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Shirley Temple, Merna Kennedy, Theodore von Eltz, and Grant Withers in Red-Haired Alibi (1932)

Review by lor_

Red-Haired Alibi

Empathy

Very fine performances denote this crisp romantic drama, tightly directed by B movie specialist Christy Cabanne. It has some beautiful touches at just the right moments to make it a memorable little movie.

1932 is my personal favorite year for movies, from some classics to solid sleepers like the great, unsung comedy "This Is the Night". "Red Haired Alibi" is the sort of film that sneaks up on you -it seems to be conventional and even ordinary, but cumulatively, brick by brick, builds up to pack an emotional wallop.

The story of a naive girl who fate has a few key twists to throw at her is rather simple, but the snappy dialogue, utterly sincere characterizations and careful manipulation of genre cliches works wonders to both grab the viewer and then create an emotional investment in the archetypal roles. Merna Kennedy is no superstar, but instead convincingly represents a "smart" young woman, who rolls with the punches and maintains her poise throughout both luck and hardship, just what is needed for a depression-era heroine. Theodore Von Eltz is near-perfect as the transparently immoral, smoothie of an antihero, upfront with his misogyny yet likable in a sleazy Ricardo Cortez way. It helps to create interest in watching his behavior while creating enough distance to make his fate acceptable to the viewer.

I loved the climax where Merna takes charge, and with the irresistible Third Act presence of Shirley Temple as her stepdaughter the heart-warming finale is simply terrific.
  • lor_
  • Oct 9, 2023

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