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SOS vertu!

Original title: Wise Girl
  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 1h 10m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
866
YOUR RATING
Ray Milland and Miriam Hopkins in SOS vertu! (1937)
Quirky ComedyScrewball ComedyComedyDrama

High-society heiress Susan goes undercover to find her young nieces, who are enjoying a Bohemian lifestyle with their artist uncleHigh-society heiress Susan goes undercover to find her young nieces, who are enjoying a Bohemian lifestyle with their artist uncleHigh-society heiress Susan goes undercover to find her young nieces, who are enjoying a Bohemian lifestyle with their artist uncle

  • Director
    • Leigh Jason
  • Writers
    • Allan Scott
    • Charles Norman
  • Stars
    • Miriam Hopkins
    • Ray Milland
    • Walter Abel
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    866
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Leigh Jason
    • Writers
      • Allan Scott
      • Charles Norman
    • Stars
      • Miriam Hopkins
      • Ray Milland
      • Walter Abel
    • 13User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Photos8

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    Top cast43

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    Miriam Hopkins
    Miriam Hopkins
    • Susan Fletcher
    Ray Milland
    Ray Milland
    • John O'Halloran
    Walter Abel
    Walter Abel
    • Karl
    Henry Stephenson
    Henry Stephenson
    • Mr. Fletcher
    Alec Craig
    Alec Craig
    • Dermont O'Neil
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    Guinn 'Big Boy' Williams
    • Mike
    • (as Guinn Williams)
    Betty Philson
    • Joan
    Marianna Strelby
    • Katie
    Margaret Dumont
    Margaret Dumont
    • Mrs. Bell-Rivington
    Jean De Briac
    Jean De Briac
    • George
    • (as Jean de Briac)
    Ivan Lebedeff
    Ivan Lebedeff
    • Prince Michael
    Rafael Alcayde
    Rafael Alcayde
    • Prince Ivan
    • (as Rafael Storm)
    Gregory Gaye
    Gregory Gaye
    • Prince Leopold
    Richard Lane
    Richard Lane
    • Detective
    Tom Kennedy
    Tom Kennedy
    • Detective
    Cecil Kellaway
    Cecil Kellaway
    • Fletcher's Butler
    • (unconfirmed)
    Herbert Ashley
    Herbert Ashley
    • Process Server
    • (uncredited)
    Maurice Cass
    Maurice Cass
    • Dr. Barry - Court Psychiatrist
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Leigh Jason
    • Writers
      • Allan Scott
      • Charles Norman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    6.5866
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    Featured reviews

    2Handlinghandel

    A dud

    Forced, cloying, formulaic. Do these adjectives make you want to run to rent his? Miriam Hopkins was brilliant in the original "Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde." A few other early movies of hers, notably "The Story of Temple Drake," are never shown but said to be excellent.

    Here, she is cutesy, bossy, and thoroughly unappealing. Ray Milland as a Greeniwch Village bohemian not at all convincing.

    The two child performers are creepy and also bear no relation to the Village as it was then.

    Speaking as a native of Greenwich Village, I find the setting ersatz, generic, and phony. Not that I was around for a couple generations but my relatives were there in 1937. It isn't funny. It isn't remotely authentic. We don't care about the characters.

    So many movies were made about the struggling masses vs the capitalists at this time, and done with elan. "Easy Living" comes to mind. It didn't take place in the Village. But it rings very true. This rings with a thudding knell.
    6planktonrules

    Enjoyable though I will admit that it was a bit forced.

    In some ways, "Wise Girl" is much like "You Can't Take it With You"- -the film that won the Oscar for Best Picture and Best Director just one year after "Wise Girl" debuted. However, despite its similarities (as both are about goofy rooming houses filled with weirdos), the film is inferior mostly because the film seems very forced--as if the director and actors act loudly in order to convey how wacky the film is supposed to be.

    When the film begins, you learn that the Fletchers are very rich and they are horrified that John O'Halloran (Ray Milland) is raising two little girls who belonged to the sister of Susan Fletcher (Miriam Hopkins). After all, John is poor and lives a crazy bohemian lifestyle in a strange boarding house...and he doesn't even send these two little girls to school! Susan decides to investigate all this undercover and befriends this odd family...and naturally John feels stabbed in the back when he later learns that she and her father are going to court to take the kids! However, inexplicably, Susan has fallen in love with John and also has determined to make a success of him whether he likes it or not!

