VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,9/10
2225
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un fannullone e una manicure, entrambi intenzionati a sposarsi per soldi, si incontrano e si mettono insieme non senza difficoltà.Un fannullone e una manicure, entrambi intenzionati a sposarsi per soldi, si incontrano e si mettono insieme non senza difficoltà.Un fannullone e una manicure, entrambi intenzionati a sposarsi per soldi, si incontrano e si mettono insieme non senza difficoltà.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie totali
Peter Allen
- Jewelry Clerk
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Murray Alper
- Cabbie
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Sam Ash
- Maitre d'Hotel
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Herman Bing
- Barber
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Ralph Brooks
- Restaurant Patron
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Sterling Campbell
- Barber
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Whitey the Cat
- Cat
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Albert Conti
- Maitre d' in Speakeasy
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Marcelle Corday
- Celeste
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Nell Craig
- Saleswoman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
William Demarest
- Natty
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Fred MacMurray's line readings here are simply impeccable--on par with, oh, say, Cary Grant in His Girl Friday. Another not wholly sympathetic leading role in a comedy. Unfortunately, the movie ends up being kind of muddle-headed toward the end. Still, the chemistry between the two stars is fully evident, and I like that the movie doesn't crassly gloss over the Bellamy character's hurt and resentment. It gives the movie body. The domestic scenes between Lombard and MacMurray are particular good--sort of a warm-up, too, for what Liesen does with Jean Arthur and Ray Milland in their glorious cohabitation scenes at the Hotel Louie in Liesen's Easy Living. Liesen is an unfairly forgotten director of romantic comedies. Besides this one, and Easy Living, check out also Remember the Night and Midnight.
"Hands Across the Table" is a sparkling and enjoyable screwball romance, directed with an airy grace by the underrated Paramount stylist Mitchell Leisen, whose "Easy Living"(1937) and "Swing High, Swing Low"(1937) are two of the greatest classics of the 1930s. "Hands" is a minor work to be sure, but it is enjoyable and worthwhile for showcasing the comedic talents of Carole Lombard as the gold-digging manicurist who falls for a former millionaire playboy, played by Fred MacMurray. Ralph Bellamy plays Lombard's rejected suitor, a role that somehow prefigures his role in Hawks' "His Girl Friday".
Hands Across the Table is the first of four films that Paramount teamed Fred MacMurray and Carole Lombard in. It's one of MacMurray's earliest film and he's playing what he would perennially be typecast as, a light leading man. That is until Double Indemnity showed just how dramatic he could be.
The hands across the table refer to those hands that a manicurist deals with and Lombard is a manicurist. This is the middle of the Great Depression and Lombard working in a hotel figures she can snag a millionaire. She actually does in the person of Ralph Bellamy.
But figuring to trade higher she meets Fred MacMurray who has the nice WASPy rich sounding name of Theodore Drew III. Problem is as he says to Lombard, the family fortune crashed in 1929. He's set his sights on a rich heiress, Astrid Allwyn, who will be able to support him in the style he was previously accustomed to.
Director Mitchell Leisen keeps the proceedings light and airy and its obvious that MacMurray and Lombard are suited for each other on the screen. No accident that they made three successive films, all of them money makers.
Funniest scene in the film how MacMurray scares away William Demarest as a prospective suitor for Lombard. Worth the price of the VHS tape alone.
The hands across the table refer to those hands that a manicurist deals with and Lombard is a manicurist. This is the middle of the Great Depression and Lombard working in a hotel figures she can snag a millionaire. She actually does in the person of Ralph Bellamy.
But figuring to trade higher she meets Fred MacMurray who has the nice WASPy rich sounding name of Theodore Drew III. Problem is as he says to Lombard, the family fortune crashed in 1929. He's set his sights on a rich heiress, Astrid Allwyn, who will be able to support him in the style he was previously accustomed to.
Director Mitchell Leisen keeps the proceedings light and airy and its obvious that MacMurray and Lombard are suited for each other on the screen. No accident that they made three successive films, all of them money makers.
Funniest scene in the film how MacMurray scares away William Demarest as a prospective suitor for Lombard. Worth the price of the VHS tape alone.
Cynical gold-digger Regi Allen (Carole Lombard) is a hotel manicurist. She befriends rich hotel guest Allen Macklyn (Ralph Bellamy). He's wheelchair bound and she doesn't consider him as marriage material. She does get a manicure appointment from weirdo Theodore Drew III (Fred MacMurray). Everybody assumes that he comes from money.
I actually thought that Allen would be the romantic lead, but he disappears during all of the middle. It actually doesn't make sense that Regi wouldn't go after him if she's a true gold-digger. Fred MacMurray is pretty fun. He's doing his wacky personality and is a good pairing with Carole Lombard. I do keep holding out for Allen until he shows up in the third act. He distracted me from fully enjoying this rom-com.
I actually thought that Allen would be the romantic lead, but he disappears during all of the middle. It actually doesn't make sense that Regi wouldn't go after him if she's a true gold-digger. Fred MacMurray is pretty fun. He's doing his wacky personality and is a good pairing with Carole Lombard. I do keep holding out for Allen until he shows up in the third act. He distracted me from fully enjoying this rom-com.
...then you ought to rent this movie. She is just adorable, and charming beyond belief, as avowed gold-digger Regi Allen. All the supporting players here are wonderful. However, male lead Fred MacMurray comes off -- at least to me -- as a very cold fish. His endless "humorous" comments have an angry undercurrent, and the script, while admitting the guy is very shallow (shallow, angry -- sounds like a keeper), also insists he's this wacky dreamboat.
When you get down to it, all he has to offer Regi over the love-struck, crippled Allen Macklyn (Ralph Bellamy, playing what I think is the first of his many second male leads dumped by the leading lady for the first male lead) is that he can walk.
When you get down to it, all he has to offer Regi over the love-struck, crippled Allen Macklyn (Ralph Bellamy, playing what I think is the first of his many second male leads dumped by the leading lady for the first male lead) is that he can walk.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn one scene, Fred MacMurray calls his fiancée, and Carole Lombard continuously interrupts him stating, "Bermuda calling." Director Mitchell Leisen said, "When they finished the take, Carole and Fred collapsed on the floor in laughter; they laughed until they couldn't laugh any more. It wasn't in the script, but I made sure the cameras kept turning and I used it in the picture. It is so hard to make actors laugh naturally - I wasn't about to throw that bit out."
- Citazioni
[Ted suggests temporarily becoming Regi's platonic roommate]
Regi Allen: Well, I'm not *that* unconventional.
Theodore Drew III: Aw, don't be old-fashioned. What are conventions anyway? Just a bunch of salesmen sitting around and telling stories.
- ConnessioniEdited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Seul le cinéma (1994)
- Colonne sonoreHands Across the Table
Music by Jean Delettre
Lyrics by Mitchell Parish
[Played during the opening credits]
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 20 minuti
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By what name was I milioni della manicure (1935) officially released in India in English?
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