The Bumstead family is off to see relatives in the country when Blondie runs into Charlie and Millie, an eloping couple needing her help.The Bumstead family is off to see relatives in the country when Blondie runs into Charlie and Millie, an eloping couple needing her help.The Bumstead family is off to see relatives in the country when Blondie runs into Charlie and Millie, an eloping couple needing her help.
Stanley Brown
- Ollie Shaw
- (uncredited)
Mary Jane Carey
- Mary - the Secretary
- (uncredited)
Tommy Dixon
- Saunders
- (uncredited)
Richard Fiske
- Nelson
- (uncredited)
Si Jenks
- Newton Banks - Justice of the Peace
- (uncredited)
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Long story, why did I watch this? 1) Seinfeld mentions Glengarry Glen Ross in Comedians/Cars 2) Roku shows "Glenn Ford" as choice #1 when I search Glen 3) I investigate Glenn Ford, this movie from 1940 is available on Amazon Prime 4) I watch the entire movie and LOVE IT!!!!!! 5) goodbye and enjoy! =) P.S. Daisy is frickin' awesome! YAY! =D
In the 1940s, 50s and 60s, Charles Lane and Will Wright made a specialty out of playing grouchy supporting characters in movies and television. I loved seeing them as they added a lot of wonderful grouchy color to whatever they were in--no matter how insignificant. Here is one of the few times I can recall BOTH of these men in the same production--too bad they didn't get to act together--though I am not sure if the audience could have stood so much of their acerbic personas--but I loved them.
The film begins with Blondie lecturing Dagwood and Baby Dumpling NOT to use fireworks for the upcoming 4th of July. However, Dagwood is certifiably insane (or stupid) and sees no problem giving a 4 year-old explosives!! So, to get these two away from temptation, Blondie decides they should go visit her aunt and uncle in the country. However, the trip turns out to be anything but exciting, as they blunder into the middle of a feud. Two young people (one is a very young Glenn Ford before he became famous) want to get married but her insanely grumpy father is ready to shoot Ford or anyone who gets in his way. Can the Bumsteads manage to avoid blowing off any limbs as well as help this nice young couple? Despite the use of a silly runaway car sequence near the end, this is a very endearing episode of the series of 28 films Columbia made for the cartoon strip. The best part was Daisy, as her stunts were wonderful. So, as usual the dog is THE star--with Baby Dumpling a close second. Lots of fun...and grouchiness. Oh, and if you are looking for Lane, he's the befuddled conductor on the train. Amazingly, he died only a couple years ago--at 102 years of age!
By the way, if you watch this film you might easily get the impression that it's really cool to let very young children play with firecrackers, dynamite and drive. Oh, those wacky Bumsteads.
The film begins with Blondie lecturing Dagwood and Baby Dumpling NOT to use fireworks for the upcoming 4th of July. However, Dagwood is certifiably insane (or stupid) and sees no problem giving a 4 year-old explosives!! So, to get these two away from temptation, Blondie decides they should go visit her aunt and uncle in the country. However, the trip turns out to be anything but exciting, as they blunder into the middle of a feud. Two young people (one is a very young Glenn Ford before he became famous) want to get married but her insanely grumpy father is ready to shoot Ford or anyone who gets in his way. Can the Bumsteads manage to avoid blowing off any limbs as well as help this nice young couple? Despite the use of a silly runaway car sequence near the end, this is a very endearing episode of the series of 28 films Columbia made for the cartoon strip. The best part was Daisy, as her stunts were wonderful. So, as usual the dog is THE star--with Baby Dumpling a close second. Lots of fun...and grouchiness. Oh, and if you are looking for Lane, he's the befuddled conductor on the train. Amazingly, he died only a couple years ago--at 102 years of age!
By the way, if you watch this film you might easily get the impression that it's really cool to let very young children play with firecrackers, dynamite and drive. Oh, those wacky Bumsteads.