    This film does have some cute moments though I had a hard time believing any of this and the film often got louder instead of more clever. Worth seeing but a pale imitation of the goofiness of "You Can't Take it With You".
    drednm

    The Great Miriam Hopkins

    Of all the major 30s star actresses, Miriam Hopkins ranks among the most bizarrely overlooked and underrated. Her string of excellent 30s and 40s films is quite impressive but she is often referred to as being stagy or brittle. Yet she had a great sense of humor and was memorable in several comedies, including this film, Old Acquaintance (with Bette Davis), and The Smiling Lieutenant (with Maurice Chevalier and Claudette Colbert). Hopkins was famous for her dislike of Hollywood, and the results has been a bad rep -- undeserved.

    In Wise Girl she play an heiress trying to rescue the children of her dead sister from their guardian -- the sister's brother-in-law (Ray Milland), an artist who works at odd jobs. The film offers several hilarious scene such as Hopkins taking a bath is a storeroom, Hopkins joining Milland and Guinn Williams in a Greenwich Village restaurant for $3 apiece to act as "Bohemians," and Hopkins going ringside during one of Williams' fights. Milland is also excellent and very funny.

    Hopkins and Milland make a great couple. The film also boasts solid support from Williams, Walter Abel, Henry Stephenson, James Finlayson, Margaret Dumont, Grace Hayle, Leonid Kinskey, and Inez Palange. The two girls are OK.

    But Hopkins, drunk on a "slice of wine" and wearing a pinned-together dress that is twice her size is hilarious as she blows at stray hairs while smoking a cigarette with a long cigarette holder.... A scream.

    Hollywood's version of Greenwich Village is way off of course, but the courtyard complex Milland lives in, filled with artsy types, is quite impressive. Hopkins and Milland make a grand comedy team.
    David_Newcastle

    Ray Milland and Mariam Hopkins in a comedy masterpiece!

    Witty, high-energy comedy with a script to die for. You'll meet more memorable characters than you can possibly remember. Ray Milland is a charming artist and free spirit who lives in Greenwich Village, taking care of his dead brother's two young daughters. Their rich, beautiful, snobbish aunt (Mariam Hopkins) goes to the Village incognito to win the little girls' affection and steal them away from Milland so they can be raised by her rich daddy. The dialogue is incredibly good, the performances are Oscar-quality, and the plot is filled with more convolutions than Einstein's gray matter. `Wise Girl' should be considered one of the great comedy classics of all time
    7tjonasgreen

    Amusing Depiction of Greenwich Village Life.

    Sometimes it's hard to define what separates a successful, delightful comedy from one that falls flat. In this case, the contrived plot about a spoiled rich girl who schemes to take her nieces away from the Greenwich Village 'bohemian' who is raising them, only to fall for him herself, is not promising. And nothing in director Leigh Jason's filmography suggests that he was an overlooked major talent. And yet he must have been responsible for creating a relaxed, happy atmosphere on the set that was faithfully recorded on film.

    He also had the good sense to cast this movie properly. The one small flaw is Miriam Hopkins in a part that Ginger Rogers would have been perfect for. Hopkins is efficient but brittle, lacking the warmth and sexiness Rogers would have had. She is further hampered by a pair of bizarrely long and sooty false eyelashes that are sometimes a distraction. But a very young and very handsome Ray Milland couldn't be better in an exuberant, uninhibited comic performance of great charm.

    And better than that, particularly for New York City residents, is the Hollywood depiction of Greenwich Village in 1937. Though completely synthetic and idealized, it remains recognizable to a contemporary viewer. Art director Van Nest Polglase created an amiable jumble of mews apartments and ramshackle shared backyards that is the perfect backdrop for this picture's collection of artists, strivers, smart-alecks and wannabes. Best in the supporting cast is Guinn Williams, bringing sweetness and light to his role as a prizefighter-sculptor-dressmaker, suggesting the self-invention and fluidity (sexual and otherwise) of life in the Village. Even more refreshing are Betty Philson and Marianna Strelby playing the little girls. Plain, intelligent and full of humor, these girls seem like real human beings and are nothing like the professional child actors of the time.

    Of special interest are a couple of memorable comic set-pieces: Ray Milland's vacuum cleaner demonstration to a woman with a howling baby is played with more spontaneity than one expects (the baby and his contortions are marvelous 'found' moments) and a phony domestic 'play' in a department store window that degenerates into a free-for-all is also fun. The movie slides slowly downhill with a straight-faced custody trial and then never quite gets back on track when the action moves to Long Island, but this movie is still worth a look.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      This film did poorly at the box office, with RKO losing $114,000 (over $1.9M in 2016) according to studio records.
    • Quotes

      Mr. Simon Fletcher: You know my mental mastodons of the law: Barton, Barton, and a son of a Barton.

    • Connections
      Featured in Savage Intruder (1970)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 23, 1938 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
      • Russian
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Wise Girl
    • Filming locations
      • Hollywood Legion Stadium, 1628 El Centro Ave. Hollywood, California, USA(boxing sequence)
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $448,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 10m(70 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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