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Rings on Her Fingers

  • 1942
  • Approved
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Henry Fonda and Gene Tierney in Rings on Her Fingers (1942)
Screwball ComedyComedyCrimeRomance

Two con artists take a shopgirl under their wing, but she disrupts their marrying-for-money scheme by falling for a mathematician.Two con artists take a shopgirl under their wing, but she disrupts their marrying-for-money scheme by falling for a mathematician.Two con artists take a shopgirl under their wing, but she disrupts their marrying-for-money scheme by falling for a mathematician.

  • Director
    • Rouben Mamoulian
  • Writers
    • Ken Englund
    • Robert Pirosh
    • Joseph Schrank
  • Stars
    • Henry Fonda
    • Gene Tierney
    • Laird Cregar
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rouben Mamoulian
    • Writers
      • Ken Englund
      • Robert Pirosh
      • Joseph Schrank
    • Stars
      • Henry Fonda
      • Gene Tierney
      • Laird Cregar
    • 23User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos41

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    Top cast60

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    Henry Fonda
    Henry Fonda
    • John Wheeler
    Gene Tierney
    Gene Tierney
    • Susan Miller…
    Laird Cregar
    Laird Cregar
    • Warren Worthington
    Shepperd Strudwick
    Shepperd Strudwick
    • Tod Fenwick
    • (as John Shepperd)
    Spring Byington
    Spring Byington
    • Mrs. Maybelle Worthington
    Frank Orth
    Frank Orth
    • Kellogg
    Henry Stephenson
    Henry Stephenson
    • Colonel Harry Prentiss
    Marjorie Gateson
    Marjorie Gateson
    • Mrs. Fenwick
    George Lessey
    George Lessey
    • Fenwick Sr.
    Iris Adrian
    Iris Adrian
    • Peggy
    Harry Hayden
    • Conductor
    Gwendolyn Logan
    • Miss Calahan
    Eric Wilton
    • Butler
    William 'Billy' Benedict
    William 'Billy' Benedict
    • Newsboy
    • (as Billy Benedict)
    Sarah Edwards
    Sarah Edwards
    • Mrs. Clancy
    Thurston Hall
    Thurston Hall
    • Mr. Harvey Beasley
    Clara Blandick
    Clara Blandick
    • Mrs. Beasley
    Charles C. Wilson
    Charles C. Wilson
    • Captain Hurley
    • (as Charles Wilson)
    • Director
      • Rouben Mamoulian
    • Writers
      • Ken Englund
      • Robert Pirosh
      • Joseph Schrank
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    6.61.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6Ed-Shullivan

    Not my kind of cup of tea. It would be more appropriately titled "Who's zooming who?"

    I have not seen Henry Fonda in very many forgettable performances but Henry Fonda's performance in Rings on Her Fingers, is one of his clunkers. The film stars the beautiful Gene Tierney who is a wholesome hard working girl named Susan Miller (alias Linda Worthington) selling girdles, until two scammers wave a bunch of greenbacks in her face to join them in suckering foolish and gullible men out of their hard earned money. One of the men these three (3) con artists decide to con is a wealthy young man named John Wheeler played by Henry Fonda.

    The latter half of the film kind of reminded me of the many confusing and chaotic comedies that Abbott and Costello had so much success in making films in the same era of the 1940's decade. I guess I have a bit of a hard time appreciating Henry Fonda playing the sap who falls in love with his con artist girlfriend. When Gene Tierney whose alias is Linda Worthington is being chased by a private detective in the airport and the two men who both want to marry her are also present, Linda must stay on her toes to keep the two men apart from each other while either one is in her presence.

    I just felt that this film could not decide if it wanted to be a crime film, or a comedy, romance or a drama? In the end it does not matter as it really is a forgettable film other than seeing the beautiful Gene Tierney in a bathing suit squirming around on a blanket trying to get Henry Fonda's attention.

    I give it a 6 out of 10 rating
    9Igenlode Wordsmith

    Warm-hearted comedy con

    "Rings on Her Fingers" is a thoroughly charming picture that takes a kaleidoscope of elements from films of the era -- the shop-girl Cinderella, bathing suit poses on the beach, the rich man's yacht, the poolside party, mistaken identity, love on the breadline, evasion in a crowded terminus, the casino, the gangster -- and mixes them all up in a hectic, hilarious, but instinctively good-natured plot. As a romance, it's very funny without ever needing to resort to the anarchic destruction of many 'screwball' affairs; as a comedy, it laughs at its characters with loving affection rather than glee and discomfiture.

    In the best of farces, absurd events unfold with a seemingly inevitable logic. It must be admitted that in this picture, the plot occasionally skates past short-term expedients that just have to be taken for granted -- but the ensuing situations are milked to such good effect that it's easy to turn a blind eye. The film is rich in set-pieces both verbal and visual, with a host of lively minor characters to accompany the note-perfect performances of the principals.

    Laird Cregar excels as usual in the role of the resonant, urbane Warren (performing with impressive agility in his swimming-pool scene), while Spring Byington is here the best I have seen her, the actress submerging her trademark mannerisms in an actual character. Gene Tierney is sweet, smart, funny and distinctly shapely as the girl who pulls off the perfect con and then learns what she has really done. Henry Fonda -- for my money, both more credible and more sympathetic here than in "The Lady Eve" -- plays a mathematical dreamer with a passion for sailing and the sea, while some eye-catching yachts of the era star in the background, apparently shot on location!

