AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
1,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA father's attempts to protect his college-age daughter from trouble backfire and he finds himself in the middle of scandal after scandal.A father's attempts to protect his college-age daughter from trouble backfire and he finds himself in the middle of scandal after scandal.A father's attempts to protect his college-age daughter from trouble backfire and he finds himself in the middle of scandal after scandal.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 2 indicações no total
Bob Denver
- Alex
- (as Robert Denver)
Leon Alton
- Man at Airport
- (não creditado)
Don Anderson
- Party Guest
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Frank and Anne Michaelson's eldest daughter Mollie is going away to college...and unfortunately she is what's known as a dish! Frank, played by James Stewart, gets himself in all sorts of trouble trying to protect his daughter, played by the lovely Sandra Dee,...he ends up in jail at a protest and in his underwear at a costume party all of which is being criticized by the board of directors where he works who are calling for his replacement.
There are some wonderful cameos...Bob Denver (of Gilligan fame) plays a coffeehouse musician who has to explain to Frank that his daughter is not stripping, and Robert Morley who plays Mr. Pope-Jones, a commiserating fellow father of daughters...who he can't seem to remember the names of!
My favorite scene was actually when Frank and Anne are having a discussion about who taught them the birds and the bees...after they receive a letter or telegram from their daughter mentioning the word virgin! Great comedy there.
"If I could start over, I'd have boys!"-Frank
Poor Frank realizes in the end...that his second daughter is also coming of age!
This was a light comedy that explores that special father daughter relationship from the father's perspective. I would recommend this to Dad's in particular and anyone looking for a light comedy.
There are some wonderful cameos...Bob Denver (of Gilligan fame) plays a coffeehouse musician who has to explain to Frank that his daughter is not stripping, and Robert Morley who plays Mr. Pope-Jones, a commiserating fellow father of daughters...who he can't seem to remember the names of!
My favorite scene was actually when Frank and Anne are having a discussion about who taught them the birds and the bees...after they receive a letter or telegram from their daughter mentioning the word virgin! Great comedy there.
"If I could start over, I'd have boys!"-Frank
Poor Frank realizes in the end...that his second daughter is also coming of age!
This was a light comedy that explores that special father daughter relationship from the father's perspective. I would recommend this to Dad's in particular and anyone looking for a light comedy.
Much as I always love a Jimmy Stewart film, this is a rather lame comedy, interesting mainly for an early Jerry Goldsmith score. Sandra Dee tries hard to shake her golly Molly character she played in A Summer Place (she is named Molly here too) and Audrey Meadows does well in her perfunctory role, but the script is just too lame to engender interest.
A primary flaw in my opinion is that Stewart's character was too unlikeable. The main character of the concerned father should have been more hesitant about interfering in his daughter's college life. It would have engendered more laughs and maintained sympathy with the character. But here Stewart's character is far too aggressive and possessive to the point of irritation. His character would come across as such even more so in our more enlightened times. Yelling at his daughter, yelling at her boyfriend, calling him a punk several times in the film and otherwise meddling in what should be his daughter's "space" as they would later say (the film is from 1963 so just short of the hippie generation) hardly endears him to a modern audience, in my opinion.
In a dated film like this it's difficult to judge how flat the comedy was in 1963, but words like "virgin" would hardly gain a laugh today. Some scenes seem especially dated, such as the coffee house scene with Bob Denver as a folksinger, the fast French cars, while it's hard to imagine that a writer would attempt a laugh by having the parents listen to a record at 331/3 when it's supposed to be played at 78 or 45. Like how desperate can writers be to include something as ludicrous as that for laughs. It might have been funny when electronic music was first invented but not in 1963! Similarly lame was the scene in the dorm with the French girl students, as if having a group of students yelling in French was supposed to elicit bowls of laughter.
But any film starring Jimmy Stewart, in my view the greatest of all American film actors, including Marlon Brando, can never be a waste of time.
