WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Comedy >

The Farmer Takes a Wife

Watch The Farmer Takes a Wife For Free

The Farmer Takes a Wife

Erie Canal, N.Y., 1850: Molly Larkins, cook on Jotham Klore's canal boat, has a love-hate relationship with her boss. She hires handsome new haul-horse driver Dan Harrow and the inevitable triangle develops (complicated by Dan's desire to farm and Molly's to boat) against a background of the canalmen's fight against the encroaching railroad.

... more
Release : 1953
Rating : 5.2
Studio : 20th Century Fox, 
Crew : Costume Design,  Director, 
Cast : Betty Grable Dale Robertson Thelma Ritter John Carroll Eddie Foy Jr.
Genre : Comedy Music Romance

Cast List

Related Movies

Don't Hug Me I'm Scared 2
Don't Hug Me I'm Scared 2

Don't Hug Me I'm Scared 2   2014

Release Date: 
2014

Rating: 8.1

genres: 
Fantasy  /  Animation  /  Horror
Stars: 
Baker Terry  /  Kayla Bechor  /  Joseph Pelling
99 Songs
99 Songs

99 Songs   2021

Release Date: 
2021

Rating: 6.5

genres: 
Drama  /  Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Ehan Bhat  /  Edilsy Vargas  /  Manisha Koirala
Two Tickets to Broadway
Two Tickets to Broadway

Two Tickets to Broadway   1951

Release Date: 
1951

Rating: 5.5

genres: 
Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Tony Martin  /  Janet Leigh  /  Gloria DeHaven
Meet Me in Las Vegas
Meet Me in Las Vegas

Meet Me in Las Vegas   1956

Release Date: 
1956

Rating: 6.1

genres: 
Comedy  /  Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Dan Dailey  /  Cyd Charisse  /  Agnes Moorehead
Release the Prisoners to Spring
Release the Prisoners to Spring

Release the Prisoners to Spring   1975

Release Date: 
1975

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Comedy
Stars: 
Lena Nyman  /  Tage Danielsson  /  Georg Årlin
Barbie: The Princess & The Popstar
Barbie: The Princess & The Popstar

Barbie: The Princess & The Popstar   2012

Release Date: 
2012

Rating: 5.8

genres: 
Animation  /  Family
Stars: 
Kelly Sheridan  /  Ashleigh Ball  /  Peter Kelamis
Smilin' Through
Smilin' Through

Smilin' Through   1941

Release Date: 
1941

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Fantasy  /  Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Jeanette MacDonald  /  Brian Aherne  /  Gene Raymond
Nancy Goes to Rio
Nancy Goes to Rio

Nancy Goes to Rio   1950

Release Date: 
1950

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Comedy  /  Music
Stars: 
Ann Sothern  /  Jane Powell  /  Barry Sullivan
Broadway
Broadway

Broadway   1929

Release Date: 
1929

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Crime  /  Music
Stars: 
Glenn Tryon  /  Evelyn Brent  /  Merna Kennedy
It's a Date
It's a Date

It's a Date   1940

Release Date: 
1940

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Comedy  /  Music  /  Romance
Stars: 
Deanna Durbin  /  Kay Francis  /  Walter Pidgeon
The Kissing Bandit
The Kissing Bandit

The Kissing Bandit   1948

Release Date: 
1948

Rating: 5.3

genres: 
Comedy  /  Western  /  Music
Stars: 
Frank Sinatra  /  Kathryn Grayson  /  J. Carrol Naish

Reviews

Karry
2021/05/13

Best movie of this year hands down!

More
Scanialara
2018/08/30

You won't be disappointed!

More
Wordiezett
2018/08/30

So much average

More
Doomtomylo
2018/08/30

a film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.

