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IMDbPro

Oh, Men! Oh, Women!

  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
243
YOUR RATING
David Niven, Ginger Rogers, Dan Dailey, Tony Randall, and Barbara Rush in Oh, Men! Oh, Women! (1957)
Comedy

A bored housewife seeks help from a psychiatrist who also solves his own emotional problems.A bored housewife seeks help from a psychiatrist who also solves his own emotional problems.A bored housewife seeks help from a psychiatrist who also solves his own emotional problems.

  • Director
    • Nunnally Johnson
  • Writers
    • Edward Chodorov
    • Nunnally Johnson
  • Stars
    • Ginger Rogers
    • David Niven
    • Dan Dailey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    243
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Writers
      • Edward Chodorov
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Stars
      • Ginger Rogers
      • David Niven
      • Dan Dailey
    • 8User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos3

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    Top cast20

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    Ginger Rogers
    Ginger Rogers
    • Mildred Turner
    David Niven
    David Niven
    • Dr. Alan Coles
    Dan Dailey
    Dan Dailey
    • Arthur Turner
    Tony Randall
    Tony Randall
    • Cobbler
    Barbara Rush
    Barbara Rush
    • Myra Hagerman
    Natalie Schafer
    Natalie Schafer
    • Mrs. Day
    Rachel Stephens
    • Miss Tacher
    John Wengraf
    John Wengraf
    • Dr. Krauss
    Cheryll Clarke
    • Melba
    • (uncredited)
    Clancy Cooper
    Clancy Cooper
    • Mounted Policeman
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Davis
    • Steward
    • (uncredited)
    Harry Denny
    • Clergyman
    • (uncredited)
    Franklyn Farnum
    Franklyn Farnum
    • Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Joel Fluellen
    Joel Fluellen
    • Cab Driver
    • (uncredited)
    Renny McEvoy
    Renny McEvoy
    • Bartender
    • (uncredited)
    Monty O'Grady
    Monty O'Grady
    • Clergyman
    • (uncredited)
    Franklin Pangborn
    Franklin Pangborn
    • Steamship Clerk
    • (uncredited)
    Les Raymaster
    • Clergyman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • Writers
      • Edward Chodorov
      • Nunnally Johnson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    5.2243
    1
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    10

    Featured reviews

    4jotix100

    The shrink

    One wonders whose idea it was to film Edward Chodorov's play? Nunnally Johnson, an otherwise good director, must have been under the influence when he agreed to direct this silly comedy.

    The movie has a distinct 50's look. The story about a Manhattan shrink with a well-to-do clientele might have been funny on the stage, but as we watch it unfold on the screen it's just ridiculous. Even being kind about it, no one can say anything good about the movie, which, by the way, it's not even funny.

    The only curious thing about "Oh Men, Oh Women" is that it was Tony Randall's film debut. A great cast is totally wasted. Dan Dailey, Ginger Rogers, David Niven and Barbara Rush might have looked good to the casting department, but in the film they are mired by a screen play that goes nowhere. Also in the film is the delightful Natalie Schafer, a stage actress that made it big in television in the series "Gilligan's Island".

    If you have nothing to do, read a book, but don't waste your time with this stinker.
    2planktonrules

    Instead of a film, it seems more like a bad sitcom or a play by a local (and not very talented) theater troop!

    A psychoanalyst is about to get married. However, at the same time things get out of hand with some of his patients and life becomes a total mess over the course of the film.

    "Oh, Men! Oh, Women!" is an incredibly bad film. It's shocking, as the movie has some very good actors....and so I know you can't blame it on most of the actors*! No, I blame it mostly on two folks...the writers (I assume they were chimps) and the director (who must have demanded the actors emote MORE in every scene). It's really a shame, as with David Niven, Ginger Rogers, Dan Dailey, Barbara Rush and Tony Randall it SHOULD have been very good...or at least not irritating. Instead, it comes off like a terrible sitcom or local community theater production. Labored and unfunny throughout.

    *I DO blame Dan Dailey. He was an experienced actor and I don't know how his performance could have been MORE shrill and LESS subtle. This has to be his worst performance.
    1moonspinner55

    Oh, Hollywood!