A primary flaw in my opinion is that Stewart's character was too unlikeable. The main character of the concerned father should have been more hesitant about interfering in his daughter's college life. It would have engendered more laughs and maintained sympathy with the character. But here Stewart's character is far too aggressive and possessive to the point of irritation. His character would come across as such even more so in our more enlightened times. Yelling at his daughter, yelling at her boyfriend, calling him a punk several times in the film and otherwise meddling in what should be his daughter's "space" as they would later say (the film is from 1963 so just short of the hippie generation) hardly endears him to a modern audience, in my opinion.
In a dated film like this it's difficult to judge how flat the comedy was in 1963, but words like "virgin" would hardly gain a laugh today. Some scenes seem especially dated, such as the coffee house scene with Bob Denver as a folksinger, the fast French cars, while it's hard to imagine that a writer would attempt a laugh by having the parents listen to a record at 331/3 when it's supposed to be played at 78 or 45. Like how desperate can writers be to include something as ludicrous as that for laughs. It might have been funny when electronic music was first invented but not in 1963! Similarly lame was the scene in the dorm with the French girl students, as if having a group of students yelling in French was supposed to elicit bowls of laughter.
But any film starring Jimmy Stewart, in my view the greatest of all American film actors, including Marlon Brando, can never be a waste of time.
A 1963 comedy starring James Stewart & Sandra Dee. Being put through the wringer by a civic board, Stewart recounts how he ended up there when daughter Dee went to college & became the apple of many a man's eye. At first getting a musical berth at a proto-hippie coffee joint, she soon flexes her artistic muscle (evidenced by her painting canvases at home wearing a 2 piece bikini where an ogling man nearly nearly crashes his car!) prompting her & her French beau to go to France (since she's won an art scholarship). Throughout poor Stewart, a lawyer, gets a front row vista to the culture wars as he gets arrested during a college sit-in, can't get a stiff drink at the coffee bar & having Dee's Parisian female roommates attack him when he honestly asked if they were hookers. Dee gets a wedding proposal from her man w/a date to meet his parents at a masquerade party but things don't go smoothly since her man's parents are snobs. Will the wedding go off w/o a hitch? Typical of Stewart's 60's comedy output which found him more stunned at the state of the world to reflect what was going on in burgeoning youth movement of the time w/Dee cute as a button (& a fellow New Jerseyian, go Bayonne!) trying to keep her dad's sanity in check. Also starring Audrey Meadows (wasted frankly!) as Stewart's wife, Bob Denver (billed as Robert!) playing a future version of his Maynard G. Krebs persona from Dobie Gillis, Robert Morley as a fellow traveler Stewart encounters in Paree & John McGiver as the head of the board impugning Stewart's character. Interesting fact the script was based on a play written by Henry & Phoebe Ephron, writer Nora's parents, who based the daughter's character on her.
It's a special meeting of the Pacific Palisades Board of Education. President Frank Michaelson (James Stewart) is being pushed to resign after some unflattering newspaper stories. In his defence, he recounts the whole story starting with his teenage daughter Mollie (Sandra Dee) and her influence on the male sex who are all grabby hands. The freshman college girl heads off into the bohemian world followed by her overprotective father.
I like Stewart's comedy. He's an old duddy and he knows it. It's funny that way. The Mr. Smith jokes are good fun. It's 50's trying to deal with the 60's and doing it in a safe way. Jimmy gets in a few chuckles but Dee is a bit stiff. She's playing innocence as clueless without the comedy. One may notice Bob Denver and he has a fun scene with Jimmy. Overall, it's the lightest of comedies with limited effect and a little long. The movie only comes alive with Jimmy.
I like Stewart's comedy. He's an old duddy and he knows it. It's funny that way. The Mr. Smith jokes are good fun. It's 50's trying to deal with the 60's and doing it in a safe way. Jimmy gets in a few chuckles but Dee is a bit stiff. She's playing innocence as clueless without the comedy. One may notice Bob Denver and he has a fun scene with Jimmy. Overall, it's the lightest of comedies with limited effect and a little long. The movie only comes alive with Jimmy.
