Young Jane Benson (Merle Oberon) just about manages to make ends meet running the large family house in Yorkshire. In love with local doctor Freddie Jarvis (Sir Rex Harrison), she suggests t... Read allYoung Jane Benson (Merle Oberon) just about manages to make ends meet running the large family house in Yorkshire. In love with local doctor Freddie Jarvis (Sir Rex Harrison), she suggests they marry, but almost at once finds she has inherited eighteen million pounds. He makes it... Read allYoung Jane Benson (Merle Oberon) just about manages to make ends meet running the large family house in Yorkshire. In love with local doctor Freddie Jarvis (Sir Rex Harrison), she suggests they marry, but almost at once finds she has inherited eighteen million pounds. He makes it clear he wants nothing to do with the money and what it can buy, and Jane sets off alone ... Read all
- Pietro
- (as Louis Borrell)
- Cabaret Singer
- (as Elizabeth Welch)
- Sanitarium Patient
- (uncredited)
- Reporter
- (uncredited)
- Reporter
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
A film that is watchable mostly for its location shooting and Technicolor
Without the lush Technicolor (one of five films by producer Alexander Korda made in Technicolor in the 1930s) and the European travelogue locations to maintain the interest this romancer would be something of a washout. It demonstrates very literally all that glitters is not necessarily gold underneath. Oberon adds some glamour to a film that begain shooting in 1937 and was not released until 1940.
In its present form, you might just want to pass on this one.
The film also suffers from a bizarre problem--one that is even weirder than using Jean Harlow's double to finish "Saratoga" after she died part-way through filming. The star of the film, Merle Oberon, went through HUGE changes in her looks in the late 1930s--going from a somewhat unattractive lady to a more vivacious lady due to studio folks who saw her potential. Here is the problem with this--much of the film was made in 1937 and then the project was shelved. Then, two years later, she looked like a totally different lady--and that's when they filmed the rest!! So, in the '37 portions, she has shaved and penciled eyebrows (like Jean Harlow) and very unattractive hair that emphasized her large forehead. In the '39 portions, she has normal eyebrows and a much more becoming hairstyle--making it look like two different actresses played the role. And, since it was NOT filmed in sequence, it's very disconcerting--much like when Luis Buñuel DELIBERATELY used two different actresses to play the same role in "That Obscure Object of Desire". With Buñuel, it worked because he was a surrealist but in "Over the Moon" most viewers will just be left confused.
As for the story itself, it's a decent tale of a poor girl (Oberon) who instantly becomes a very, very, very wealthy heiress and how this helps to mess up her life. Lots of selfish hangers on suddenly become her 'friends' and her fiancé (Rex Harrison) is driven off by her new lifestyle and nasty friends. But, no matter how much charm and magic the film has, all the factors listed above do a lot to undo the good--making the film a bit of a chore to watch.
Merle's on a whirl
Dutiful Merle Oberon and Dr. Rex Harrison are attending Merle's grandfather until his demise. Grandpa never spent a dime and his only living heir inherits 18 million pounds. At the age she's at she will not hoard, but instead starts moving with the upper crust and gets a few upper crust admirers chiefly Robert Douglas son of the richest man in the United Kingdom.
Harrison gets tired though and wants to get back to practicing medicine. But Merle's just starting to go through the fortune and all the admirers it's bringing.
Harrison walks out but like Levi Johnson he's acquired some notoriety of his own and he gets an offer from some sanitarium that caters to the disgustingly rich to join their staff though he at first doesn't really know why.
Of course in the end it all works out. Over in America had this been done by a Leo McCarey or a Mitchell Leisen Over The Moon might have been a comedy classic. It had the makings, but it falls short.
Merle Gets a Make-Over
This film meanders along clumsily. It appears disjointed, and Oberon often looks less than her beautiful self. One reason for this is the fact that "Over the Moon" jumped around three production years. It was begun in 1937 and completed in 1939. Although Oberon had yet to appear in the classic "Wuthering Heights" (1939), she was already an established star, having received an "Academy Award" nomination for "The Dark Angel" (1935). Herein, it appears that filmmakers are still searching for the proper way to photograph Oberon. This may be due to the fact that "Over the Moon" was filmed in color. Some of the camera angles, lighting and takes used are not flattering.
*** Over the Moon (2/12/39) Thornton Freeland ~ Merle Oberon, Rex Harrison, Ursula Jeans, Robert Douglas
trifling romantic comedy
Did you know
- TriviaProduction began in 1937. By the time the final re-takes were completed in 1939, the appearance of Merle Oberon, both in terms of make-up and hairstyle, had changed considerably, and are quite apparent in the finished movie.
- GoofsAlthough a newspaper headline states that Jane became a millionairess at the age of 18, she later says that she had to wait until she was 21 to inherit her grandfather's fortune.
- Quotes
Pietro: Don't you believe me?
Jane Benson: No, but please do go on.
Pietro: If you don't believe me, what's the use?
Jane Benson: Because it sounds so lovely.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Trouble with Merle (2002)
- SoundtracksRed Hot Annabelle
(uncredited)
Music by Mischa Spoliansky
Lyrics by Desmond Carter
Sung by Elisabeth Welch
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Han eller ingen
- Filming locations
- Arosa, Kanton Graubünden, Switzerland(Swiss resort exteriors)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 18m(78 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1






