VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
208
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA harried daughter tries to keep her wacky family together while trying to sell her eccentric father's latest invention, a collapsible life raft.A harried daughter tries to keep her wacky family together while trying to sell her eccentric father's latest invention, a collapsible life raft.A harried daughter tries to keep her wacky family together while trying to sell her eccentric father's latest invention, a collapsible life raft.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Peter Miles
- Joey McCooley
- (as Gerald Perreau)
Donald Davis
- Pete McCooley
- (as Don Davis)
Harry Barris
- Clarinetist
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Leon Belasco
- Violinist
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Brooks Benedict
- Mr. Bradshaw
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Margaret Bert
- Mrs. Fitzmaurice
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
I saw this movie with my mother in 1944, and it made a lasting impression upon me. We lived in Buffalo and both of us agreed that San Diego would be a better place for us and decided that some day we would live there. Though this never came about, and I have never been to San Diego, it must have "put a bee in my bonnet" because eventually I came to Mexico where I have been living permanently since 1955. This is a motion picture I would like to see again.
I watched this recently by chance- absolutely charming! Clever writing, excellent timing and completely family friendly- without seeming dated. This movie has influenced me to take more chances, enjoy life more and recommend it to my three children-ranging in age from 11 to 27. Draws attention to the coincidences in life that may not be concidences and the opportunities that we may miss if we're not watching! One of the best of its genre and generation, in my opinion. I had forgotten how clever the writing could be in some of these old classics. If this is not counted as one of the classics, it should be and certainly is in my book. I will probably buy it!
Terrific little comedy from Universal. I didn't expect much and watched only to see the great Buster Keaton in a supporting role. But this is a solid and wacky little comedy about a pushy daughter (Louise Allbritton) and her inventor father (Edward Everett Horton) in their attempts to crash the corporate headquarters of a company in San Diego run by a reclusive millionaire (Jon Hall). The situations may be very TV but in 1945 this was fresh material. But the cast is tops and saves this one.
Eric Blore is hilarious as the "family retainer." Irene Ryan as the wayward tenant is also very funny. I also spotted Almira Sessions, Florence Lake, Chester Clute, Hobart Cavanaugh, Esther Howard, Sara Selby, Dewey Robinson, Vernon Dent, and many other great character actors.
Certainly worth a look.....
Eric Blore is hilarious as the "family retainer." Irene Ryan as the wayward tenant is also very funny. I also spotted Almira Sessions, Florence Lake, Chester Clute, Hobart Cavanaugh, Esther Howard, Sara Selby, Dewey Robinson, Vernon Dent, and many other great character actors.
Certainly worth a look.....
High school teacher Edward Everett Horton invents an all-in-one inflatable lifeboat, and tries to sell it to the advisory board run by Jon Hall, the third richest man in America. Through a series of situations impelled by his hair-brained daughter, Louise Allbritton, he finds himself buying a house in San Diego with his last money, and moving in with her and his four motherless sons, although the raft has been rejected. Miss Allbritton won't give up, and eventually charms Hall, although the raft remains rejected.
It's larded with subplots, some of which work -- Miss Allbritton persuades bus driver Buster Keaton into leaving the route he's been driving for ten years, and instead driving along the seashore, for a charming excursion -- and some do not. Irene Ryan shows up as a boarder, even though the house is not accepting them; and Eric Blore is a butler attached to the house, who bursts into tears whenever he's fired. The romantic leads are not very appealing. Miss Allbritton is shrill, and Hall is stuffy. Still, the cast is filled with fine comics, including Clarence Muse, Florence Lake, Chester Clute, Brooks Benedict, Hobart Cavanaugh, Vernon Dent, and Esther Howard, and even Tom Keene as a reporter. If the reasons why this has been hard to find so long are apparent from a viewing, I'm still glad I saw it, if only for the Keaton sequence.
