Actress Judy Carroll, from the gas-house district has been trained, educated and developed so well by her manager, that not even the publicity-seeking world of the theater has guessed her an... Read allActress Judy Carroll, from the gas-house district has been trained, educated and developed so well by her manager, that not even the publicity-seeking world of the theater has guessed her antecedents. But she has not loved well or wisely as she learns when she tries to adopt a ba... Read allActress Judy Carroll, from the gas-house district has been trained, educated and developed so well by her manager, that not even the publicity-seeking world of the theater has guessed her antecedents. But she has not loved well or wisely as she learns when she tries to adopt a baby.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
- Mrs. Evans
- (uncredited)
- Doc
- (uncredited)
- Party Guest
- (uncredited)
- Mr. Farley
- (uncredited)
- Speakeasy Patron
- (uncredited)
- Mrs. Bronson
- (uncredited)
- Water Wagon Driver
- (uncredited)
- District Attorney
- (uncredited)
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Featured reviews
This briskly paced film is a terrific little pre-Code drama that boasts a wonderful performance by Bennett. McCrea is also very good. Paul Lukas is OK as the love-struck manager. Walter Pigeon has a small role in the opening scenes. Jobyna Howland is a hoot as Bennett's mother. Clara Blandick is the housekeeper, Charles Middleton is the prosecutor, Virginia Hammond is McCrea's mother, Walter Catlett is a barfly, and Sterling Holloway is the night clubber who keeps asking for "Poor Butterfly." And little June Filmer is wonderful as the baby.
Bennett has a few excellent dramatic scenes, gets to sing a jazz number, and then there are all those balloons!
* 1/2 (out of 4)
Growing up trashy but turned into a lady, an actress (Constance Bennett) wants to adopt a child but isn't allowed after her past is brought up in a court trial. This is an early film from George Cukor that really doesn't have any of the charm or spirit that his later films have. The film is incredibly slow moving and the 67-minute running time feels longer than three hours. Bennett is good in her role but she doesn't have a lot to work with and Joel McCrea is wasted as is Walter Pidgeon. With a cast like this you'd expect a lot better.
The film is worth watching for Constance Bennett alone. She is natural and plays the part perfectly. Joel McCrea is always charming and allows her to shine in each of her scenes by giving Bennett exactly the acting support she needs.
McCrea is a playwright who has written a play about a woman's quest to adopt a baby. It offers the leading role to Bennett, but he does not realize how much the play parallels her actual life. It is hinted at that the child she is seeking to adopt is her love child, but it is not certain that is the fact. McCrea is married and about to be divorced and free. They fall in love and she sees a future with him and their own children.
All seems so happy, but McCrea has an issue from his past that forces Bennett to make a life changing decision. I won't spoil the climax, but it is a good one and Bennett acts her role perfectly.
The film is "good" but it is made "great" because of Constance Bennett. She turns this into a Classy Classic!
Bennett is fabulous and gives a wonderful and lively performance. In films prior to What Price Hollywood Bennett was passive, even lethargic. In Rockabye she kicks up her heels, sings in a speakeasy with the pals of her youth, gets frisky with scrambled eggs and balloons, and has a rollicking good time with her new love. I suspect Bennett was playing herself, a free-spirit who thumbed her nose at conventions. Bennett too is believable in the script's hard-to-swallow scenes of sorrow and sacrifice. Variety's reviewer wrote, "This actress is one of the few who can somehow achieve conviction in just such stagey things" and "She is accountable for practically all its merits."
How did the public respond to Rockabye? After the opening in New York, Variety predicted it would do well, as all Bennett films had done. Bennett's biographer wrote that it was a colossal box-office flop. TCM wrote that RKO records showed it was a respectable hit and grossed slightly more than the very successful What Price Hollywood. So it was a flop and a hit? Maybe it was both. After a disastrous preview of Rockabye, the film was remade with a new director and costars. This would have doubled production costs and resulted in a loss, regardless of grosses. RKO then wised up - in future, no more babies.
10 stars for Bennett. 0 stars for story.
Did you know
- TriviaRKO bought the rights of the play from Gloria Swanson. Director George Fitzmaurice was borrowed from MGM and Phillips Holmes (in the role later played by Joel McCrea) from Paramount. The finished film was considered so bad that George Cukor was summoned by Selznick to direct two weeks of retakes, with McCrea taking over Holmes'role.
- Quotes
Jacobs Van Riker Pell: Yes, I wanna know all the things you like most.
Judy Carroll: Chinchilla, smelly cheese, oh boy, that first cigarette in the morning, millions of divine slippers, the first kiss after the quarrel, pretzels, having the back of my neck rubbed, the smell of new luggage, Debussy's music, and colored babies. And you know what?
Jacobs Van Riker Pell: What?
Judy Carroll: Toy balloons. You know I've never had a toy balloon and I've wanted one all my life.
Jacobs Van Riker Pell: I bet you've never had a colored baby, either.
[laughs]
- SoundtracksTill the Real Thing Comes Along
(uncredited)
Written by Edward Eliscu and Harry Akst
Sung by Constance Bennett as "Till the Right Man Comes Along" with piano accompaniment
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 8m(68 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1