7tavm
This is the seventh in the Blondie movie series. While there are more contrivances than usual in the series, this is still a pretty funny entry involving firecrackers, a man with a shotgun, a ladder, a car that goes off by itself, and a young couple trying to get married. Of that young couple, one of them is Glenn Ford-years before he achieved stardom in films like Gilda with Rita Hayworth who was in a previous entry, Blondie on a Budget. The other half was Luana Walters who I just found out was in lots of B westerns and would eventually be the first to play Superman's Krytonian mother, Lara, in the 1948 serial named after her son. Interestingly, Ford himself played Supes' adopted father, Jonathan Kent, in the Christopher Reeve version from 1978. My favorite gag is what happens when Dagwood rushes down the ladder! So on that note, Blondie Plays Cupid is highly recommended. P.S. Charles Lane, previously in the first film in the series as a furniture salesman, makes a welcome return here as the train conductor. And, as in Blondie Brings Up Baby, Baby Dumpling's real name is revealed to be Dagwood Jr. though that will be changed to Alexander a few years down the line after original comic strip creator Chic Young does so by then.
The whole cast is back for this installment of Blondie. Dagwood and Baby Dumpling are in rare form as they want to light off fireworks and Blondie is so worried about safety that she has forbidden it! This creates a bit of a three way hide and seek with large firecrackers. And the mailman gag...yep! You guessed it, he gets a lit firework that has been tossed out of the Dagwood household!
In order to avoid fireworks altogether, Blondie plans a nice quiet weekend out of the city at her Aunt Hannah and Uncle Abner's country farm. On the way to the farm they hitch a ride with this lovely couple...a young Glenn Ford plays the groom to be Charlie and Luana Walters the bride to be Millie. The couple runs into trouble by way of her father...and Blondie steps in to help them elope.
Fireworks, Dynamite and Oil oh my!
This was a fun, family friendly installment built around the Fourth of July. Blondie fans will be thrilled and I highly recommend this film as irbid one of the better ones in the series. I also recommend the film to Glenn Ford fans as they will enjoy seeing him as a youngster on the cusp of marriage.
In order to avoid fireworks altogether, Blondie plans a nice quiet weekend out of the city at her Aunt Hannah and Uncle Abner's country farm. On the way to the farm they hitch a ride with this lovely couple...a young Glenn Ford plays the groom to be Charlie and Luana Walters the bride to be Millie. The couple runs into trouble by way of her father...and Blondie steps in to help them elope.
Fireworks, Dynamite and Oil oh my!
This was a fun, family friendly installment built around the Fourth of July. Blondie fans will be thrilled and I highly recommend this film as irbid one of the better ones in the series. I also recommend the film to Glenn Ford fans as they will enjoy seeing him as a youngster on the cusp of marriage.
BLONDIE PLAYS CUPID (Columbia, 1940), the sixth installment featuring "Blondie and the Bumsteads", ranks as one of their funnier entries in the series, and noteworthy, too, for an early screen appearance of future film star, Glenn Ford, almost unrecognizable in his very youthful appearance. While the title indicates a Valentine's Day theme,the setting takes place during the 4th of July weekend placing the Bumsteads in another vacation out-of-town venture.
