Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaVicki Wallace teases her husband Tony until he hits her. After divorcing and marrying Vernon, her behavior leads to similar results. She returns to Tony's place, where drama unfolds with his... Leggi tuttoVicki Wallace teases her husband Tony until he hits her. After divorcing and marrying Vernon, her behavior leads to similar results. She returns to Tony's place, where drama unfolds with his date Bonnie and Vernon's friends.Vicki Wallace teases her husband Tony until he hits her. After divorcing and marrying Vernon, her behavior leads to similar results. She returns to Tony's place, where drama unfolds with his date Bonnie and Vernon's friends.
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- Judge
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- Duryla Model
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- Court Spectator
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- Court Recorder
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- Mrs. Crosby's Mother
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- Nightclub Patron
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Recensioni in evidenza
Despite my intense dislike of the character, Joan Blondell is very good, a little different in tone than I've ever seen her. She's not quite tough, but she's certainly not weak. She's not dumb, but she's not all that smart, either (I have no idea where the title comes from; the British title, HIT ME AGAIN, makes much more sense). I laughed out loud several times, even while I was grinding my teeth at the Blondell character and the way she was treated. The acting all around is quite good. Claire Dodd and Frank McHugh provide nice comic relief (relief, that is, from the "comic" slapping and arguing that occurs among the three leads). I don't think I've ever enjoyed a movie and been so exasperated by it at the same time.
Johnny on the spot lawyer and neighbor Edward Everett Horton offers to be Blondell's divorce attorney and he marries her. But we're talking life with Horton and his fuss budget personality.
I think you can figure this one out. It's most dated because in this day and age no one slaps a woman without condemnation.
Still F. Hugh Herbert's script has quite a few laughs in it and Warner Brothers regulars Claire Dodd and Frank McHugh get their share also as neighbors and card playing regulars.
Funny at times, but most dated.
In many ways, this is a deeply cynical film (witness the running commentary from the two constant house guests) about public and private lives, the last gasp of pre-code comedy before the censors came down hard on creative expression of and shuttered them into the kitchen with their aprons for the next thirty years or so, when Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton exposed a more modern version of the S/M games that can develop when love is stunted by circumstance. This is not a great film by any measure, but viewed in an unusual context can be great fun.
He does, and fast forward and Vicki has married Vernon. But the grass is not greener. Vicki finds herself bored with Vernon's kind and giving ways and decides she wants her first husband back. Complications ensue.
It really pains me to give a movie with the best WB had to offer in comedy in front of the camera in 1934 only a mediocre grade. But the characters are cardboard and the very thin humor wore on me after a very short while. And Blondell is playing one of the most annoying nagging characters in the history of film, although she is playing it tongue in cheek. How I felt about this film was very similar to how I felt about the very first production code comedies because they often substituted shouting and motion for that great precode bite and energy.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizTony tells Vicki that he's been going to the movies quite a lot recently, and there the women are quite different: "They get pushed in the face with grapefruit and they love it." This is a reference to Nemico pubblico (1931) with James Cagney, who famously shoved half a grapefruit into Mae Clarke's face. Joan Blondell also was in that film, so this apparently is an inside joke.
- BlooperAt the 4 minute mark the boom mic shadow moves on the wall by the book shelves.
- Citazioni
George Lancaster: Love is the illusion that one woman differs from another.
- ConnessioniReferences Nemico pubblico (1931)
- Colonne sonoreBridal Chorus
(1850) (uncredited)
from "Lohengrin"
aka "Here Comes the Bride"
Music by Richard Wagner
Performed by the Vitaphone Orchestra
Variation played when marriage is announced in gossip column
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Hit Me Again
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 5 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1