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The film
concerns the exploits of Lucy and Jerry Warriner (Irene Dunne and Cary Grant,
whose on-screen chemistry is spectacular), a married couple who, like most
couples, have their problems. But their problems revolve mostly around Jerry’s
suspicions that his wife is cheating on him – which she’s not, as it happens –
with her handsome European voice coach. Despite Lucy’s dismissal of his idea as
ridiculous Jerry’s concerns escalate to the point where they decide to divorce,
with a waiting period before things are finalized. They separate, Lucy gets
custody of Mr. Smith the dog (though Jerry gets visiting rights), and each one
goes on to date others. Naturally, this being a comedy – and a romantic one at
that – it only takes a stroll through a few bad relationships and a few
attempts at sabotaging their other romances for them to realize they’re right
for each other and still in love.
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Given the improvisational factor and the smarts of
everyone involved from McCarey to Grant and Irene Dunne, it’s hard to know how
much of the fantastic dialogue was scripted, made up on the spot, or partly
written and then modified. But I know that when the couple has an exchange that
goes:
Jerry Warriner: But
things are the way you made them.
Lucy Warriner: Oh,
no. No, things are the way you think I made them. I didn't make them that way
at all. Things are just the same as they always were, only, you're the same as
you were, too, so I guess things will never be the same again.
that’s simply a great comic
sequence, regardless of how it found its way to the screen. But experiencing dialogue like that and having it work, hearing the bon mots that they
throw down but never throw away, seeing the chemistry than Dunne and Grant
create on screen – that’s the fun of the film. And knowing that between the
actors, Delmar’s screenplay, and McCarey’s penchant for doing things on the fly
to keep things off-balance and exciting, it’s impossible to get to the root of
where each laugh came from. It’s the collective art of filmmaking at its finest
from the golden period of Hollywood comedies, and you can hardly do better in
finding a great film. But be sure to see McCarey’s Make Way for Tomorrow
and see for yourself just how well his approach works to drama and you won’t be
sorry. He certainly wouldn’t think so.
- Patrick Brown
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