    It takes a lot of talented people to come up with a comedy so misguided as this. Their intentions must have been honorable, and everyone fights frantically to keep the goods from sinking, but it's a loss, one of those drawing-room disasters which might have looked good on the page but not stretched across the widescreen. David Niven plays a psychoanalyst bored with his patients and confused over his fiancée's involvement with two of his clients. The actors drink and slur their words...why? Is it funnier to hear drunken wisecracks? Tony Randall as a neurotic and Barbara Rush as the prospective bride get the worst of it: his badgering ninnyisms and her high-pitched hysteria are not funny for any era. Based on a play, and obviously so, with tatty furnishings and dull, flat sets. A scene early on, with Rush in a taxi, is the high-point...we actually get outdoors and away from the whining.
    5vert001

    Oh My!

    It's odd to say it about a film made by Nunnally Johnson, unquestionably one of the finest screenwriters in film history, but the script for OH MEN! OH WOMEN! desperately needed punching up from somebody like Neil Simon. As it stands, we have a psychiatric-based farce which isn't very funny. And when it tries for wisdom, it's considerably worse. Add in Johnson's typically static direction that emphasizes the staginess of the source material and you have a good long slog to get through even the film's relatively modest 90 minute running time. It would have been a disaster without its talented cast: David Niven, for the umpteenth time, gives us that unusual combination of stuffiness, befuddlement and charm that served him so well over his long career. Making his first film appearance, Tony Randall is already the Tony Randall that we would come to love, but in one of her last film appearances, Ginger Rogers is pretty much wasted as a bored wife. Playing her husband, Dan Daily does what he can with a fairly tedious character, and Barbara Rush is better than I expected, though she became more wearing as the movie went on. All in all, the film is an exceptional example of pure mediocrity.

    As an aside, possibly the last person in Hollywood who would have actually seen a psychoanalyst in real life (she was a devout Christian Scientist) was Ginger Rogers, yet this was the third movie which saw Ginger's character on a shrink's couch: CAREFREE, LADY IN THE DARK, and OH MEN! OH WOMEN! Unfortunately, the movies deteriorated as the career moved on.
    marcslope

    Oh, Brother!

    There's a Mike Nichols and Elaine May LP sketch about psychiatry (she's the libidinous doctor, he's the patient) from around the same time that manages to do in three minutes what this movie fails to accomplish in an hour and a half: make hilarious sport of the sexual undercurrents implicit in the doctor-patient relationship. This one's done in by a stagy screenplay derived from a hit Broadway sex comedy of the day, an ugly production, and some howlers of miscasting. David Niven's supposed to be a promising young psychiatrist; he's 50 and looks it, and he's mismatched against Barbara Rush as his fiancée, an ostensibly adorable sprite who comes off as grating by today's standards. Dan Dailey (rather good, despite formidable odds) is an "amusingly" alcoholic stage star married to Ginger Rogers, who -- interestingly, given her starring role in "Lady in the Dark" years before -- once again is the woman on the couch who needs to be dominated by an alpha male to be happy. Tony Randall, in what could be considered a warmup for Felix Unger, is the sniveling, fussy, paranoid anhedoniac mixed up in this mixed-up crowd. Writer-director Johnson tries to slam the laughs across, lapsing into overwritten, over-directed fantasy scenes (though it's fun to see Rogers framed by an aluminum-foil halo, like a child in a Christmas pageant) and easy happy endings for nearly all concerned that one doesn't buy for a minute. And, typical of big studio comedies of the time, the characters drink and drink, which is supposed to be hilarious, and meet via unconvincing coincidences (Randall just happens to look up Rush the same night that Dailey does; both just happen to have had flings with her years before; both have just met Niven that very day, who's supposed to sail with her on a honeymoon cruise the next day; etc.). Interesting for the sociology, I guess, as psychiatry was going mainstream, and middle American audiences could chortle at the zany, immature doings of this allegedly smart, cosmopolitan set. But it's a pretty leaden comedy, even by the not-high standards of the time.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Film debut of Tony Randall.
    • Quotes

      Arthur Turner: Any psychoanalyst who would take a woman for a patient should consult a psychoanalyst.

    • Connections
      Referenced in What's My Line?: Mike Todd & Ginger Rogers (1957)

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    FAQ1

    • Chicago Opening Happened When?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 23, 1957 (Sweden)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ma Femme a des Complexes
    • Filming locations
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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