"Christmas in July"-Preston Sturges-1940
The film opens with a couple listening to the radio on the rooftop of their apartment/tenament building. The radio is tuned to the Maxford Coffee hour. Across the country millions of people are awaiting the announcement of a huge contest. There have been over 2 million entrants trying to write the company's new slogan. The young man, Jimmy MacDonald (Dick Powell), is an entrant, and he likes his chances. To the dismay of all, no winner is announced. The selection panel is deadlocked.
This a strangely bizarre story of a type that was only common for a few years in American film making. A famous example is "Bringing Up Baby. The story is based on two unlikely story elements. The first is sending a tame Leopard, Baby, as a gift for Katherine Hepburn's aunt. The second is the intercostal clavicle of a dinosaur; this is the final bone Cary Grant needs to reconstruct the skeleton. In Christmas in July Powell is a low paid clerk in a competing coffee company. The winner of the contest will receive $25,000. Several of Powell's co-workers plan a prank . They construct a fake telegram announcing MacDonald as the contest winner and telling him to go to Maxford Coffee to pick up the check. Powell picks up the check, but the selection panel is still deadlocked. Chaos ensues; this is screwball comedy. In this genre everything works out in the end.
Powell is ably supported by Ellen Drew (Fiance), Franklin Pangborne (Radio Announcer), Raymond Walburn (owner of Maxford Coffee), William Demerest (the holdout on the selection panel, and Ernest Truex (owner of Baxter coffee). The pace and the dialogue are quick; the film runs less than 70 minutes, and I still find several laugh out loud sequences in this film. What we find funny is both individual and collective and changes over time. One for instance is black face or even yellow face, what once was humorous now is stomach turning. Still this film is well worth viewing, despite some dated references and scenes. This is well worth viewing. It is available for free streaming.
The film opens with a couple listening to the radio on the rooftop of their apartment/tenament building. The radio is tuned to the Maxford Coffee hour. Across the country millions of people are awaiting the announcement of a huge contest. There have been over 2 million entrants trying to write the company's new slogan. The young man, Jimmy MacDonald (Dick Powell), is an entrant, and he likes his chances. To the dismay of all, no winner is announced. The selection panel is deadlocked.
This a strangely bizarre story of a type that was only common for a few years in American film making. A famous example is "Bringing Up Baby. The story is based on two unlikely story elements. The first is sending a tame Leopard, Baby, as a gift for Katherine Hepburn's aunt. The second is the intercostal clavicle of a dinosaur; this is the final bone Cary Grant needs to reconstruct the skeleton. In Christmas in July Powell is a low paid clerk in a competing coffee company. The winner of the contest will receive $25,000. Several of Powell's co-workers plan a prank . They construct a fake telegram announcing MacDonald as the contest winner and telling him to go to Maxford Coffee to pick up the check. Powell picks up the check, but the selection panel is still deadlocked. Chaos ensues; this is screwball comedy. In this genre everything works out in the end.
Powell is ably supported by Ellen Drew (Fiance), Franklin Pangborne (Radio Announcer), Raymond Walburn (owner of Maxford Coffee), William Demerest (the holdout on the selection panel, and Ernest Truex (owner of Baxter coffee). The pace and the dialogue are quick; the film runs less than 70 minutes, and I still find several laugh out loud sequences in this film. What we find funny is both individual and collective and changes over time. One for instance is black face or even yellow face, what once was humorous now is stomach turning. Still this film is well worth viewing, despite some dated references and scenes. This is well worth viewing. It is available for free streaming.
, James Robinson Justice ("Those Magnificent Men in Their Flying Machines"), and Gordon Jackson (the butler in "Upstairs Downstairs"). Local islanders made up much of the cast. This is one of the few Ealing comedies I hadn't seen. It's a solid little film; it was re-made in 2016 quite poorly. It is available to stream for free.