15-year-old Corliss Archer and 17-year-old Mildred Pringle are best friends and get into some mischief together which causes their parents to fight over who is a bad influence on whom. Their... Read all15-year-old Corliss Archer and 17-year-old Mildred Pringle are best friends and get into some mischief together which causes their parents to fight over who is a bad influence on whom. Their fight also affects on Mildred and Lenny Archer, Corliss' brother, who elope one weekend w... Read all15-year-old Corliss Archer and 17-year-old Mildred Pringle are best friends and get into some mischief together which causes their parents to fight over who is a bad influence on whom. Their fight also affects on Mildred and Lenny Archer, Corliss' brother, who elope one weekend when Lenny's home on leave from the Army. Fearing that the Pringles would want the marriage... Read all
- Awards
- 3 wins total
- Mrs. Waldo
- (uncredited)
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Top Sergeant
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The trouble starts when Corliss' family and Mildred's start fussing at each other over some silly misunderstanding. This causes huge problems for Corliss' brother when he arrives home on leave, because he wants to marry Mildred and they do so secretly. But now with all the arguing, the pair decide to keep their marriage a secret until the new groom gets back from the war. But there's a hiccup...Mildred becomes pregnant and through a misunderstanding, folks think Corliss is an unwed mother-to-be. Corliss doesn't want their families to know about the real wedding and decides since she promised not to tell that she would pretend to be the pregnant one...and names poor Dexter as the father! Is this the end to the lies and craziness? Not on your life. How does Corliss extricate herself...or will she suddenly find herself married to Dexter at their parents' insistence?
This film is surprisingly adult for its time. While teens getting married was not uncommon back in the 40s, being pregnant without being married was a huge taboo...or at least to admit to doing. The whole notion of premarital sex was pretty racy stuff for the day-- especially when it was the 'little girl' America loved, Miss Temple! Overall, a funny but slight film that is well worth seeing. The only serious problem was Corliss' father (Walter Abel), as his character seemed like a cartoonish buffoon much of the time. And, incidentally, Temple returned a few years later for a sequel (it was terrible) and shortly after that, there were two television versions which starred Lugene Sanders as well as Ann Baker. Neither of the shows were particularly successful.
Nevertheless, it's one of Shirley's most appealing performances as a teen-ager and she seems to be enjoying herself immensely. She has good support from Jerome Courtland, as an awkward neighborhood boy, and Walter Abel as her exasperated father and Katharine Alexander as his patient wife. I believe Shirley had already played Corliss Archer on radio and certainly had an affinity for this sort of role.
I recall enjoying it much more years ago. A recent viewing of the film left me much less impressed with the overall result. It seemed to be straining a bit hard for laughs and the material was very thin.
Did you know
- TriviaThe play "Kiss and Tell" opened at the Biltmore Theater on March 17, 1943 and ran for 956 performances.
- Quotes
Corliss Archer: [When Dexter refuses to buy a guest towel from Corliss at a charity bazaar] You claim to love me so much, and then when it comes to putting up a measly dollar for a guest towel, you're not interested.
Dexter Franklin: Well, gee whiz.
Corliss Archer: Oh, it's all right, Dexter. Forget it. And when it comes to taking me out to the movies tonight, I'm not interested.
Dexter Franklin: [reluctantly] OK, give me a towel.
Corliss Archer: [glancing in Dexter's wallet] Dexter, you've got a five-dollar bill in there!
Dexter Franklin: Yeah, it's gonna stay there.
Corliss Archer: Oh, Dexter, you wouldn't want Mildred to sell more than me, would you? Come on, be a sport. It's for the USO!
Dexter Franklin: Okay, give me five.
Corliss Archer: Oh, Dexter! You're really very sweet.
[kisses him]
Dexter Franklin: Wow! Holy cow!
- ConnectionsFollowed by L'amour a toujours raison (1949)
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Kiss and Tell
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1