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It Happens Every Spring

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It Happens Every Spring

A scientist discovers a formula that makes a baseball which is repelled by wood. He promptly sets out to exploit his discovery.

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Release : 1949
Rating : 6.8
Studio : 20th Century Fox, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Art Direction, 
Cast : Ray Milland Jean Peters Paul Douglas Ed Begley Ted de Corsia
Genre : Comedy

Cast List

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Reviews

Clevercell
2018/08/30

Very disappointing...

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Vashirdfel
2018/08/30

Simply A Masterpiece

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SpuffyWeb
2018/08/30

Sadly Over-hyped

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Kaelan Mccaffrey
2018/08/30

Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.

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zardoz-13
2017/01/03

"Kill the Umpire" director Lloyd Bacon's sci-fi sports saga "It Happens Every Spring" is a frivolous but entertaining baseball comedy. Ray Milland plays a bespectacled college chemistry professor who invents a mysterious liquid during a sabotaged experiment that he is conducting to develop a substance that repels insects from wood. Everything comes to a screeching halt after a baseball shatters the window of his laboratory and smashes his glassware equipment. Vernon K. Simpson (Ray Milland of "Dial M for Murder") cleans up the debris and discovers that the fluid applied to a ball swerves around wooden objects. The initial test looks extremely flawed because Simpson hangs the baseball by a string and passes wood in close proximity to it and the ball bounds. Problem is you know that somebody had to be tugging the string off-screen because we are not shown in the medium shot where the string is attached to a stick. (This didn't bother me that much but some may object to it. Anyway, this enables Simpson to throw a pitch that with which no batter can connect. Vernon rushes over to see university president, Professor Greenleaf (Ray Collins of "Perry Mason"), to persuade him to approve his request for an impromptu leave of absence. Greenleaf agrees, and our baseball-obsessed hero tears off so he won't miss his train. Greenleaf had been warned by a colleague that Vernon goes flaky during the summer months, but nobody knows exactly what governs Vernon's erratic behavior. He just loves baseball, and a radio broadcast from a baseball game during his class lecture distracts him. Meantime, Vernon visits the main offices of a non-specific St. Louis baseball team and struggles to convince hostile club manager Jimmy Dolan (Ted de Corsia of "The Steel Jungle") and club owner (Ed Begley of "Hang'em High") that he can win the pennant for them if they allow him to hurl. Naturally, these guys are astonished that he can throw a ball that nobody can swat. The complication is that Vernon doesn't want anybody, particularly the president of the university, Professor Alfred Greenleaf, to find out what he is doing. Furthermore, what he doesn't know is that catcher, Monk Lanigan (Paul Douglas of "Fourteen Hours"), has been sneaking his stuff to grow hair. The scenes of Monk and later Dolan combing their unruly hair is funny. As it turns out, Vernon and Professor Greenleaf's daughter Deborah (Jean Peters of "Apache") are romantically involved, and Vernon is hoping that his scientific discovery will land them a fortune because his university teaching position pays peanuts. Nevertheless, Vernon proves his value to St. Louis and they sign him to a contract. Vernon comes up with a fake name King Kelly to throw anybody off the scent of his identity. He dazzles everybody until the smashes his fingers, and he cannot catch Vernon's pitches. Eventually, Monk meets Deborah and learns about Vernon's secret identity. Things take a turn for the worst when Vernon finds out that the last bottle of his stuff is gone. Director Lloyd Bacon believes in playing comedy with emphasizing the humor. Nobody in the cast behaves as if they were in a comedy, and this makes these shenanigans doubly invigorating. The final catch is that Vernon snags a line drive during the pennant game and it fractures his hand so he can no longer play baseball. The theme of the discrepancy between the salary of athletes and college professors crops up repeatedly. Interestingly enough, the filmmakers could care less that what Vernon is doing raises ethical questions. Vernon's discovery allows him to take advantage of the opposing team rather than steroids enable an athlete to grow bigger muscles. Vernon's special ability strikes me as being at odds with good sportsmanship. "It Happens Every Spring" qualifies as wholesome but amusing hokum.

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Robert J. Maxwell
2014/01/24

I haven't followed baseball since I was a child. The only sport that's ever interested me is trying to get out of bed in the morning. But this is a movie that convulsed me as a youth and that I still enjoy watching, along with "The Natural" and "Damn Yankees" (except for Tab Hunter, a black hole in any production).Ray Milland is quite good as a slightly aged-in-the-wood chemistry graduate student and professor. He loves his work; he loves his girl, Jean Peters. The only problem is that through the Spring and Summer he's distracted by baseball, which he monitors religiously.One of those lab accidents takes place that produces an unidentifiable mixture of some white fluid -- about a quart -- that is repelled by wood. Scientist that he is, Milland discovers that rolling a baseball around in the stuff makes it impossible for a wooden bat to hit the ball. The ball leaps like a rabbit before returning to its original trajectory. Milland forces his way onto a major league team, leaving everyone to wonder if he's been kidnapped or become a gangster.It's a raw but engaging comedy. Milland pass off the little bottle of fluid as hair tonic and when anyone borrows it and tries to brush his hair, the hair crackles and tries to escape the brush. Paul Douglas is the catcher who first tries Milland out -- "He ain't got a prayer" -- and then is assigned to keep an eye on him because Milland reads books with titles like "The Atom, The Stars, And The Universe", and "Fundamentals of Ballistics," so he's an odd ball, though a valuable odd ball.Don't expect subtlety or sophistication and you'll enjoy yourself.

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mase44
2007/07/13

Yes it's corny, as corny as they come. The baseball scenes aren't the best, but are still very interesting. It's a simple movie and it's hard to believe it could be on someones all time top 10 list. However, that is exactly where it sits for me. I remember a time when it was on once a year in the early spring. One would have to scan the TV guide throughly or risk missing it and having to wait another year. We are so spoiled now. I always judged the wealth of a movie by how it made you feel when it was over. It Happens leaves me feeling.... well.... giddy, happy, full of life, full of what could be possible. I throw it in the VCR a couple of times a year now and always watch it just before the new season begins. Ahhhh, hope springs eternal....If you haven't seen it yet, There's always next year. Mike

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MiserblOF
2007/01/09

This is one of my favorite films from my childhood. I love to watch it in March, just before the baseball season begins. Milland is outstanding as the quiet, studious college instructor who has a slight case of "spring fever", except it "lasts all summer." If this film were made today there'd be a lot of pseudo-moral outrage about the message that cheating is OK, etc. etc. Probably there would also be grumbling about a college teacher having a romance with a student, but this movie is innocent and funny. Paul Douglas was outstanding, as always, playing the catcher/roommate.This film should be on DVD. It's outrageous that it it isn't.

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