अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंThanks to her ability and her legs, Claire McIntyre rises in the business world.Thanks to her ability and her legs, Claire McIntyre rises in the business world.Thanks to her ability and her legs, Claire McIntyre rises in the business world.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
Frank Darien
- Luke C. Winters
- (as Frank Darion)
Judith Barrett
- Sarah Ellen
- (as Nancy Dover)
Robert Allen
- Graduate at Dance
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Irving Bacon
- Waiter
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Robert Gordon
- Office Boy
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
George 'Gabby' Hayes
- Hotel Clerk
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Tom Ricketts
- Old Man at Graduation Dance
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
Virginia Sale
- Sally Curtin
- (बिना क्रेडिट के)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
It's no great classic. Assembly line Hollywood stuff, about the same quality as Erin Brockovich, circa 1931. But it's worth watching, especially if you're already into pre-code-era stuff, or if you're interested in feminist themes in cinema, or if you're awake at 3 AM and it's on cable. An honest and accurate film, it gets the male-female dynamic just about right, for 1931, 2002, or whenever. Loretta Young was casual and charming and perfect for the role. 6.5/10, rounded down to 6/10.
Pretty college graduate Loretta Young (as Claire "Mac" McIntyre) tells musician boyfriend Frank Albertson (as John "Johnny" Saunders) she's going to chisel out a "Big Business Girl" career in New York while his dance band plays a Paris date. Although Mr. Albertson begs her to go, Ms. Young needs to pay off college loans. She is hired as a secretary to advertising executive Ricardo Cortez (as Robert "RJ" Clayton). Young is ambitious, intelligent, powdered and leggy. She also has a secret...
After being referred to as "office decoration," Young hikes up her skirt and swings her legs around the boss' face. This understandably arouses Mr. Cortez. Young is promoted. Albertson returns from Paris. Romantic misunderstandings ensue. For her "lingerie scene" Young wears a clingy, low-cut slip which shows off her thin figure to great effect. At the subsequent party, flies crawl around her back and down her dress. Also watch for brassy Joan Blondell (as Pearl) to liven up the last act.
***** Big Business Girl (6/12/31) William A Seiter ~ Loretta Young, Frank Albertson, Ricardo Cortez, Joan Blondell
After being referred to as "office decoration," Young hikes up her skirt and swings her legs around the boss' face. This understandably arouses Mr. Cortez. Young is promoted. Albertson returns from Paris. Romantic misunderstandings ensue. For her "lingerie scene" Young wears a clingy, low-cut slip which shows off her thin figure to great effect. At the subsequent party, flies crawl around her back and down her dress. Also watch for brassy Joan Blondell (as Pearl) to liven up the last act.
***** Big Business Girl (6/12/31) William A Seiter ~ Loretta Young, Frank Albertson, Ricardo Cortez, Joan Blondell
Loretta Young graduates college and marries band leader Frank Albertson. While he tours Europe, she gets a job at Ricardo Cortez's advertising agency. There, her brains, creativity, and legs make her popular with clients and Cortez. He's making his move when Albertson returns; Miss Young has not mentioned a husband.
Miss Young's legs carry the movie as well as the career, what with Albertson being whiny, and Cortez oily. This seems to be a movie for liberated women to enjoy. The best performances are by Dorothy Christy, who tries to seduce Albertson in front of Miss Young, and a very funny turn by Joan Blondell as a professional correspondent.
Miss Young's legs carry the movie as well as the career, what with Albertson being whiny, and Cortez oily. This seems to be a movie for liberated women to enjoy. The best performances are by Dorothy Christy, who tries to seduce Albertson in front of Miss Young, and a very funny turn by Joan Blondell as a professional correspondent.
Such a predictable and creaky old film really shouldn't be as entertaining as this!
It's the lightest of light comedies and being made in 1931 with a low budget, it's far from visually stunning however it's actually quite fun.