    The film starts off light and gradually gains in intensity and emotional weight as it goes along, with frequent upwellings of laughter to season some very genuine feeling. The two lovers are charming together, from a very Freudian first scene (in which the camera settles on Linda's trim contours as a somewhat dislocated John tries to describe the lines of his yacht) to the final escape, Perhaps the highlight is the taxicab sequence in which our hero, intoxicated with excitement, is convinced he has devised a 'system' to beat the roulette wheel, while Linda and the audience, in on the secret, find him both hilarious and adorable at the same time.

    Like all good comedies, "Rings on Her Fingers" laughs at our human frailties, but it does so with a gentle touch. It shares with "Some Like It Hot" an essential innocence and sweetness at the root of its effervescent humour, and scarcely sets a foot wrong in the process. I enjoyed this little-known, little-rated picture very much indeed.
    6Lejink

    Take Hank to the bank

    Here's a light and frothy comedy with Henry Fonda repeating his "The Lady Eve" role as the rube being taken for his money by travelling confidence tricksters Laird Cregar and Spring Byington, plus their newly recruited honey-trapper Gene Tierney, fresh from the girdle section of a New York department store, lured by the exciting and seemingly glamorous life of wealth distribution, the dainty way Cregar describes the team's modus operandi of parting the rich from their money.

    The catch here is that Fonda this time isn't filthy rich at all, the boat-buying con he falls for relieves him of his hard-earned, mathematically calculated, life savings leaving him penniless, although his consolation is that he and his temptress Tierney fall hard for each other so much so that she surreptitiously tries to put things right for him. Naturally there's a reckoning to be had, which fortuitously comes about when Cregar & co. and their victim coincidentally end up under the same roof, to wit Fonda's millionaire bachelor buddy's place, who himself is set to be the next target for the travelling tricksters.

    While not hysterically funny, the film makes the most of its ever more unlikely situations and is nicely played by the four main leads. Fonda and Tierney combine well together as do Cregar and Byington. There are some amusing scenes, like when the young couple plod their way around a dance floor amongst some limbs-flying jitterbuggers, Fonda's "lucky" gambling streak at the casino and earlier when Fonda is distracted by Tierney in a bathing suit as he's trying to describe the dimensions of the boat he's seeking to buy.

    The ending seems a bit contrived bringing all the main characters together again with Fonda improbably stepping out of character to get his girl in the style of Cagney, but at least it all ends happily ever after as there's little doubt that even the thwarted Cregar and Byington will continue undiminished on their merry way, indeed, in my opinion, an extra finishing scene showing them hooking up with another aspirant young shop girl to do their bidding could easily have been tagged on to keep the circle unbroken.

    This wasn't the best screwball comedy I've seen and certainly Sturges and Hawks executed these farces a little more sharply and amusingly but this was still an engaging, pardon the pun, film to watch.
    7ricardojorgeramalho

    Romantic but Boring

    Somewhere between a romantic comedy and a screwball comedy, Rings on Her Fingers has its funny moments, but it also manages to occasionally fall into a boring moralism. Gene Tierney is magnificent, but she deserved a bolder role, other than that of a teenager in love.

    Henry Fonda also seems ill-suited for comedy. It has never been his specialty, and the few times he succeeded, it was mainly due to the talent of his occasional partner (see The Lady Eve with Barbara Stanwick). Here, neither Tierney nor Fonda can pull each other off. Laird Cregar and Spring Byington are much more entertaining in the supporting roles.

    A story that had everything to be an excellent screwball comedy but, unfortunately, is nothing more than a not very inspired romantic comedy, despite the quality of the cast.
    7p25735-261-505738

    I Enjoyed It

    Having never heard of this movie before, I found it to be a pleasant surprise when I found it on youtube. From reading the other reviews, it appears I'm in the minority, but I can't help it. In most cases, a film either has me after a few minutes, or it doesn't. From the start, I found Gene Tierney to be enchanting and, as the plot unfolded, I thought, "Ooh, this going to be fun.", and it was. People have compared this to "The Lady Eve", but that has a plot even more preposterous. I mean, come one, only someone with brain damage wouldn't know Eve and Jean are the same person. So, John thinking he had discovered a method for gambling doesn't seem that far-fetched. Though not one of the best film comedies of all time, it was still enjoyable.

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    Related interests

    Barbra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal in What's Up, Doc? (1972)
    Screwball Comedy
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When Laird Cregar asks who Gene Tierney, then serving in a shop, is, Spring Byington tartly remarks, "A shop-girl, of course. Who did you think she was--Brenda Frazier?" The very glamorous and wealthy Brenda Frazier was the most famous debutante of the 1930s.
    • Goofs
      When John slides his roulette chips across the table to cash them in, other people's bets are corralled with them, yet no one complains.
    • Quotes

      Susan Miller: Say, are you really millionaires?

      [Warren and Maybelle burst into laughter]

      Warren: Why?

      Susan Miller: Well, there seems to be something missing.

      Mrs. Maybelle Worthington: Just the millions, and they can't rule you out for a technicality.

      Warren: You see, nature played a little trick on us: we should have been born with blue blood, so we have devoted our entire life to correcting this... biological error.

      Susan Miller: What do you do? If you're not, what are you?

      Mrs. Maybelle Worthington: Well, we're sort of an excess profits tax. To criticize us would be unamerican.

      Warren: We are merely bees that take a little nectar from the flowers that have so much. And you too can have some.

    • Connections
      Featured in AFI Life Achievement Award: AFI Life Achievement Award: A Tribute to Henry Fonda (1978)
    • Soundtracks
      Yo, Ho, Ho, and a Bottle of Rum
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Played and sung at the beginning

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 20, 1942 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Double or Nothing
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Catalina Island, Channel Islands, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $651,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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