The fun begins with Daisy, the Bumstead pooch, letting in some her neighborhood dog friends of various breeds, including a St. Bernard who gets stuck in Daisy's little pet door, into the house to share in eating a big bone, creating enough disturbance in having Blondie (Penny Singleton) being chased around the house until she eventually lures them out the door. Then there's husband Dagwood (Arthur Lake), preparing for the festivities for the 4th of July weekend, having hidden a bag full of firecrackers known only to his son, Baby Dumpling (Larry Simms), into his suitcase. Once Blondie discovers their secret, she ends their fun by placing them into a tub of water. Blondie makes it known that she's doing this for their own good, not wanting any casualties to occur. Because Mr. Dithers (Jonathan Hale) has granted his employees an extra day off for the weekend, Blondie decides to family break away from the American tradition and noisy firecrackers by taking the family to the country with a visit with her Aunt Hannah (Leona Roberts) and Uncle Abner (Spencer Charters) on their farm in Crossley for some peace and quiet. Things are far from that once their vacation gets started. Dagwood nearly misses the train while the Bumsteads end up on the express train to Kingsley instead of the local,only to leave them 72 miles from their destination. The no-nonsense ticket collector (wonderfully played by Charles Lane) almost consents on breaking the rules by stopping the train in Crossley until he discovers the "baby" Blondie is holding in her arms happens to be Daisy disguised as an infant. As the Bumsteads find themselves on the side of the road walking in the middle of nowhere, they hitchhike for cars to stop. They are soon picked up by an eloping couple, Charlie Collins and Millie Tucker (Glenn Ford and Luana Walters), oh their way to Weehawk to get married by Newton Banks (Si Jenks), justice of the peace. WIth Blondie acting as their witness, the ceremony is interrupted with the arrival of the bride's father (Will Wright), holding a shotgun, taking Millie back home with him in Charlie's car with Dagwood, Baby Dumpling and Daisy still sitting in the back seat. It's up to Blondie to play cupid by arranging for the couple to get together again. Because Charlie has twisted his ankle, she has Dagwood climbing up the ladder to get Millie instead. Things get even more complicated as Dagwood enters the wrong window, and following a wild chase, comes face to face with the old man and his shotgun. What an interesting and worthwhile essay for Baby Dumpling when he returns to school describing how he spent his summer vacation.
What makes this entry worthwhile is the fine comic support of character actors whose names may not be relatively known but their faces are. First off, Will Wright as the gruff speaking hillbilly father who carries a shotgun, and on a couple of occasions, threatens Dagwood with it. Dagwood tells him, "You wouldn't talk that way if you didn't have a shotgun in your hand." Then there's Si Jenks, the hard of hearing justice of the peace; and Spencer Charters and Leona Roberts as the wholesome elderly couple. Series regulars Jonathan Hale (Mr. DIthers), Danny Mummert (Alvin Fuddow), and Irving Bacon (The Postman) don't have much to do this time around. However, it's Bacon as the neighborhood letter carrier whose attempt to deliver the mail without getting knocked down by Dagwood who comes out ahead. Alvin gives him an idea of throwing the mail through an open window, while at the same time, the Bumsteads acquire a lighted firecracker, and throw it his way. This is one of the few times, however, where the postman really gets even, making enough noise to have the Bumsteads jumping out of their recently shellacked chairs, leaving clothing material behind.
Nearly three years from the start of the series, Larry Simms has outgrown his sitting on a high chair, now eating breakfast on a stool, and wearing long pants in certain scenes. Although too young to be in the driver's seat, he does so here quite by accident. While pretending to be driving an old jalopy, the motor starts up as he opens the door to get out, which is customary. This is followed by Baby Dumpling driving all over the place, causing poor Dagwood to either chase after him or being chased by him. "B-l-o-n-d-i-e!!!" Although Baby Dumpling will soon change his name to Alexander by 1942, BLONDIE PLAYS CUPID and BLONDIE BRINGS UP BABY (1939) are the only entries where his birth name of Dagwood Bumstead Jr. Is ever mentioned.