Big Business Girl seems to be primarily an excuse to show how crazily pretty Loretta Young is and in that respect it's unquestionably successful. If a computer was programmed to create the sweetest, most beautiful girl possible, Loretta Young would probably be the result. She's only eighteen in this but the fact that she is lusted after by an older man, her boss, kind of legitimises us chaps being allowed to stare. She is definitely however not just a pretty face, certainly in this, she is an exceptional actress and manages not just to carry this unremarkable story single handedly but also makes it very watchable.
The first ten minutes are so awfully lame you will be tempted to switch it off but don't, stick with it - it does get better. Director William Sieter eventually picks up the pace and turns what starts out looking like it's going to be a bland melodrama into quite an engaging and lively comedy-drama.
The last ten minutes when Joan Blondell finally arrives is worth the wait. All of a sudden this film transforms itself again from that lightweight comedy-drama into something brilliantly funny; the scene with Joan on piano, fag in mouth, is hilarious - you will have a smile on your face as the credits roll.
It's the lightest of light comedies and being made in 1931 with a low budget, it's far from visually stunning however it's actually quite fun.
Big Business Girl seems to be primarily an excuse to show how crazily pretty Loretta Young is and in that respect it's unquestionably successful. If a computer was programmed to create the sweetest, most beautiful girl possible, Loretta Young would probably be the result. She's only eighteen in this but the fact that she is lusted after by an older man, her boss, kind of legitimises us chaps being allowed to stare. She is definitely however not just a pretty face, certainly in this, she is an exceptional actress and manages not just to carry this unremarkable story single handedly but also makes it very watchable.
The first ten minutes are so awfully lame you will be tempted to switch it off but don't, stick with it - it does get better. Director William Sieter eventually picks up the pace and turns what starts out looking like it's going to be a bland melodrama into quite an engaging and lively comedy-drama.
The last ten minutes when Joan Blondell finally arrives is worth the wait. All of a sudden this film transforms itself again from that lightweight comedy-drama into something brilliantly funny; the scene with Joan on piano, fag in mouth, is hilarious - you will have a smile on your face as the credits roll.
BIG BUSINESS GIRL (1931) is an unspectacular pre-Code talkie with a bit of a racy edge. Eighteen-year-old Loretta Young plays a college grad trying to make it in the business world. At her advertising company, she is quickly promoted from a secretary, but finds out she's being paid merely to "decorate the office". What she doesn't realize is that her boss (Ricardo Cortez) is underpaying her by more than half what her talents are worth, but this is not the main issue in the film. She wants to climb the ladder and is willing to play the game if that's what it takes. The sudden appearance of her long-distance boyfriend (Frank Albertson) throws a monkey wrench in her plans and the movie becomes a will-they-won't-they waiting game to see if the young couple can work out their misunderstandings.
Fourth-billed Joan Blondell doesn't appear until the very end of the film, but she's fantastic as a professional correspondent in divorce set-ups. She plays cards in her negligée with nervous husbands as they await the private detectives. It's a living. Streetwise Blondell can handle herself and, as she says, with the type of husbands she works with it's safer than working in a beauty parlor. Blondell is a great comedienne and her scenes are easily the highlight of the film.
Fourth-billed Joan Blondell doesn't appear until the very end of the film, but she's fantastic as a professional correspondent in divorce set-ups. She plays cards in her negligée with nervous husbands as they await the private detectives. It's a living. Streetwise Blondell can handle herself and, as she says, with the type of husbands she works with it's safer than working in a beauty parlor. Blondell is a great comedienne and her scenes are easily the highlight of the film.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाLoretta Young was just 18 years old when this film was released.
- गूफ़Shadow of boom microphone moving vertically up the curtained doors behind Johnny and Mrs. Emery at the club after she mentions having a cabin in the Adironacks.
- भाव
Claire 'Mac' McIntyre: Honestly, Johnny, you're only good for two things: making music and making love.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Complicated Women (2003)
- साउंडट्रैकConstantly
(uncredited)
Music by Bert Williams (1910)
Lyrics by Chris Smith and Jim Burris
Performed by Frank Albertson with band
Played often throughout the picture
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Big Business Girl?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि
- 1 घं 15 मि(75 min)
- रंग
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