and humorous settings, but in a totally innocent manner, proving that this is not yet the more permissive 1960's. One slip, however, and this light-hearted soufflé could easily have become burnt-toast of the most tasteless variety. Fortunately, there are no slips.
Once the pace picks up, this comedy sparkles as brightly as any other Cary Grant madcap, which is to say, about as good as comedy gets. The nightclub scene is an absolute triumph of timing, staging, and scripting. The laughs build as the party table becomes more and more chaotic, interrupted by one petty annoyance after another, finally reducing the worldly Grant to speechless exasperation. This is the type of soaring comedic architecture that requires real artistry, but has been sadly replaced in contemporary film by a dumbed- down world of bathroom jokes, insult gags, and other cheap forms of humor that appeal mainly to juveniles.
The movie itself, directed by an unheralded Irving Reis, is literally brimful of bounce and charm, leaving no one in doubt that the big war is over and America is ready for the future even if its libido is showing. With: a slyly endearing Ray Collins, a bemusedly prim Myrna Loy, a pompously befuddled Rudy Vallee, and a well-deserved Oscar for writer Sidney Sheldon, along with a final scene that could not be more apt. Despite the shift in public mores, audiences now as then should find this a highly entertaining ninety minutes of expert movie- making.
Once the pace picks up, this comedy sparkles as brightly as any other Cary Grant madcap, which is to say, about as good as comedy gets. The nightclub scene is an absolute triumph of timing, staging, and scripting. The laughs build as the party table becomes more and more chaotic, interrupted by one petty annoyance after another, finally reducing the worldly Grant to speechless exasperation. This is the type of soaring comedic architecture that requires real artistry, but has been sadly replaced in contemporary film by a dumbed- down world of bathroom jokes, insult gags, and other cheap forms of humor that appeal mainly to juveniles.
The movie itself, directed by an unheralded Irving Reis, is literally brimful of bounce and charm, leaving no one in doubt that the big war is over and America is ready for the future even if its libido is showing. With: a slyly endearing Ray Collins, a bemusedly prim Myrna Loy, a pompously befuddled Rudy Vallee, and a well-deserved Oscar for writer Sidney Sheldon, along with a final scene that could not be more apt. Despite the shift in public mores, audiences now as then should find this a highly entertaining ninety minutes of expert movie- making.
- dougdoepke
- Jul 3, 2010
- Permalink
- How long is The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer (1947) officially released in India in English?
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