"Take Her, She's Mine" is a comedy film that reflects family concerns during a period of cultural change in the American scene of the early 1960s. It shows parental concern - mostly that of a dad, for his daughter who has come of age, in a time just as the counterculture was beginning. It sort of reflects the last of an age of innocence before the sexual revolution of the 1960s that followed. So, modern audiences may find this film rather silly. Yet, it's not a bad picture of the parental concern of the time, and somewhat of the foray of the more innocent of youth into the cultural turnover. This is before the onset of widespread drug use and free sex that would become a part of the scene over the next decade. That concern of parents soon became a real concern of law enforcement and the country as a whole.
Knowing something about that may help modern audiences understand a little more the premise of the plot of this film. And, then enjoy the comedy, because there is some very good comedy here. It has a pleasant mixture of humorous dialog and funny antics or situations in which the dad gets entangled. James Stewart plays that dad, Frank Michaelson. Aside from a little over-doing it in the imagination and worrying frenzy, he's very good as the fall guy. Thinking like the kids and young folks of his time, he would seem a little buffoonish. But, then, just at the right moment he becomes the dad who trusts and stands by his daughter, Mollie. Some of the student protests that Mollie gets in bear signs of the times. In one, she and others are carrying signs that read, "The Berlin wall must go."
Sandra Dee does very well as the 19-year-old Mollie Michaelson who goes off to college; and then at 20 goes off to study art in Paris. Dee was the most popular young star in the early 1960s. MGM promoted her marriage to popular singer and actor Bobby Darrin, but it wasn't to last. By the end of the decade, her star had fallen and she later succumbed to alcoholism and had medical and psychological problems. She died of kidney disease at age 62 in 2005.
Audrey Meadows plays Frank's wife, Ann Michaelson, bet her role hardly has more than an occasional line when Frank is at home in between his long-distance trips to try to straighten out or save Mollie. John McGiver is Hector G. Ivor, the vice chairman of the local California board of education, of which Frank is the chairman. No one could play a straight-faced character for comedy better than McGiver, and every time the camera closes in on him here it brings a smile if not a chuckle. And Robert Morley as Mr. Pope-Jones is his usual very funny character, although this is somewhat of a unique role, as many of his comedy personas area.
All of these characters, the funny situations that Frank gets into, and the dialog make this an entertaining and fun film to watch. Here are some favorite lines.
Hector Ivor, "Honestly, sometimes I really wonder where the papers get all this stuff they print. Can't make it all up, can they?"
Frank Michaelson, at the airport, "All right - how much over weight?" Anne Michaelson, "None." Frank, "None? With that load?" Anne, "No, you see ... " Frank, "All right, don't tell me. Don't tell me. I know there's something crooked about it, but I don't wanna hear it. Not at a time like this, anyway."
Frank Michaelson, "Holy chihuahua!"
Hector Ivor, "You'd think they'd flunk her." Frank Michaelson, "They did."
Frank Michaelson, "Now, I have to be the first to admit that I don't know very much about modern art, but I happen to be one of the outstanding authorities in the State of California on hogwash."
Frank Michaelson, "There's just one catch to it." Anne Michaelson, "What's that?" Frank, "You and I won't be able to eat her senior year."
Frank Michaelson, "Do you know what Life (magazine) means when they say protégé?" Anne Michaelson, "Wellll.." Frank, "When they say protégé, they're winking. It's their way of slipping you the dirt. When they say protégé, what they're really saying..." Anne, "Okay, okay!"
Hector Ivor, "I got into a little jam like that once." Frank Michaelson, "Hector, telling me your troubles at this point would be like complaining to Noah about a drizzle."
Frank Michaelson, "How old is the punk?" Mollie Michaelson, "He's not a punk." Frank, "All right, how old is the non-punk?"
Mr. Pope-Jones, "Waiter - do you know who that fellow looks like?" Waiter, "Pardon." Pope-Jones, "Henry Fonda. Henry Fonda, the American film star. Will you ever forget him in 'Gone with the Wind?'"
Mr. Pope-Jones, "Never try this sort of thing with a hangover."
Mr. Pope-Jones, "Your father's right, dear. There's nothing shiftier than a lover's promise."
