I wonder, did Lew Ayres ever feel like Jimmy Kildare was a heel? I mean, he’s an unbelievably nice guy–he won’t propose to nurse Mary Lamont (Laraine Day sleepwalks through almost all of Dr. Kildare’s Strange Case, since there’s only one scene where she needs to do anything) because he doesn’t want to make her […]
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Tagged: Harold S. Bucquet· Harry Ruskin· Laraine Day· Lew Ayres· Lionel Barrymore· Max Brand· Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer· Nat Pendleton· Willis Goldbeck· ★½
Watching The Secret of Dr. Kildare is about two things–seeing Lionel Barrymore’s fantastic performance (even as he’s spouting expositional dialogue, it’s riveting) and finding out the deep dark secret of patient Helen Gilbert. It’s the third film in the series and the staples are already in place–Lew Ayres, under some false pretense, stops working for […]
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Tagged: Harold S. Bucquet· Harry Ruskin· Laraine Day· Lew Ayres· Lionel Barrymore· Max Brand· Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer· Nat Pendleton· Willis Goldbeck· ★½
Someone thought Calling Dr. Kildare was a good idea. Sitting through the turgid eighty-six minute running time, that thought occasionally popped into my head. Someone thought this story was a good idea. Lew Ayres’s young Dr. Kildare (this one’s set three months, give or take, after the first entry) has a spat with Lionel Barrymore […]
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Tagged: Harold S. Bucquet· Harry Ruskin· Lana Turner· Laraine Day· Lew Ayres· Lionel Barrymore· Max Brand· Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer· Nat Pendleton· Willis Goldbeck· ★
Well shit, I was wrong. I thought Foreign Correspondent was pre–Rebecca and I am incorrect.
I suppose the confusion has to do with the way Hitchcock made Correspondent. It’s very much in the style of his 1930s British films (I’m thinking primarily of The 39 Steps and The Lady Vanishes), while Rebecca was not. Rebecca was […]
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Tagged: Alfred Hitchcock· Charles Bennett· George Sanders· Herbert Marshall· James Hilton· Joan Harrison· Joel McCrea· Laraine Day· Robert Benchley· United Artists· ★★★★