More
moonspinner55
2015/12/05

Agreeable 20th Century-Fox musical, a remake of their 1935 Janet Gaynor-Henry Fonda comedy-romance, based on the novel and play "Rome Haul", is uncertainly directed, full of static staging, and embarrassed by at least one terrible dance number--but it does have Betty Grable, full of her usual sass and vigor (which this vehicle definitely needs). On the Erie Canal in 1850, a young lovely and her fiancé/business partner run a barge hauling supplies (she cooks, he drinks); she hires a horse-driver to pull the barge, a low-keyed farmer with a sweetheart in Chicago, but when her fiancé is thrown in jail for fighting with the incoming railroad folk, the girl goes into partnership with the handsome newcomer, sparking romance. Director Henry Levin doesn't seem to know anything about staging a musical number on the screen; though the mediocre songs by Harold Arlen and Dorothy Fields are clearly no help to him, Levin hasn't paced the narrative with the energy needed for a musical, and the introductions to each song are creaky with hesitation. "We're in Business", featuring Gwen Verdon (who pops in without an introduction), is the worst of the lot, while the reprise of "Today I Love Everybody" includes a brief vocal by Thelma Ritter that proves the actress can't do everything. Grable and quiet, polite Dale Robertson aren't an exciting match, but his gentle tone cools down her brashness. There's a streak of early feminism in Grable's character when she flatly refuses to become a farmer's wife (without her feelings on the matter even being considered!), which is then abandoned in the face of true love, however she and Robertson look good together. The color is gloppy, and the finale--where Levin apparently chose to move the material back to its stage roots--is perplexing, yet the movie is upbeat and pleasurable despite its faults. **1/2 from ****

More
MartinHafer
2015/11/18

The one thing you'll no doubt notice when this film begins is that Betty is clearly older. She's 37 and playing a part designed for a teenager or perhaps a woman of 20...plus she simply looks older than 37. She also apparently had far less clout by 1953, as she was cast along with Dale Robertson--not exactly a household name. RObertson wasn't bad in the film, mind you...but he was a big comedown from folks like Don Ameche or Victor Mature in the 30s or 40s. Studio veterans John Carroll and Thelma Ritter are on hand to lend support. This loss in popularity also might help to explain why the once big star was forced to do a remake of a completely unremarkable film. The 1935 version was only fair and here almost two decades later it's essentially the same film but with music and Technicolor. This remake is certainly no better due to the miscasting of Grable, a few very unremarkable songs and a plot that just seemed to drag. Not a bad film but one that clearly showed that Grable's days as a star were nearly passed. Watch it if you'd like but it's only a time- passer and nothing more.

More
bkoganbing
2008/10/19

It's sad that The Farmer Takes A Wife was owned by 20th Century Fox instead of Warner Brothers. Had Jack Warner been in charge he had the right person for the female lead in Doris Day. As it is this musical adaption of the Frank Elsner-Marc Connelly play has a most miscast Betty Grable doing a part that had Doris stamped all over it. When Betty says 'Uticky' it doesn't quite come out right.The original play ran for 104 performances in the 1934-35 season and was the vehicle that made Henry Fonda a star. In fact producer Walter Wanger took the highly unusual step in bringing Fonda to Hollywood to star in the role that made him. Playing the parts that Betty Grable and John Carroll have in this version are Janet Gaynor and Charles Bickford.Of course with this being changed to a musical and the billing reflecting it, the emphasis was changed from the male to the female lead. Seeing Dale Robertson as Dan Harrow though, he makes an admirable substitute for Fonda. Too bad that Harold Arlen and Dorothy Fields didn't write anything memorable in the score. And for the life of me I can't figure why John Carroll who does sing well, wasn't given more to do musically.The story is an old fashioned rustic one set during the final days of the Erie Canal. Everyone but Betty seems to realize the railroad will eventually put the canal out of business as the major venue of transportation. Still she and soft spoken farmer Robertson do eventually come together as Robertson wins her over Carroll who is a real lout in this film. I can readily see Charles Bickford in that part in the first film version. At the same time Betty was doing this, Doris Day was doing Calamity Jane over at Warner Brothers in a similar role with much better songs. Maybe with a better score, The Farmer Takes A Wife would have been more memorable.Still I think it would have needed Doris Day.

More
ccmiller1492
2006/12/02

"The Farmer Takes a Wife" is so disappointing that it could serve as an example of "the last gasp of the Hollywood musical." It's hard to believe that the marvelous "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers" came out the following year. To start with, none of the songs are memorable, and the production numbers are so stylized and overstuffed with flounces, ruffles and ribbons that they are effectively deadened. Grable herself looks slightly overblown in this context and John Carroll who has a very pleasing voice and good presence, is not allowed to sing at all other than humming a few bars. Dale Robertson, who is not a singer and probably had his singing dubbed, is given one of the best songs to sing while taking a bath in a rain barrel...and is repeatedly shown apparently scrubbing at his crotch while performing the song! Viewers are well advised to skip this one, which is for extreme Grable and/or Carroll fans only. Even they will have a hard time tolerating it.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now