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The Clock

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The Clock

A G.I. en route to Europe falls in love during a whirlwind two-day leave in New York City.

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Release : 1945
Rating : 7.3
Studio : Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Art Direction, 
Cast : Judy Garland Robert Walker James Gleason Keenan Wynn Lucile Gleason
Genre : Drama Romance

Cast List

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Reviews

Console
2018/08/30

best movie i've ever seen.

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Freaktana
2018/08/30

A Major Disappointment

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Huievest
2018/08/30

Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.

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Catangro
2018/08/30

After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.

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weezeralfalfa
2014/06/11

After having seen how many Judy Garland-starring musicals?, I was taken by surprise by this unheralded simple love story, released as WWII was winding down. Unfortunately, it had two things going against it for contemporary audiences. firstly, it was the only film until her 40s in which Judy didn't sing one song. Second, with its theme of an extreme shotgun wedding involving a boyish-looking soldier on a short shore leave and a girl he just accidentally met, probably many potential patrons stayed away, hoping to see something that didn't remind them of the now stale war. Nonetheless it was a heart-warming story appropriate for the times. It's often slow moving, with many awkward moments, when the tentative couple are unsure what to do next.To me, the film has a dream-like quality to it, rather like, yes, "The wizard of Oz"!. After all, the basic plot is hardly plausible, given all the psychological, practical, and legal barriers to this story actually happening the way it's presented. Judy's performance and some of the scene set ups also add to the dream-like quality. While Joe(Robert Walker) soon is sure that Alice(Judy) is a right girl for him, a shot-gun romantic dalliance with a fly-by-night nobody corporal, let alone marriage, goes against all Alice's stated principles. Besides, Joe has his heart set on returning to his Indiana small town and becoming a carpenter, whereas Alice says she hoes to stay in NYC, having moved there from the Midwest several years ago. But, Joe's extreme persistence, best exemplified by his running after the bus taking her home after they agree to part, finally begins to wear down Alice's formidable psychological defenses.I have one major criticism. Alice becomes very defensive at Joe's probing questions regarding her romantic life, while they are having dinner during their evening date. In fact, she almost leaves him there. Next thing we know, they are strolling through a woods(presumably Central Park), deep in thought and conversion about their relationship. Joe argues that clearly their accidental meeting in the train station was predestined by some higher power. Now, Alice says she agrees, implying that she might be ready to throw caution to the wind and accept a marriage proposal. A formal proposal doesn't come until they later loose contact with each other in the bustle of the subway station, and finally are reunited when both decide to go to the spot where they first bumped into each other. Meanwhile, they engage in a passionate kiss before realizing that the midnight clock has struck, and there are no more buses to take Alice home. While looking for a taxi, they are befriended by a milkman, who had begun his nightly delivery route. Thus begins the much more lively second portion of the film.Alice and Joe, being apparently ordinary conservative young people, with otherwise little in common, their interactions as a couple are mostly superficial and boring, excepting their several instances of nearly permanently losing touch with each other, and their exasperating experiences in trying to obtain a marriage license within 24 hrs. in a world where the usual absolute minimum is 3 days. Otherwise, it's some of the character actors and their interactions with these characters that provide much of the interest. There's James Gleason, as the friendly milkman, who gives them some go-ahead encouragement about their still wobbly relationship. There's Keenan Wynn, as a talkative drunk, who injects some badly needed excitement into the proceedings in one scene. Later, there are several characters involved in the mad race to obtain a marriage license before Joe has to leave. Usually, initially, they give the couple the run around, then try to help them skirt the normal bureaucratic maze when they realize their extreme time-limited situation.Curiously, after they finally extract a marriage license, they are remarkably somber while eating in a restaurant. Then, Judy begins to sob hysterically, complaining that she doesn't really feel married. It turns out that she really regrets the lack of a church wedding, not just the hurried civil ceremony. In lieu of a church ceremony, they enter a church and, without the benefit of a clergyman, say their wedding vows to each other, which they read from a pew book. In the parting scene, when Joe has to take the train to his ship, there is no crying by Alice. She is confident that Fate will take care of Joe and he will return in one piece to take her to his small town.While Walker was romancing Judy on screen, director Minnelli was romancing her off screen, and they would become engaged by the end of production. Judy had requested Minnelli as the finishing director, being dissatisfied with the original director.It turned out that Walker and Judy would once again be featured together, the next year, in the Jerome Kerns-honoring musical extravaganza "'Til the Clouds Roll By". Walker, playing Kerns, has another unlikely love-at-first-sight romance with another, while Judy played the historic singer Marilyn Miller.

