Betty Jackson, a socialite, and Barry Trent are attracted to each other upon first sight. They met running into each other in the park as they walked their respective dogs day after day. Bet... Read allBetty Jackson, a socialite, and Barry Trent are attracted to each other upon first sight. They met running into each other in the park as they walked their respective dogs day after day. Betty doesn't know what Barry does for a living, but because he has different dogs on each wa... Read allBetty Jackson, a socialite, and Barry Trent are attracted to each other upon first sight. They met running into each other in the park as they walked their respective dogs day after day. Betty doesn't know what Barry does for a living, but because he has different dogs on each walk, he implies he works in his family's dog breeding business. In reality, he is a poor do... Read all
- Undetermined Role
- (uncredited)
- Harper
- (uncredited)
- Herman
- (uncredited)
- Owner of Oscar's Diner
- (uncredited)
- Edmund
- (uncredited)
- Man on Bicycle
- (uncredited)
- Passerby
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Morley is a bit stiff and out of his class in the lead role -- he can't seem to speak fast enough -- but Miss Shirley acquits herself well enough. A few more gags would have helped, but that might have required a few more minutes, and director Ben Holmes, RKO's specialist in churning 'em out quick, probably lacked the patience -- even if it was a slow year for him, he had two other pictures to direct.
This early rom-com talkie has most of the standard structure. It starts with a good meet-cute and a misunderstanding. The two leads have functional chemistry but they need to maintain the combative heat. It's a little up and down. Overall, it's all very sitcom but it does get a bit overly complicated. I'm also surprised that Jujutsu becomes such a large part of the comedy.
A dog walker gets a job at a newspaper by telling lies and it gets him into all kinds of hot water. And of course he becomes smitten with Anne Shirley because everybody becomes smitten with Anne Shirley, including and especially me! That's why I call her The Adorable Anne Shirley. She had a screen innocence and adorability rivaled only by the great Judy Garland and the great Shirley Temple.
This movie moves fast. I don't like slow moving movies (I'm looking at you Stanley Kubrick!) and this is never slow. It's always moving forward, forward, forward. It's relentless. And it moves faster and faster as it moves along. This is a gem.
And the ending is wonderfully fun and adorable.
Did you know
- TriviaThe "Baltimore 1845" ten cent stamp that Mansfield is after is an actual rare stamp - Scott's #3X2 on white paper and #3X4 on light blue paper. The best examples can fetch tens of thousands of dollars at auction. What is shown in the film is a facsimile of the stamp, of course, with cancellations done poorly.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Une fiancée s'enfuit (1937)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $105,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 1 minute
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1