Thursday, February 25, 2010

Merrily We Live (1938) and If You Only Could Cook (1935)

Merrily We Live has been on my Wish List for years. TCM has started showing it recently to my delight. It's difficult to describe the movie, without using the words "My Man Godfrey" and "derivative," and yet this is a wonderfully enjoyable film. I will go so far as to say I enjoyed it at least as much as the earlier far more famous flick. Billie Burke plays the ditsy mother whose habit of hiring tramps as chauffeurs has left the family destitute of silver. An early scene has the family eating breakfast using kitchen utensils. She received a Best Supporting Actress nomination for the role. Despite the "forgotten men" as servants/love interests plot device, this movie is derived from different source material, a 1926 play, "They All Want Something" and the first film incarnation of it, What a Man (1930).

Brian Aherne plays Wade Rawlins a novelist who has a car accident on a fishing trip and stops at the Kilbourne mansion to use the telephone. Assuming he's a tramp looking for work, he is whisked away, protesting loudly, to be be suited up as the family's new chauffeur. One look at him in his work duds and heiress Jerry (Constance Bennett) is a goner. This is one of those moments where 1930s sensibilities are lost on me. While I think Aherne looks pretty tasty in his scruffy fishing outfit, shown above, chauffeur's uniforms always remind me a little too much of Berlin in 1939. It hardly signifies what he wears because when a tramp who isn't really a tramp and an heiress are in the same movie together, it's a sure bet they're gonna wind up getting married.

All the supporting cast are excellent including Bonita Granville as aspiring thespian/rich brat (territory that Virginia Wiedler had pretty well sown up in my book), Ann Dvorak as the chief rival for Rawlins' attention, Patsy Kelly as the sassy kitchen main and Alan Mowbray, as the family butler who quits at least once a day. This family is so screwball, even the dogs are funny, with names like "Down Boy" and "Off the Carpet" though sadly there are no wire-haired terriers present.

To add to the Dreamboat in Disguise as Servant sub-genre, If You Only Could Cook (1935) features Jim Buchanon (Herbert Marshall) as an automotive mogul who, after a rough day at the office, meets Joan Hawthorn (Jean Arthur) on a park bench while she's looking through the want ads. Mistaking him for a fellow job-seeker, she invites him to pose as a married couple in order to get jobs as a cook and a butler. Marshall of course, has his own butler, who he hits up for tips, before heading off for a few weeks vacation as a servant. Only in the movies!

Lionel Sander, best known as Max from the TV series Hart to Hart has a supporting role as one of the gangsters in the employ of Mike Rossini (Leo Carillo). The mob boss hires the couple, and then falls for Joan, which presents complications for Jim who is also in love with her. Oh, and I forgot to mention, Jim is supposed to be getting married to a woman he doesn't love in a few days. As is the way in screwball comedy, it all works out right in the end after much confusion over sleeping arrangements in the couple's cramped servant's quarters. One of Sander's lines, "If you were married to her, would you sleep on the sofa!?" sums up the tensions that drove the entire screwball genre.

Marshall doesn't quite go through the mistaken for a "forgotten man," routine. It's enough for him merely to sit on a park bench and to be branded as unemployed. Arthur is plucky and funny as usual. She always plays well as the wiser and more worldly member of a couple, and it's a nice twist to see reserved Marshall cast as her love interest. Mr. Smith and Mr. Deeds were hicks, but they were also dreamers, as is our Mr. Buchanon. He's just a bit more sophisticated.

Familiar tropes are sometimes the best because their variations delight and amuse almost more than those films which are entirely novel. During the Depression there was no greater fantasy than being a rich person with servants, unless of course it was that you were rich, your servant happened to look like a movie star and be a millionaire in disguise.

11 comments:

Sarah said...

Both are great movies but my heart was totally with Merrily We Live- I adore Brian Aherne and I enjoyed him just as much here as I did in A Night to Remember. Merrily has such a great cast and you're right- even the dogs are funny. I especially loved the father coming home drunk. Definitely on my keeper list.

SteveQ said...

Kudos on finding films I haven't seen! The only obscure 1930's film I've seen lately is "How to Undress In Front of Your Husband." You don't want to see that one.

Jennythenipper said...

Sarah: I agree of the two, I prefer Merrily. I really think this is an underrated gem, maybe the best "new to me" screwball comedy I've seen since firing up this blog. I enjoyed If You Only Could Cook, but it was just a bit too restrained or something. Maybe Herbert Marshall and screwball don't really work together. Of course anything with Herbert Marshall and Jean Arthur is going to be worth watching.

Steve: The title of "How to undress..." makes it sound intriguing. I'm a sucker for a great title, but alas, they rarely live up to their potential.

Cladrite Radio said...

Thanks for your post. I'd have trouble choosing between Merrily and Could Only Cook, but I'm a sucker for Jean Arthur (and think Herbert Marshall's aces, too) so I'd have to opt for the latter in a very close race.

Rupert Pupkin said...

Good stuff! I'm always on the lookout for good 30s films! Haven't seen either of these, both sound good! Been on a Jean Arthur kick since I saw her and Charles Boyer in Borzage's HISTORY IS MADE AT NIGHT, which my wife and I both liked quite a bit. Highly recommended if you've not seen it.

Jennythenipper said...

haven't seen "Histor is made..." Rupert, but I'll keep an eye out for it.

Cladrite: (Love your handle by the way) I think Jean is at the very beginning of a much deserved uptick in her popularity. The AFI retrospective and TCM have both helped. She's always been a favorite of mine. See my Phonebook Actresses post.

Anonymous said...

I actually stumbled across your blog right after I watched Merrily We Live a week or so ago. It was the first time I'd ever seen Brian Aherne. Oh my god. I had to keep pausing the film just to look at that face. Thanks for the picture! I enjoyed the movie, but the biggest drawback was, without question, Constance Bennett who overacted so badly it was a real distraction. And Herbert Marshall is good in everything. I LOVED him in The Good Fairy, and I always wished he had done more comedy. I love your blog, and I'm shocked by how similar our tastes run in dishy movie stars (including the obscure ones like Warren William!), although I'm amazed not everyone thinks Joel McCrea is as much of a sex symbol as I do! (And I'm still deep in my Fredric March obsession.) Great blog!

Jennythenipper said...

Paula: I didn't have a problem with CB's acting at all. I guess it was a bit stagey, when I think of it. I'm going to have to rewatch maybe. It didn't stand out as being bad or anything, at least to me at the time.

Thanks for the shout out on your LJ page. It's always a pleasure to fangirl with someone about my favorite obscure actors! Isn't Brian Aherne dreamy? He was a smart guy too. He wrote a nice autobiography and a book about his friend George Sanders. If you follow my labels you can find my other Aherne posts including a gallery and brief bio. I like Frederic March as well. I need to watch more of his movies, I think.

Sally said...

These sound so cute! I haven't seen either but I'd love to. Great post!

Are they on dvd? If so, then I will add them to my Netflix queue.

Jennythenipper said...

Sally: sadly neither of these are on DVD. You're best bet is to either wait for them to appear on TCM again or check internet back-channels for them. Hint: search google shopping for the film title plus "DVD."

Jbearsuwiggins said...

The name of the dogs are "Get Off The Rug" and "You Too".