Bobby Walberg and Ingrid Bergman in Adam Had Four Sons (1941) |
Alice Faye, John Payne, Betty Grable and Jack Oakie in Tin Pan Alley (1940) |
I never knew until I saw this number that Mr. Gilbert could dance.
It is hard to understand the reason that The Blue Veil (1951) has never been released on DVD or distributed to television. The film featured Oscar-nominated performances by Jane Wyman and Joan Blondell (Wyman won the Golden Globe for Best Actress).
Joan Blondell and Jane Wyman in The Blue Veil (1951) |
Some of the films that I have been watching are available on streaming services and available on DVD, but the little attention they have received has guaranteed them virtual obscurity. One film that long escaped my notice was Adam Had Four Sons (1941). Cynical critics are unwilling to advocate a film as pleasant and wholesome as this one (one online critic dismissed the film as "sickly sweet"). But it is, in fact, a beautiful and moving film about a governess (Ingrid Bergman) who raises four young boys after their mother dies.
I discovered a perfect double feature: Holy Matrimony (1943) and Molly and Me (1945). Both of these sweet, unostentatious comedies showcase the delightful pairing of Monty Woolley and Gracie Fields.
Woman's World (1954) was released on DVD as part of 20th Century Fox's Cinema Arts series on May 20, 2014. To my knowledge, it aired at least once on the defunct Fox Movie Channel.
The film examines the harmful friction that can develop between career and family. The story is set into motion with the death of Gifford Motors' general manager. Ernest Gifford (Clifton Webb), the owner of Gifford Motors, invites his three best regional managers to New York City to size up the men and decide which one of them is the most suitable for the general manager position.
Gifford makes sure the men bring their wives because he believes the general manager's wife, who will be a prominent figure in the company's social functions, will play a crucial role in her husband's success. The three couples include Bill and Katie Baxter (Cornel Wilde and June Allyson), a good-natured couple who are content to spend the rest of their lives in Kansas City; Sidney and Elizabeth Burns (Fred MacMurray and Lauren Bacall), a couple that is on the verge of divorce because the hardworking husband is allowing his job to monopolize his time and undermine his health; and Jerry and Carol Talbot (Van Heflin and Arlene Dahl), a couple under the harmful sway of Carol's obsessive ambition for money and power. Who'll get the job? The film has the suspense of a murder mystery, with Gifford as crafty and observant as the detective who must figure whodunit.
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