Really disappointing - I was expecting a fun and engaging happy musical. This however conveys a very miserable and over-serious mood. Whilst there's of course nothing wrong with a serious story, if you don't care for the characters, it's just dull.
It's probably because of B+D's acquisition by Rank that there's not many of Anna Neagle's early pictures or even of Herbert Wilcox's prolific output still in existence. If this is anything to go by however then we're not missing much. The problem is the two leading men are just so frightfully uninteresting and Anna Neagle's character doesn't feel genuine.
Nevertheless it's a rare treat to see something from England's 'other' big studio (although it did burn down halfway through the production of this but hardly because the acting was so hot it set the place on fire.) Wilcox had been in the business since the early twenties so knew what he was doing but considering this was meant to be his big break-out 'spectacular' to take America by storm, the direction is pretty pedestrian. The way the dance scenes are filmed looks like they were taking direction notes from 1929's BROADWAY MELODY. The best part is the first few minutes - the montage of London life in 1937 which gives some lovely authentic atmosphere. After that it plummets downhill to become very artificial and studio bound. Gaumont or RKO had no worries about competition!
Before she became royalty, Anna Neagle was originally B+D's answer to Gaumont's Jessie Matthews. Unlike Jessie Matthews however, although Neagle was a competent and quite pretty young actress, she lacked Matthews' charm, acting, singing and dancing ability and of course that jaw-dropping sexiness of 'the divine diva.' Watching this, one can understand why she subsequently settled into the niche of comfortable costume dramas!
A challenge to anyone who watches this would be: write a paragraph of what the story was. Even if you can remember, you simply would be too bored to bother.