It's larded with subplots, some of which work -- Miss Allbritton persuades bus driver Buster Keaton into leaving the route he's been driving for ten years, and instead driving along the seashore, for a charming excursion -- and some do not. Irene Ryan shows up as a boarder, even though the house is not accepting them; and Eric Blore is a butler attached to the house, who bursts into tears whenever he's fired. The romantic leads are not very appealing. Miss Allbritton is shrill, and Hall is stuffy. Still, the cast is filled with fine comics, including Clarence Muse, Florence Lake, Chester Clute, Brooks Benedict, Hobart Cavanaugh, Vernon Dent, and Esther Howard, and even Tom Keene as a reporter. If the reasons why this has been hard to find so long are apparent from a viewing, I'm still glad I saw it, if only for the Keaton sequence.
And by Huttonesque I am talking about Betty Hutton, who, at the time this movie was made, was riding high over at Paramount as a bubbly blonde singing comedienne. Universal, with not nearly as much money as Paramount, has Louise Albritton in this role as Virginia McCooley, the oldest of five children - the rest are boys much younger than she - whose father is a widowed schoolteacher, Philip McCooley (Edward Everett Horton). Dad has invented a one man inflatable life raft, and he would like to sell it to the Navy, but is too afraid of leaving his safe teaching job. So Virginia quits dad's job for him, ends their lease, and moves their furniture to San Diego - without notifying dad first.
So off this family goes to San Diego, at that time the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet, and during wartime there is practically a no vacancy sign at the city limits, it is so packed with sailors and government personnel. The McCooleys don't know any of this, they are just feeling their way through getting a place and getting dad's invention accepted by the navy. But there is another road block besides housing. On the train to San Diego the McCooleys managed to anger someone who happens to be a very important person - the owner of the railroad, the third richest person in the US, and the arbiter of what inventions get accepted by the Navy's civilian research branch. And this guy, a young eligible bachelor, does not trust women because he figures they are all after his fortune. So if Virginia hopes to make inroads with him she will have to tread carefully.
With Buster Keaton as a bus driver who is in a rut, Irene Ryan as somebody who mistakes the McCooley home as a boarding house and is determined to hold on tight to what she thinks is her new room, and Eric Blore once again gets to make Horton's life miserable as an incompetent and unwanted gentleman's gentleman.
It is funny independent of the time in which it is made, but it is also great as a history lesson about life on the homefront in 1944. Highly recommended.
As for Louise Albritton, Universal's own Betty Hutton, you may have never heard of her before, but not because she hit the skids. She married in 1946 and eventually dropped out of show business to raise a family in the post war baby boom tradition, dying in 1979 after 33 years of marriage. A much happier ending to her tale than to poor Betty Hutton's tragic life.
So off this family goes to San Diego, at that time the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet, and during wartime there is practically a no vacancy sign at the city limits, it is so packed with sailors and government personnel. The McCooleys don't know any of this, they are just feeling their way through getting a place and getting dad's invention accepted by the navy. But there is another road block besides housing. On the train to San Diego the McCooleys managed to anger someone who happens to be a very important person - the owner of the railroad, the third richest person in the US, and the arbiter of what inventions get accepted by the Navy's civilian research branch. And this guy, a young eligible bachelor, does not trust women because he figures they are all after his fortune. So if Virginia hopes to make inroads with him she will have to tread carefully.
With Buster Keaton as a bus driver who is in a rut, Irene Ryan as somebody who mistakes the McCooley home as a boarding house and is determined to hold on tight to what she thinks is her new room, and Eric Blore once again gets to make Horton's life miserable as an incompetent and unwanted gentleman's gentleman.
It is funny independent of the time in which it is made, but it is also great as a history lesson about life on the homefront in 1944. Highly recommended.
As for Louise Albritton, Universal's own Betty Hutton, you may have never heard of her before, but not because she hit the skids. She married in 1946 and eventually dropped out of show business to raise a family in the post war baby boom tradition, dying in 1979 after 33 years of marriage. A much happier ending to her tale than to poor Betty Hutton's tragic life.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn his final scene Buster Keaton breaks out in a big smile, one of the only times in his career the Great Stoneface did so on camera.
- Citazioni
Philip McCooley: You mean to tell me that you resigned for me over the telephone to the principal of the high school?
Virginia McCooley: He thought it was a little unusual too, at first. Then I told him you were just too bashful to admit the reason.
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 23 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was San Diego, ti amo (1944) officially released in Canada in English?
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