Available on either video cassette or DVD format with sing-along opening from King Features, BLONDIE PLAYS CUPID did have a successful run each Sunday morning on American Movie Classics (1996-2001) with restored original credits, and non-restoration credits on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: November 6, 2021). Regardless of the format, Blondie fans certainly will enjoy this one. Next chapter: "Blondie Goes Latin" (**1/2)
The fun begins with Daisy, the Bumstead pooch, letting in some her neighborhood dog friends of various breeds, including a St. Bernard who gets stuck in Daisy's little pet door, into the house to share in eating a big bone, creating enough disturbance in having Blondie (Penny Singleton) being chased around the house until she eventually lures them out the door. Then there's husband Dagwood (Arthur Lake), preparing for the festivities for the 4th of July weekend, having hidden a bag full of firecrackers known only to his son, Baby Dumpling (Larry Simms), into his suitcase. Once Blondie discovers their secret, she ends their fun by placing them into a tub of water. Blondie makes it known that she's doing this for their own good, not wanting any casualties to occur. Because Mr. Dithers (Jonathan Hale) has granted his employees an extra day off for the weekend, Blondie decides to family break away from the American tradition and noisy firecrackers by taking the family to the country with a visit with her Aunt Hannah (Leona Roberts) and Uncle Abner (Spencer Charters) on their farm in Crossley for some peace and quiet. Things are far from that once their vacation gets started. Dagwood nearly misses the train while the Bumsteads end up on the express train to Kingsley instead of the local,only to leave them 72 miles from their destination. The no-nonsense ticket collector (wonderfully played by Charles Lane) almost consents on breaking the rules by stopping the train in Crossley until he discovers the "baby" Blondie is holding in her arms happens to be Daisy disguised as an infant. As the Bumsteads find themselves on the side of the road walking in the middle of nowhere, they hitchhike for cars to stop. They are soon picked up by an eloping couple, Charlie Collins and Millie Tucker (Glenn Ford and Luana Walters), oh their way to Weehawk to get married by Newton Banks (Si Jenks), justice of the peace. WIth Blondie acting as their witness, the ceremony is interrupted with the arrival of the bride's father (Will Wright), holding a shotgun, taking Millie back home with him in Charlie's car with Dagwood, Baby Dumpling and Daisy still sitting in the back seat. It's up to Blondie to play cupid by arranging for the couple to get together again. Because Charlie has twisted his ankle, she has Dagwood climbing up the ladder to get Millie instead. Things get even more complicated as Dagwood enters the wrong window, and following a wild chase, comes face to face with the old man and his shotgun. What an interesting and worthwhile essay for Baby Dumpling when he returns to school describing how he spent his summer vacation.
What makes this entry worthwhile is the fine comic support of character actors whose names may not be relatively known but their faces are. First off, Will Wright as the gruff speaking hillbilly father who carries a shotgun, and on a couple of occasions, threatens Dagwood with it. Dagwood tells him, "You wouldn't talk that way if you didn't have a shotgun in your hand." Then there's Si Jenks, the hard of hearing justice of the peace; and Spencer Charters and Leona Roberts as the wholesome elderly couple. Series regulars Jonathan Hale (Mr. DIthers), Danny Mummert (Alvin Fuddow), and Irving Bacon (The Postman) don't have much to do this time around. However, it's Bacon as the neighborhood letter carrier whose attempt to deliver the mail without getting knocked down by Dagwood who comes out ahead. Alvin gives him an idea of throwing the mail through an open window, while at the same time, the Bumsteads acquire a lighted firecracker, and throw it his way. This is one of the few times, however, where the postman really gets even, making enough noise to have the Bumsteads jumping out of their recently shellacked chairs, leaving clothing material behind.
Nearly three years from the start of the series, Larry Simms has outgrown his sitting on a high chair, now eating breakfast on a stool, and wearing long pants in certain scenes. Although too young to be in the driver's seat, he does so here quite by accident. While pretending to be driving an old jalopy, the motor starts up as he opens the door to get out, which is customary. This is followed by Baby Dumpling driving all over the place, causing poor Dagwood to either chase after him or being chased by him. "B-l-o-n-d-i-e!!!" Although Baby Dumpling will soon change his name to Alexander by 1942, BLONDIE PLAYS CUPID and BLONDIE BRINGS UP BABY (1939) are the only entries where his birth name of Dagwood Bumstead Jr. Is ever mentioned.
Available on either video cassette or DVD format with sing-along opening from King Features, BLONDIE PLAYS CUPID did have a successful run each Sunday morning on American Movie Classics (1996-2001) with restored original credits, and non-restoration credits on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: November 6, 2021). Regardless of the format, Blondie fans certainly will enjoy this one. Next chapter: "Blondie Goes Latin" (**1/2)
Did you know
- TriviaThis was the film debut of Will Wright.
- GoofsWhen Baby Dumpling gets behind the wheel of the car, you can clearly see in the long shots that it is being driven by an adult.
- Quotes
Dagwood Bumstead: [holding bone Daisy put in his bed] Oh, I'm coming apart!
Blondie Bumstead: Nonsense. You don't come apart 'til you're forty.
- ConnectionsFollowed by Blondie Goes Latin (1941)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Blondie Goes to the Country
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 8 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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