Young Pinkie Wingate and her friend, Buzz, will do anything to stop her widowed mother from entering into a loveless marriage with the town banker - including kidnapping.Young Pinkie Wingate and her friend, Buzz, will do anything to stop her widowed mother from entering into a loveless marriage with the town banker - including kidnapping.Young Pinkie Wingate and her friend, Buzz, will do anything to stop her widowed mother from entering into a loveless marriage with the town banker - including kidnapping.
Edgar Dearing
- Motorcycle Policeman
- (uncredited)
Frances Hughes
- Little Girl
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
One of Judy garlands earlier films. Her and Freddie Bartholomew are great in this 1938 film. Highly recommend.
Judy and Freddie team up and kidnap Judy's mom ( Mary Astor ) in a trailer in an effort to prevent her mother from marrying the town banker , which the mother does not love. In route they meet a photographer ( Walter Pigeon ) who falls in love with Judy's Mom. The scenes with her little brother are really funny coupled with Judy singing "Zing, Went the Strings of my Heart" made this a treat for my daughter and myself to watch. A great movie to watch on a quiet afternoon or late at night.
Schoolmates Pinky Wingate (Judy Garland) and Buzz (Freddie Bartholomew) are best friends. Her family is in money trouble. Her daydreaming father died without leaving behind any insurance. Her widowed mother Dottie (Mary Astor) is in a relationship with a stuffy banker who she knows can take care of her children. Pinky is desperate to stop her from a loveless marriage and convinces Buzz to help her kidnap Dottie and her little brother Billie. They drive the RV out into a country camping site. They encounter Richard Thurlow (Walter Pidgeon), J. J Slattery (Alan Hale), and a skunk.
This is basic kids setting up romances for adults like a lot of those Disney movies. It's simple family fun and a silly non-sense story. Judy and Freddie are at the top of their game. He has a few more childhood roles before failing to transition into adult roles. Judy's next movie would put her at the top of the mountain. This is a big stepping stone although a small failure.
This is basic kids setting up romances for adults like a lot of those Disney movies. It's simple family fun and a silly non-sense story. Judy and Freddie are at the top of their game. He has a few more childhood roles before failing to transition into adult roles. Judy's next movie would put her at the top of the mountain. This is a big stepping stone although a small failure.
8tavm
I had previously watched this back in the '90s when I borrowed this VHS version from the library and I remember enjoying it but when I watched it again on YouTube, I had forgotten much of the plot. As a result, I enjoyed this even more now with young Judy Garland in all her natural glory whether singing or doing her dramatic scenes. The reason I watched this again, however, was since I was reviewing various Our Gang shorts and other films featuring at least one of that group's members in chronological order, this was next on the list since another of this movie's players was Scotty Beckett-a former member from the early '30s. He was funny here. Also liked Walter Pidgeon as a potential love interest for Judy and Scotty's mother-Mary Astor, Freddie Bartholomew as a family friend, and Alan Hale Sr. as another potential family friend. So on that note, I highly recommend Listen, Darling. Oh, and that's Charley Grapewin-future relative of Garland in The Wizard of Oz-as the guy at the gas station.
This movie is pure unadulterated schmaltz. It was schmaltz before schmaltz was schmaltzy! But was one of the most enjoyable movies I've ever seen. It was great to see the three young actors (Judy Garland, right before her rise with the Wizard of Oz; Freddie Bartholomew, just as his star was starting to face; and Scotty Beckett, a former Our Gang star who played numerous supporting roles in the 30s), hold their own with three seasoned veterans (Mary Astor, Walter Pigeon and Alan Hale, Sr.).
The plot is contrived, the conclusion predictable, the setting a bit outdated (women were only trained to be homemakers, leaving widows with children in danger of poverty) and the situation completely contrived, but there is nothing to not enjoy in this pure piece of entertainment from Hollywood's Golden Age.
Enjoy it, try not to roll your eyes too much, and recommend it to your friends! They just don't make movies like they used to.
The plot is contrived, the conclusion predictable, the setting a bit outdated (women were only trained to be homemakers, leaving widows with children in danger of poverty) and the situation completely contrived, but there is nothing to not enjoy in this pure piece of entertainment from Hollywood's Golden Age.
Enjoy it, try not to roll your eyes too much, and recommend it to your friends! They just don't make movies like they used to.
Did you know
- TriviaMary Astor fondly remembered working on "Listen, Darling" with the 16-year-old Judy Garland. "She was so young and vital - it was no act. Something would strike her as funny, and her face would get red, and 'There goes Judy!' would be the cry. And we just had to wait until she got over it. She was a kid, a real kid. It didn't take long for her to get over that."
- GoofsAbout 38 minutes into the film (halfway through the movie) Buzz has a somewhat long talk with Richard (Walter Pidgeon) in his trailer. Just before leaving, Buzz invites him to have dinner at Dottie's trailer. As Buzz walks out of Richard's trailer, a moving shadow of the boom microphone is visible above the doorway.
- Quotes
'Pinkie' Wingate: [sings] I've got you. You've got me. Who cares how rough the road may be? We'll go bumpty, bumpty, bumpty, bump. On the bumpy road to love.
- ConnectionsFeatured in That's Entertainment, Part II (1976)
- SoundtracksZing! Went the Strings of My Heart
(1934)
Music and Lyrics by James F. Hanley
Played during the opening and end credits
Played by the school orchestra and sung by Judy Garland (uncredited)
- How long is Listen, Darling?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Pappa sökes
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $566,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 15m(75 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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