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Petri Pelkonen
2010/01/11

Corporal Joe Allen is a soldier who has a 48-hour leave.In Pennsylvania Station he meets Alice Mayberry after she trips over his duffel back and breaks the heel of her shoe.He takes her to a shoe-repair shop and their adventure together begins.Joe, who is a stranger in New York wants Alice to accompany him during his stay.Eventually Alice has to step on the bus.Joe starts running next to the bus wanting to meet her before he has to go.She promises to meet him under the clock at the Astor Hotel.She shows up there, a little late though, although Alice's roommate tells her to forget about this soldier.They miss the last bus home, so they accept a ride with a milkman, Al Henry.A flat tire and a drunk at a bar means they have to deliver the milk.In the morning they get a great breakfast made by Al's wife.They get lost from each other at a subway and they are reunited and they decide to get married.But it's not as simple as it sounds.There are some bureaucratic complications over the blood tests and the City Hall will be closed at 4 o'clock.But nothing can stop them from having each other.The Clock (1945) is directed by the female lead's future husband, Vincente Minnelli.Fred Zinnemann started the project.Arthur Freed is the producer, who also appears in the film.Also screenwriter Robert Naathan appears in the film.Robert Walker is terrific in the male lead.Judy Garland is terrific in her first motion picture in which she does not sing.And they were both having some personal problems during the filming.James Gleason makes his milkman really sympathetic.His real-life wife, Lucile Gleason gives a great performance as Al 'Emily' Henry.Keenan Wynn makes his drunk both funny and annoying at the same time.Ruth Brady is Helen the roommate.Marshall Thompson plays Bill.Angela Lansbury's mother, Moyna MacGill appears as Luncheonette Lady.This movie is close to perfect.It's got the greatest dialogue and the chemistry really works with the main couple.And it moves from one great scene to another.It's really sweet when they are at the Metropolitan Museum of Art getting to know each other having very little interest on the museum objects.It's a lot of fun to watch those two delivering the milk in the nightly New York after the real milkman has been knocked out by the drunk.It's most touching when Joe and Alice are separated in the subway and when they are finally reunited with her rushing into his arms.And it's real exciting to watch those two trying to beat the clock when they decide to get married.This is what romantic movies should be like.This was made with a feeling.Here we have this sympathetic couple you really want to find the happiness with each other.And in the end when Joe goes back to the war he will return to his love one.And they will have all the time in the world.You just know.After seeing a movie like this the world feels like a better place to live.At least for a while.

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drednm
2009/12/25

THE CLOCK is a neat little film directed by Vincente Minnelli with a story by Paul Gallico.Robert Walker plays a naive soldier on leave in New York City where he meets Judy Garland, a secretary from a small town who has lived in the city for 3 years.They spend the day together, knowing only the other's first name and having a series of "adventures," most notably getting a ride from a milkman (James Gleason) and trying to get married. Of course they also lose each other in a subway crowd and find one another under "the clock." Minnelli has some terrific, long scenes here (no cuts) and loving closeups of the stars. The episodic nature of the narrative works well since the plot is the "boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boys gets girl" theme.Keenan Wynn is a rather obnoxious drunk in a luncheonette scene that also features Moyna MacGill (Angela Lansbury's mother) in a funny bit. Marshall Thompson has a nothing bit, and Lucile Gleason is wonderful as Gleason's wife serving breakfast.Oddly, the basic plot of this film mirrors that of Paul Fejos' 1928 silent masterpiece LONESOME, which starred Glenn Tryon and Barbara Kent as workers in New York City who meet, spend a day together at Coney Island, and then lose one another in the crowds, knowing only the other's first name. THE CLOCK gives no credit to the Fejos film.Garland and Walker are exceptional as the young couple.

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jcbhyde
2009/04/12

This Is My Second Best Film By Vincente Minnelli 'Number 1 Is Home From The Hill' And Number 1 Film Of Judy Garland The Clock Is My Second Best Film In The World I Love Ever Thing About This Movie The Story And Ever Thing And Robert Walker Did A Really Good Job To His Role As Joe & Judy Role As Alice But She Does Not Sing In The Picture This Is My Favorite Judy Garland Role I Think And It Is A Very Good Movie I Order This Movie About A Mouth Ago And Fell In Love With It Is A Amazing Story I Like The Beginning Of The Movie She Almost Falls In The Floor And Her Heel Brakes Off Her Shoes And Mr. Minnelli Should Have Got An Oscar For This Picture And Miss Garland Should Have Got A Oscar To But They Do Look At Stuff Like.

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