Knowing something about that may help modern audiences understand a little more the premise of the plot of this film. And, then enjoy the comedy, because there is some very good comedy here. It has a pleasant mixture of humorous dialog and funny antics or situations in which the dad gets entangled. James Stewart plays that dad, Frank Michaelson. Aside from a little over-doing it in the imagination and worrying frenzy, he's very good as the fall guy. Thinking like the kids and young folks of his time, he would seem a little buffoonish. But, then, just at the right moment he becomes the dad who trusts and stands by his daughter, Mollie. Some of the student protests that Mollie gets in bear signs of the times. In one, she and others are carrying signs that read, "The Berlin wall must go."
Sandra Dee does very well as the 19-year-old Mollie Michaelson who goes off to college; and then at 20 goes off to study art in Paris. Dee was the most popular young star in the early 1960s. MGM promoted her marriage to popular singer and actor Bobby Darrin, but it wasn't to last. By the end of the decade, her star had fallen and she later succumbed to alcoholism and had medical and psychological problems. She died of kidney disease at age 62 in 2005.
Audrey Meadows plays Frank's wife, Ann Michaelson, bet her role hardly has more than an occasional line when Frank is at home in between his long-distance trips to try to straighten out or save Mollie. John McGiver is Hector G. Ivor, the vice chairman of the local California board of education, of which Frank is the chairman. No one could play a straight-faced character for comedy better than McGiver, and every time the camera closes in on him here it brings a smile if not a chuckle. And Robert Morley as Mr. Pope-Jones is his usual very funny character, although this is somewhat of a unique role, as many of his comedy personas area.
All of these characters, the funny situations that Frank gets into, and the dialog make this an entertaining and fun film to watch. Here are some favorite lines.
Hector Ivor, "Honestly, sometimes I really wonder where the papers get all this stuff they print. Can't make it all up, can they?"
Frank Michaelson, at the airport, "All right - how much over weight?" Anne Michaelson, "None." Frank, "None? With that load?" Anne, "No, you see ... " Frank, "All right, don't tell me. Don't tell me. I know there's something crooked about it, but I don't wanna hear it. Not at a time like this, anyway."
Frank Michaelson, "Holy chihuahua!"
Hector Ivor, "You'd think they'd flunk her." Frank Michaelson, "They did."
Frank Michaelson, "Now, I have to be the first to admit that I don't know very much about modern art, but I happen to be one of the outstanding authorities in the State of California on hogwash."
Frank Michaelson, "There's just one catch to it." Anne Michaelson, "What's that?" Frank, "You and I won't be able to eat her senior year."
Frank Michaelson, "Do you know what Life (magazine) means when they say protégé?" Anne Michaelson, "Wellll.." Frank, "When they say protégé, they're winking. It's their way of slipping you the dirt. When they say protégé, what they're really saying..." Anne, "Okay, okay!"
Hector Ivor, "I got into a little jam like that once." Frank Michaelson, "Hector, telling me your troubles at this point would be like complaining to Noah about a drizzle."
Frank Michaelson, "How old is the punk?" Mollie Michaelson, "He's not a punk." Frank, "All right, how old is the non-punk?"
Mr. Pope-Jones, "Waiter - do you know who that fellow looks like?" Waiter, "Pardon." Pope-Jones, "Henry Fonda. Henry Fonda, the American film star. Will you ever forget him in 'Gone with the Wind?'"
Mr. Pope-Jones, "Never try this sort of thing with a hangover."
Mr. Pope-Jones, "Your father's right, dear. There's nothing shiftier than a lover's promise."
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAll of Jim Nabors' dialog was overdubbed by another actor's voice.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe newspaper picture of Frank jumping off the riverboat does not match the actual scene of Frank jumping off.
- Citações
man at LAX: Scooby!
Mollie Michaelson: Scooby-doo!
- ConexõesReferenced in What's My Line?: James Stewart (1963)
- Trilhas sonorasFar Above Cayuga's Waters
(uncredited)
aka "Alma Mater"
Music from the song "Annie Lisle"
Written by H.S. Thompson
Played during the first college scene
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- How long is Take Her, She's Mine?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Take Her, She's Mine
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 2.435.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 38 min(98 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 2.35 : 1
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