Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA middle-aged couple's (Genevieve Tobin, Adolphe Menjou) marital woes take a back seat to their daughter's intentions to run off with her beau.A middle-aged couple's (Genevieve Tobin, Adolphe Menjou) marital woes take a back seat to their daughter's intentions to run off with her beau.A middle-aged couple's (Genevieve Tobin, Adolphe Menjou) marital woes take a back seat to their daughter's intentions to run off with her beau.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Leila Bennett
- Hotel Maid
- (non crédité)
Symona Boniface
- Roulette Table Player
- (non crédité)
Oliver Cross
- Casino Patron
- (non crédité)
Virginia Dabney
- Girl in Elevator
- (non crédité)
William B. Davidson
- Dr. Donald W. Swope
- (non crédité)
Ann Hovey
- Hat Check Girl
- (non crédité)
Harold Miller
- Casino Patron
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
Oh, the glories of a pre-Hays Code sex comedy. In this hilarious take on infidelity, Genevieve Tobin and Adolphe Menjou have an unusual marriage. Adolphe is having an affair with Genevieve's best friend, Mary Astor, and Genevieve is relentlessly pursued by Adolphe's best friend, Edward Everett Horton. Their teenaged daughter, Patricia Ellis, is under the impression her parents have the perfect marriage, and when the lid gets lifted off, she's shocked.
With fantastic comic timing from the actors, and beautiful costumes worn by the leading ladies, it's a wonder why Easy to Love isn't one of the most famous comedies to come out of the early '30s. Genevieve reminded me of a combination between Joan Blondell and Ruth Chatterton, and since she spent equal time dressed as undressed, it's a wonder why she didn't rocket to stardom-especially after her nude bathtub scene that flustered both her on-screen husband and I'm sure off-screen audiences.
Check this comic romp out if you like similar movies, like Design for Living and The Palm Beach Story. It's very entertaining, and Mary Astor is absolutely adorable, prancing around in halter tops and cold-shoulder dresses decades before they were popular.
With fantastic comic timing from the actors, and beautiful costumes worn by the leading ladies, it's a wonder why Easy to Love isn't one of the most famous comedies to come out of the early '30s. Genevieve reminded me of a combination between Joan Blondell and Ruth Chatterton, and since she spent equal time dressed as undressed, it's a wonder why she didn't rocket to stardom-especially after her nude bathtub scene that flustered both her on-screen husband and I'm sure off-screen audiences.
Check this comic romp out if you like similar movies, like Design for Living and The Palm Beach Story. It's very entertaining, and Mary Astor is absolutely adorable, prancing around in halter tops and cold-shoulder dresses decades before they were popular.
A racy pre-Code comedy with a superb cast. Adolph Menjou and top-billed Genevieve Tobin are bored with their marriage. Menjou is stepping out with Mary Astor. (And who wouldn't? Tobin is a charming actress. But Astor is divine here. Her comic timing presages her performance in "The Palm beach Story." Less plausibly, Tobin is having a romance with -- ready? -- Edward Everett Horton. He was a delightful comic character actor. But the type to make a husband jealous? It's hard to imagine.
Charming Patricia Ellis is Tobin and Menjou's daughter. Her boyfriend is played by attractive Paul Kaye -- a name I'd never heard before watching this.
Hugh Herbert turns up as a private detective with a Scottish burr. His name is McTavish, and like everyone in this charming but not awfully original movie, he's very good.
Charming Patricia Ellis is Tobin and Menjou's daughter. Her boyfriend is played by attractive Paul Kaye -- a name I'd never heard before watching this.
Hugh Herbert turns up as a private detective with a Scottish burr. His name is McTavish, and like everyone in this charming but not awfully original movie, he's very good.
Maybe it's the presence of befuddled Edward Everett Horton, maybe it's the art deco sets, maybe it's rich people being silly but this sweet little motion picture feels very much like one of those lovely daft movies Fred and Ginger would make in a few years' time....but without the singing and dancing.
As an hour of lightweight vintage fun this is perfect! There's absolutely nothing special or memorable about it, there's no deep meaning, in fact you'll probably forget that you've seen it in a couple of days - however if you like that TOP HAT style of sophisticated but ultimately silly humour, you will find this genuinely funny.
Although it looks like an RKO film, it's a Warner Brothers film and if you are familiar with early 30s WB movies you will recognize everyone who pops up here. Genevieve Tobin doesn't often get to play the lead but here she does and she's actually fantastic. I might be a little biased because in this film she looks remarkably like Joan Blondell (who of course was the sexiest woman who ever walked upon the face of the Earth) but posher. There's even that same bath scene from BLONDE CRAZY with Genevieve Tobin being equally as funny and equally as hot!
