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The Goose and the Gander
When Georgiana Summers learns that the woman who stole and married her husband is planning a romantic tryst with a new love, she hatches a giddy plot to expose the rendezvous and pay her back.
Release : | 1935 |
Rating : | 6.5 |
Studio : | Warner Bros. Pictures, The Vitaphone Corporation, |
Crew : | Art Direction, Costume Design, |
Cast : | Kay Francis George Brent Genevieve Tobin John Eldredge Claire Dodd |
Genre : | Drama Comedy Romance |
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Rating: 7.1
Reviews
Please don't spend money on this.
This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable
A charming cast is laden with a stink bomb of a screwball comedy that rolls around for 65 minutes like a non- stop roller-coaster, one where the twists and turns have no thrills and the ride ultimately no point. It's as lavish to look at as a Dick Powell/Ruby Keeler musical, and even with the often paired team of Kay Francis and George Brent ends up falling flat. Marital mix-ups and post divorce games follow Francis and ex- husband John Eldredge, with Francis declaring revenge when she discovers her ex is planning to marry the woman he left her for. Confusion erupts at the home of Francis's aunt (Helen Lowell) when a bunch of unwanted guests end up there, including Brent, Eldredge, Claire Dodd, Genevieve Tobin and alleged car thieves. I needed a character map within the first five minutes of this, ironically the third time I've tried to watch this and make sense of any of it.As the first screwball comedy that Kay Francis would do, it seemed like a nice change of pace from all those soapy women's films. She had proved herself capable of being funny in films like "Girls About Town", "Trouble in Paradise" and "Jewel Robbery", and is certainly gay here (as in happy go lucky) and completely charming, but a bit of a shrew in her plot for revenge against her ex. A scene where she attempts to explain all to a private detective reveals that even the writer knew that this was perplexing and overly complex, making me wonder how this got out of the writer's building at Warners.Interestingly enough, Brent appeared in a very similar screwball comedy the following year ("Snowed In") that had a similar set-up and is equally perplexing. Other than Francis, Brent and Lowell, the cast is rather unremarkable, and even with the lighthearted atmosphere, the direction is dizzying and even headache inducing. I thought maybe the third time would be the charm on liking this, but I guess when I run out of Kay's mother love sagas, I can return to this and see if the fourth time does the trick.
Starting in 1934, when the new Production Code was enacted, 'inappropriate' adult themes were generally forbidden in films. That's because in the fast and loose 20s and especially early 30s, all sorts of very adult themes crept into films. Cursing, talks of abortions, extreme violence, adultery and even nudity were in films for general consumption---including in a Tarzan film (which appealed mostly to kids). So, a backlash took place and most of these topics were out or else if a sanitized version were allowed, by the end of the film the wrong-doers had to be punished.THE GOOSE AND THE GANDER is about as racy as they come in the Post-Code era. My assumption is that because the movie came out in 1935, it had been designed as a Pre-Code style film but had been re-written for the new sensibilities. So, on one hand, the film has themes of adultery BUT because it's Post-Code, the people never actually get a chance to consummate their illicit affairs. And, by the end of the film, people had learned their lesson and went back to their spouses or, in the case of the criminals, were arrested.The film begins with married Genevieve Tobin trying to arrange a tryst with George Brent. But, this tryst is interrupted by Kay Francis and her friends. It seems that some time back, Tobin had stolen HER husband and now using a rather intricate plot, she diverts Tobin and Brent to her home--planning on keeping them there while secretly contacting Tobin's husband so he could come there and find his wife with another man. However, when two thieves get caught up in the plot, the entire plan falls apart and where this all leads is anyone's guess.Overall, this film is very entertaining and funny--with typically good acting from Brent and Francis. Despite the Code, the film makers managed to work around it and make a nice little movie. The only negative, and I was able to look past it, was that the ending seemed a bit hard to believe.
This is an interesting little Kay Francis programmer, co-starring her frequent leading man George Brent. It's a small and delicate Warners melodrama. It aroused my interest because of Francis.I liked "Goose and the Gander" but it is not one of Francis' best roles. The plot is a bit baffling and sometimes hard to follow but it is fun and entertaining picture thanks to the charm of Francis & Brent. This is one of three films Francis made with Brent in 1935. The others are "Living on Velvet" and "Stranded".
Enjoyed viewing this great film classic and the great acting of Kay Francis (Georgiana Summers),"Play Girl",'41 who loved to fool around with George Brent("Bob" McNear),"The Great Lie",'41 who was a married man. It seemed that everyone else in the picture played husband and wife with lots of infidelity and everyone telling little white lies about who is married to who and why we have to have different rooms to sleep in and why we have twin beds in our rooms. It seems that being divorced was a very evil thing and talking about their "EX" husbands was the in THING!. Genevieve Tobin (Betty Summers),"The Petrified Forest",'36 and John Eldridge (Lawrence Thurston),"Superman",'73 enjoyed stealing automobiles(coupe type) and even going into being a jewel thief. It was great viewing this film and seeing just what people were watching during the YEAR 1935. This film was probably considered X rated. The old gas stations, furniture and women's fashions, plus the modern auto's in the 1930's made this a great film classic with all these young actors starting out in their film careers.