Warner's films from this era were infamous for being penny-pinching. They were short and not one single millimetre of film could be wasted. There was no time for building up a scene, no time for background, every frame had to be accounted for. This one takes that philosophy to the absolute limit and yet it somehow manages to look really classy. What makes this unlike other WB comedy romances from about the same time such as GOODBYE AGAIN or SMARTY (apart from them starring Joan Blondell, the living goddess herself) is that this doesn't waste a fraction of a second on anything that's not progressing the story. Unlike those other movies, there's no sub-plots, no hint of The Depression, there's no mildly thought-provoking issues; in fact, there's no time to actually think. It's all done in an hour and it works. Guy Kibbee for example looks like he ran over from another set to read his lines and then ran back again but somehow it doesn't feel rushed, just fun.
Just switch your mind off, sit in from of the screen and smile to yourself for an hour.
As an hour of lightweight vintage fun this is perfect! There's absolutely nothing special or memorable about it, there's no deep meaning, in fact you'll probably forget that you've seen it in a couple of days - however if you like that TOP HAT style of sophisticated but ultimately silly humour, you will find this genuinely funny.
Although it looks like an RKO film, it's a Warner Brothers film and if you are familiar with early 30s WB movies you will recognize everyone who pops up here. Genevieve Tobin doesn't often get to play the lead but here she does and she's actually fantastic. I might be a little biased because in this film she looks remarkably like Joan Blondell (who of course was the sexiest woman who ever walked upon the face of the Earth) but posher. There's even that same bath scene from BLONDE CRAZY with Genevieve Tobin being equally as funny and equally as hot!
Warner's films from this era were infamous for being penny-pinching. They were short and not one single millimetre of film could be wasted. There was no time for building up a scene, no time for background, every frame had to be accounted for. This one takes that philosophy to the absolute limit and yet it somehow manages to look really classy. What makes this unlike other WB comedy romances from about the same time such as GOODBYE AGAIN or SMARTY (apart from them starring Joan Blondell, the living goddess herself) is that this doesn't waste a fraction of a second on anything that's not progressing the story. Unlike those other movies, there's no sub-plots, no hint of The Depression, there's no mildly thought-provoking issues; in fact, there's no time to actually think. It's all done in an hour and it works. Guy Kibbee for example looks like he ran over from another set to read his lines and then ran back again but somehow it doesn't feel rushed, just fun.
Just switch your mind off, sit in from of the screen and smile to yourself for an hour.
This is a must see....if just for the huge stars at their glamorous best. Edward horton must have made a deal with the devil... he doesn't look anywhere near 48. Cutie mary astor at 28, years before maltese falcon. Dashing adolphe menjou, looking younger than 44. Gen Tobin, looking younger than 34. Hugh herbert is in here for comedy. And the steamy plot. Some great filthy double entendres about 14 minutes in, when wifey is on the phone. If this was released in january 1934, they must have been filming in 1933, just as the film production code was being phased in. But they seem to have snuck this past the censors, or the rules weren't being enforced yet. We watch three couples deal with marriage in various levels of happiness. It's mostly light and fluffy, even with the serious subject of cheating on one's spouse. Moves rapidamente. A warner brothers shortie, at 61 minutes. No wasted lines. Directed by bill keighley. Based on the play by thompson buchanan. Had a bunch of plays made into film. Fun. The picture and sound are exceptionally high quality... it must have been a good restoration!
"Easy To Love" is essentially a filmed stage play which is saved by its cast. I was hoping it would get funnier or turn out better as it went on but what was needed here was a more subtle, sophisticated hand, someone with something resembling a 'Lubitsch touch'. The result was a ham-handed comedy which was too obvious as far as innuendo and plot development are concerned.
The cast did their considerable best, with Edward Everett Horton in one of his patented dithering simpleton roles carrying most of the comedic load, and aided and abetted by Adolph Menjou and Mary Astor. But by and large, the picture belonged to Genevieve Tobin, director Keighley's wife. Primarily a stage actress, she was in her element as Menjou's triangulated wife.
"Easy To Love" could have been better but is worth a watch as is. I think I am in the minority on this one. I was disappointed but perhaps I was expecting too much.
The cast did their considerable best, with Edward Everett Horton in one of his patented dithering simpleton roles carrying most of the comedic load, and aided and abetted by Adolph Menjou and Mary Astor. But by and large, the picture belonged to Genevieve Tobin, director Keighley's wife. Primarily a stage actress, she was in her element as Menjou's triangulated wife.
"Easy To Love" could have been better but is worth a watch as is. I think I am in the minority on this one. I was disappointed but perhaps I was expecting too much.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe desk clerk (Hobart Cavanaugh) at the Tavern hotel is reading the June 26, 1933 issue of Time magazine when John bursts in the front door. The cover features Italian General Italo Balbo, a well-known aviator at the time. He was about to lead a flight of flying boats from Rome to Chicago for the 1933 World's Fair.
- GaffesWhen Carol is in the bathtub, the position of the sponge she's holding changes between shots.
- Citations
Carol Townsend: It's funny the evolution of marriage. First, a double bed, then twin beds, now separate rooms.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Thou Shalt Not: Sex, Sin and Censorship in Pre-Code Hollywood (2008)
- Bandes originalesEasy to Love
(1933) (uncredited)
Music by Sammy Fain
Played during the opening credits and often in the score
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- Durée1 heure 1 minute
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- 1.37 : 1
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